No initial sign of shooter at US military hospital—Navy | Inquirer News

No initial sign of shooter at US military hospital—Navy

/ 09:23 AM January 27, 2016

APTOPIX Navy Hospital-Gunshots

People are directed to come out of buildings 1 and 2 with their hands in the air as they approach SWAT officers following a report of gunshots at a building on the campus of Naval Medical Center San Diego, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016, in San Diego. The Navy said Tuesday an initial inspection at the facility found no sign of a gunman or a shooting. The San Diego Union-Tribune via AP

SAN DIEGO, United States—Police rushed into a military hospital in San Diego on Tuesday after reports of gunfire, but an initial sweep of the sprawling facility found no sign of a shooting.

A single witness reported hearing three shots in the basement of one of several buildings in the Naval Medical Center complex in southern California, prompting a massive response from authorities.

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Local police, assisted by Navy dogs and California Highway Patrol officers, scoured the building after the call came in around 8:00 am (1600 GMT) but there was no sign of a shooting or any reports of casualties, officials said.

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“They did an initial sweep and they didn’t find anything so they are doing a more thorough sweep,” Navy spokesman Jon Nylander told AFP.

“They have not located any evidence of a shooting having taken place.”

Authorities placed the hospital and surrounding buildings on lockdown and local news footage showed patients and workers in hospital garb—as well as service members in military dress—filing out of the facility with their hands raised as police stood by with assault weapons at the ready.

US law enforcement officers routinely train for “active shooter” scenarios in which an armed person goes on a rampage.

Such events have become all too common in America, still shaken after last month’s mass shooting in San Bernardino, also in southern California.

READ: At least 14 dead in shooting at California disabled center

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In that case, a married couple inspired by Islamic State of Iraq and Syria jihadists slaughtered 14 people in the city east of Los Angeles.

The Naval Medical Center was quick to get word out of a possible shooting, posting a warning on Facebook.

“An active shooter has just been reported in building #26 at Naval Medical Center San Diego. All occupants are advised to run, hide or fight,” the hospital posted on its official Facebook page.

San Diego, the southernmost city on the California coast, has a sprawling military infrastructure and is a major port for the US Navy.

The hospital is located in the city’s Balboa Park, close to San Diego’s famous zoo.

The United States has seen several deadly shootings at military installations in recent years.

In November 2009, US Army psychiatrist Major Nidal Hasan opened fire at his Texas military base, Fort Hood. He killed 13 people and wounded more than 30 more, before being overpowered by police.

READ: US soldier held in new Texas base ‘terror plot’

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In September 2013, Aaron Alexis killed 12 people and wounded eight others at the Washington Navy Yard, just two miles (three kilometers) from the US Capitol building, before he was shot dead by officers.

TAGS: hospital, Military, Navy, shooter

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