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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Suspect charged with 5 murders in attack on Maryland newsroom

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ANNAPOLIS: A Maryland man was charged with multiple counts of murder on Friday, a day after police say he rampaged through a newsroom in Annapolis with a shotgun and killed five people in one of the deadliest attacks on journalists in US history.


Police identified the suspect as Jarrod Ramos, 38, from Laurel, 40 km west of Annapolis. He faces five counts of first degree murder in Anne Arundel County criminal court where a bail hearing was scheduled later on Friday. Ramos had a longstanding grudge against the newspaper and unsuccessfully sued it for defamation in 2012 over an article that reported how he harassed a former high school classmate, court records showed.


He is accused of entering the Capital Gazette office on Thursday afternoon and opening fire through a glass door, hunting for victims and spraying the newsroom with gunfire as reporters hid under their desks and begged for help on social media, police and witnesses said.


Rob Hiaasen, 59, Wendi Winters, 65, Rebecca Smith, 34, Gerald Fischman, 61, and John McNamara were shot and killed. All were journalists except for Smith who was a sales assistant, police said.


The Capital newspaper, part of the Gazette group, published an edition on Friday with photographs of each of the victims and a headline “5 shot dead at The Capital” on its front page.


The newspaper’s editors left the editorial page blank with a note saying that they were speechless. Photographs that were widely shared on social media showed newspaper staffers working on laptops in a parking garage to produce Friday’s edition while they waited to learn the fate of colleagues after the shooting.


Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley said he was so proud of the journalists who had “soldiered on.” “These guys, they don’t make a lot of money. They do journalism because they love what they do. And they got a newspaper out today,” Buckley told Fox News.


A vigil for the victims was planned later on Friday, Annapolis city officials said on Twitter. Ramos brought a defamation lawsuit in 2012 against Eric Hartley, a former staff writer and columnist with Capital Gazette, and Thomas Marquardt, then its editor and publisher, a court filing showed.


Neither Hartley nor Marquardt is still employed by the paper or were at its office on Thursday. An article by Hartley had contended that Ramos had harassed a woman on Facebook and that he had pleaded guilty to criminal harassment, according to a legal document.


The court agreed the article was accurate and based on public records, the document showed. In 2015 Maryland’s second-highest court upheld the ruling, rejecting Ramos’s suit. Authorities responded to the scene within a minute of the shooting, and Ramos was arrested while also hiding under a desk with the shotgun on the floor nearby, police said.


After the shooting, police in Baltimore and New York City deployed extra officers outside major media outlets as a precaution.


Capital Gazette runs several newspapers out of its Annapolis office. They include one of the oldest newspapers in the United States, The Gazette, which traces its origins back to 1727. — Reuters


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