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Showing posts with label Tucson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tucson. Show all posts

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Memos: Firefighter refused call to Tucson shooting (AP)

TUCSON, Ariz. – A veteran firefighter refused to respond to last month's deadly shooting spree that left Rep. Gabrielle Giffords wounded because he had different political views than his colleagues and "did not want to be part of it," according to internal city memos.

Mark Ekstrum's insubordination may have delayed his unit's response because firefighters had to stop at another station to pick up a replacement for him, the Arizona Daily Star reported.

While the crew was not among the first called to the supermarket where six people were killed and 13 others wounded, a memo from Ekstrum's supervisor said his actions caused "confusion and delay" during the emergency.

Ekstrum's team, which is specially trained to handle large medical emergencies, was dispatched to assist 90 minutes after the Jan. 8 shooting.

The 28-year veteran of the Tucson Fire Department retired two days later while his supervisors were still considering how to discipline him, according to the Star, which obtained the memos about the incident through a public records request.

Capt. Ben Williams wrote in a report that when Ekstrum first said he would not go on the call, "he mentioned something about `political bantering' and he did not want to be part of it."

Williams said in the report that he told the 56-year-old firefighter that he could not refuse a call for that reason and then talked to the firefighter privately in his office. He said Ekstrum "started to say something about how he had a much different political viewpoint than the rest of the crew and he was concerned."

Despite being told that was not acceptable, Williams said Ekstrum informed him he was going home "sick," so they answered the call without him.

Ekstrum's crew had been dispatched at 12:03 p.m., seven minutes after the last patient arrived at the hospital, said Joe Gulotta, an assistant fire chief. The team was responding as a support crew with a large delivery truck with tents, medical supplies, water and cots used to assist those who were not seriously injured.

Ekstrum declined to comment on the Star's story and refused to elaborate on any details of the memos when reached at his home Thursday by The Associated Press.

"I have nothing else to say about it," Ekstrum said.

But the Star said Ekstrum gave a statement Wednesday to the Fire Department saying he was distraught over the shootings and was "distracted to the point of not being able to perform my routine station duties to such an extent that I seriously doubted my ability to focus on an emergency call."

Ekstrum also said in the statement that he had no problem with Giffords and even voted for her in the last election.

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Information from: Arizona Daily Star, http://www.azstarnet.com


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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Judge blocks release of Tucson shooter's mug shots (Reuters)

PHOENIX (Reuters) – A federal judge has ordered a temporary stay on the release of federal "mug shots" of accused Tucson shooter Jared Lee Loughner, after his attorneys argued releasing them would be tantamount to trying him in the media.

In a ruling announced on Friday District Judge Larry Burns stayed the release of U.S. Marshals Service booking photographs of Loughner, 22, pending a court hearing on February 18.

Loughner is charged with the attempted assassination of U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords and attempting to murder two of her aides in a January 8 shooting rampage outside a Tucson supermarket that killed six people and injured 13.

The order follows an emergency motion lodged by Loughner's attorneys on Thursday, arguing that mug shots are "powerfully associated with criminality."

"Release of the photograph conflicts with the parties' interests in avoiding the case being tried in the media rather than in court," defense attorney Reuben Camper Cahn argued.

He added that mug shots are "inherently private," and "reveal what individuals look like at their most humiliated moment," and argued that their release served no relevant freedom of information interest.

The photograph of Loughner so far released to the media was taken by the Pima County Sheriff's Department after his arrest.

The U.S. Marshals Service mug shots that his attorneys sought to block were taken after he was subsequently booked into federal custody.

Further federal charges are expected to be brought against Loughner, after which he could face prosecution for an array of state crimes.

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Jerry Norton)


View the original article here