Police dispatchers heard repeated gunfire, screaming, and moaning from
patrons of the Pulse nightclub who called to report that a gunman was
opening fire inside the club, according to written logs released
Tuesday.
The first call of “shots fired” came in at 2:02 a.m. and the caller reported “multiple people down.”
One
caller said Omar Mateen had gone upstairs where six people were hiding.
Dispatchers heard up to 30 gunshots in the background at another point
as callers screamed and moaned.
“My caller is no longer responding, just an open line with moaning,” one dispatcher said in the report.
Another dispatcher wrote, “Hearing gunshots closer, multiple people screaming.”
A caller described Mateen as wearing a gray shirt and brown pants.
Mateen
opened fire at the club on June 12, leaving 49 patrons dead and 53
injured in the worst mass shooting in recent U.S. history. In calls with
the police after the shooting began, Mateen pledged his allegiance to
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State group, declared
himself to be an Islamic soldier and demanded that the United States
stop bombing Syria and Iraq, the FBI said.
“Saying he pledges to the Islamic State,” a dispatcher wrote at 2:40 a.m.
The
report recounted where patrons hid in the nightclub: in an office
upstairs, in a closet, in a dressing room and behind a stage. Ten people
were hiding in the handicap stall of a bathroom. One caller described
patrons using their hands to stop the bleeding of shooting victims.
At
several points, callers relayed misinformation to the dispatchers. One
caller said there was a second gunman and another thought Mateen had a
bomb.
Mateen “is saying he is a terrorist … and has several bombs
strapped to him in the downstairs female restroom,” the dispatcher notes
said.
According to the time-stamped calls, nine people were
evacuated through the air conditioner window of a dressing room at 4:21
a.m. At 5:07 a.m., dispatchers heard an explosion as SWAT team members
tried to knock down a bathroom wall to free 15 hostages. At 5:17 a.m.,
dispatchers heard: “Bad guy down.”
Emails, inspection reports and
texts released by the Orlando Fire Department on Tuesday suggested that
one of the exits at the Pulse nightclub wasn’t operable weeks before the
massacre, but a fire department spokeswoman and an attorney for the
club both said that wasn’t true.
The last fire inspection at Pulse
was conducted in late May when the inoperable exit door was discovered,
according to an email exchange between Orlando Fire Marshall Tammy
Hughes and Fire Chief Roderick Williams. A follow-up visit was planned
but hadn’t been assigned so it wasn’t known if the problem was fixed,
the emails said.
But Pulse attorney Gus Benitez said Tuesday that
none of the six exits at the gay nightclub was blocked during the
inspection. The inspector only found that a light bulb in an exit sign
needed to be replaced and a fire extinguisher needed to be hung on wall.
Both items were corrected, Benitez said in a statement.
Fire
department spokeswoman Ashley Papagni backed up Benitez’s contention on
Tuesday. She said the exit door was deemed inoperable because of the
light bulb problem in the exit sign.
Pulse had twice the number of
exits needed to accommodate its maximum occupancy of 300 patrons,
according to the emails and texts.
The emails and dispatcher notes
were released on the same day that a legal tug-of-war broke out over
which court should be the venue for determining whether 911 tapes from
the Pulse nightclub shootings can be made public.
Nearly two dozen
news media organizations — including The Associated Press, CNN and The
New York Times — contend city officials are wrongly withholding
recordings of 911 calls and communications between gunman Mateen and the
Orlando Police Department. Mateen was killed by police after a standoff
in the shooting at the Pulse nightclub.
City officials claim the recordings are exempt under Florida law and are part of an FBI investigation.
A
hearing had been scheduled Tuesday in a Florida courtroom in Orlando
but it was abruptly canceled after the U.S. Department of Justice was
added to the case and Justice officials asked for it to be transferred
to federal court.
Attorneys for the news media organizations said they will fight to keep the case in state court.
Source: CCTV America
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
Post a Comment