NewsJune 15, 2017

ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- A rifle-wielding attacker opened fire on Republican lawmakers as they practiced for a charity baseball game Wednesday, critically wounding House GOP Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana and hitting aides and Capitol police as congressmen and others dove for cover...

By ERICA WERNER and CHAD DAY ~ Associated Press
A Capitol Hill Police officer walks past an automobile with the driver's window damaged at the scene Wednesday of a shooting in Alexandria, Virginia, where House Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Lousiana was shot at a Congressional baseball practice.
A Capitol Hill Police officer walks past an automobile with the driver's window damaged at the scene Wednesday of a shooting in Alexandria, Virginia, where House Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Lousiana was shot at a Congressional baseball practice.Cliff Owen ~ Associated Press

ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- A rifle-wielding attacker opened fire on Republican lawmakers as they practiced for a charity baseball game Wednesday, critically wounding House GOP Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana and hitting aides and Capitol police as congressmen and others dove for cover.

The assailant, who had nursed grievances against President Donald Trump and the GOP, fought a running gun battle with police before he, too, was shot and later died.

Colleagues said Scalise had been fielding balls at second base at a local park in Alexandria, just across the Potomac River from the nation's capital, as the Republicans practiced for their annual game with Democrats.

Scalise dragged himself away from the infield, leaving a trail of blood, before fellow lawmakers could rush to his assistance.

He was listed in critical condition, but his office said before he underwent surgery for a wound in his hip he was in good spirits and spoke with his wife by telephone.

FBI Evidence Response Team members mark evidence at the scene Wednesday of the multiple shooting in Alexandria, Virginia.
FBI Evidence Response Team members mark evidence at the scene Wednesday of the multiple shooting in Alexandria, Virginia.Cliff Owen ~ Associated Press

The shooter was identified as James T. Hodgkinson, a 66-year-old home inspector from Belleville, Illinois, near St. Louis, who had several minor run-ins with the law in recent years and belonged to a Facebook group called "Terminate the Republican Party."

He had been living out of his van in the Alexandria area in recent months, the FBI said.

Capitol Police officers who were in Scalise's security detail wounded the shooter.

He later died of his injuries, Trump told the nation from the White House.

"Everyone on that field is a public servant," Trump said, his tone somber. "Their sacrifice makes democracy possible."

James T. Hodgkinson
James T. Hodgkinson

Lawmakers noted their fortune in having armed protectors on hand -- "Thank God," they exclaimed over and over -- and said otherwise the shooter would have been able to take a huge deadly toll.

The events left the capital horrified and stunned, and prompted immediate reflection on the hostility and vitriol in American politics. Lawmakers called for a new dialogue on lowering the partisan temperature, and Trump urged Americans to come together as he assumed the role of national unifier for one of the first times in his presidency.

Proceedings were canceled for the day in the House. Instead, Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California issued their own calls for unity. "An attack on one of us is an attack on all of us," Ryan said, to applause.

Shortly after the shooting, Bernie Sanders, the former candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, said on the Senate floor the shooter apparently was a volunteer for his campaign last year. Sanders said he denounced the violence "in the strongest possible terms."

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Scalise, 51, the No. 3 House Republican leader, was first elected in 2008. The lawmaker is known for his love of baseball and handed out commemorative bats when he secured the job of House whip several years ago.

Texas Rep. Roger Williams said one of his aides, Zack Barth, was shot but was doing well and expected to recover fully. Two Capitol Police officers sustained relatively minor injuries. A former congressional aide was hospitalized.

The shooting occurred at a popular park and baseball complex where Republican lawmakers and others were gathered for a morning practice about 7 a.m. They were in good spirits despite the heat and humidity as they prepared for the annual congressional baseball match that pits Republicans against Democrats. The popular annual face-off, which raises money for charity, is scheduled for this evening at Nationals Park across the Potomac River in Washington and will go forward as planned.

Hodgkinson has been in the area since March, living out of his van, said Washington FBI special agent in charge Tim Slater.

Hodgkinson's apparent Facebook page included criticism of Republicans and the Trump administration. But Slater said authorities still were working to determine a motive and had no indication Hodgkinson knew about the baseball practice ahead of time.

The GOP lawmakers' team was taking batting practice when gunshots rang out and chaos erupted. After Scalise was hit, said Rep. Mo Brooks, an Alabama Republican, the congressman "crawled into the outfield, leaving a trail of blood."

"We started giving him the liquids; I put pressure on his wound in his hip," Brooks said.

The gunman had a rifle and "a lot of ammo," said Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, who was at the practice.

Texas Rep. Joe Barton, still in his baseball uniform, told reporters Scalise's security detail, Capitol Hill police and Alexandria police returned fire in a battle that lasted as long as 10 minutes and included dozens of shots.

"The security detail saved a lot of lives," he said. "It was scary."

Lawmakers took cover in the dugout. Barton said his son, Jack, got under an SUV.

Texas Rep. Mike Conaway described what sounded like an explosion, then lawmakers scattering off the field as police serached for the gunman and engaged him.

"The guy's down to a handgun, he dropped his rifle, they shoot him, I go over there, they put him in handcuffs," Conaway said, adding if the shooter had "gotten inside the fence, where a bunch of guys were holed up in the dugout, it would have been like shooting fish in a barrel."

Rep. Jeff Duncan of South Carolina said he had just left the practice and encountered the apparent gunman in the parking lot before the shooting. The man calmly asked which party's lawmakers were practicing and Duncan told him they were the Republicans. The man thanked him.

The wounded Capitol Police officers were identified as David Bailey, who was treated for a minor injury, and Crystal Griner, who was shot in the ankle.

Also wounded was former congressional aide Matt Mika, who works for Tyson Foods in its Washington office.

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