A picture and its story: A shooting in Seattle
Send a link to a friend
[June 10, 2020]
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Stunned
protesters surround a car that has driven into their ranks. A man is
lying on the ground nearby. Another man exits the driver's side of the
vehicle brandishing a gun. The protesters back away from him and he runs
off and melts into the crowd as medics rush to help the wounded man.
The dramatic scenes of a drive-by shooting on the streets of Seattle
were captured by Reuters photographer Lindsey Wasson during protests
against police brutality and racism that have rocked the city - and many
other places across the United States - in recent days.
Wasson, a Seattle native, has been covering the protests in Washington
state's largest city since May 31.
She took the series of pictures on Sunday evening from the window of a
local newspaper that has offices overlooking a street that became a
flashpoint.
"I had maybe just stepped to the main window, and I was looking over the
crowd and seeing what was going on. I heard a scream and commotion and
rushed to the dirty side window to photograph what was happening in a
side street," she said.
"The whole sequence probably took a minute, it happened very quickly."
Video taken by others at the scene show that the man who was injured
fell to the ground after he appeared to lean into the car. The shooter
handed himself over to the police shortly after the incident.
"Suspect in custody, gun recovered after man drove vehicle into crowd at
11th and Pine. Seattle Fire transported victim to hospital," Seattle
Police wrote in a tweet.
A police report of the incident obtained by a local NPR radio station
named the injured man as Daniel Gregory and said he had a gunshot wound
to the arm.
A GoFundMe page set up for Gregory said he was recovering in the
hospital. Reuters could not immediately reach Gregory for comment.
The demonstrations were sparked by the death of African-American George
Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis two weeks ago, and have evolved
into a movement for racial equality and reforms to police departments
across the country.
[to top of second column]
|
A man exits a vehicle with a gun as Dan Gregory is tended to
by medics after being shot in the arm by a driver who tried
to drive through a protest against racial inequality in the
aftermath of the death in Minneapolis police custody of
George Floyd, in Seattle, Washington, U.S. June 7, 2020.
REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson
For Wasson, the protests in her home town have been of a size and
intensity unlike others she has seen before.
"It has been very odd to see something like this where you grew up.
What feels different this time is the scale and how sustained it's
been. I've never seen it happen for this long, this extended energy
and purpose," she said.
The majority of her coverage of the protests over the last week has
been of more peaceful moments, said Wasson.
At those times, she has focused on how she will tell the story. But
it is also important for a photographer on the ground to read the
situation and be aware of exit routes if needed, she added.
In this case, she had an unusual high vantage point that gave her
the perfect view. Taking photos through glass is never ideal,
because of the challenges related to reflection. How the images turn
out depends on the light and how close you can get, said Wasson.
"It's not ideal but at that particular moment it was the only thing
available to me."
(Reporting by Greg Scruggs and Rosalba O'Brien; Writing by Rosalba
O'Brien; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|