Wild shootout in downtown Seattle leaves 1 dead, 7 injured

SEATTLE — Three people, including a 9-year-old boy, remained hospitalized Thursday morning after police say several people in a dispute opened fire, killing a woman, in the busiest part of downtown Seattle at the height of the Wednesday evening commute.

Authorities began receiving calls of multiple gunshot victims at about 5:00 p.m., said Seattle Fire Chief Harold Scoggins. The person who died was a woman in her 40s, fire officials told the Seattle Times.

Seven people were treated for gunshot wounds, said Harborview Medical Center spokeswoman Susan Gregg.

Of those still hospitalized, the condition of a 55-year-old woman was upgraded from critical condition to serious and a 32-year-old man and the boy were listed in satisfactory condition.

Video from the scene showed several people firing weapons after the dispute outside a McDonald’s. Police, including homicide and gang units, were investigating, Gregg said. No arrests were immediately reported.

“This is not a random incident, there were multiple people involved,”′ said Police Chief Carmen Best. “There was a dispute that happened in front of the McDonald’s, people pulled out guns, shots rang out, people ran in various directions.”

Officers attend to one of several shooting victims, outside of McDonald’s on Third Avenue, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2020, in Seattle. The window of the restaurant behind them was shattered after a gunman opened fire in the heavily trafficked downtown area. (David Silver via AP)

It was the third downtown Seattle shooting in two days. Police found a man with a gunshot wound in a mall stairwell Tuesday, and he later died at a hospital. Police shot a person in another area of downtown earlier on Wednesday.

Samantha Cook said she was refilling her transit card in a nearby station when she heard gunfire.

“I was on the first set of escalators,” Cook told the newspaper. “There were a lot of gunshots that started going off — maybe 10 or 11. It was just rapid fire.”

Tyler Parsons told the Times he was was working nearby at a coffee shop when he saw people drop to the ground. Some took cover behind the cash register where he worked and Parsons took five or six customers to a storage area.

The shooting was “just kind of terrifying. Terrifying it’s so close,” Parsons said.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said in a statement that he was “horrified and dismayed to hear about the shooting.”

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