gun violence

Video Shows Moments Before FBI Agent Shot Man at Metro Center Station: Police

The men can be seen shoving one another before they fall over the railing. Sixteen seconds later, one of the men was fatally shot

NBC Universal, Inc. The report suggests that the man shot and killed by an off-duty FBI agent was the aggressor in the situation. News4’s Walter Morris reports that some details were redacted from the report.

Metro Transit Police released video Friday showing the moments leading up to when an off-duty FBI agent fatally shot a man on the Metro Center platform and the chaos that followed.

From two angles, two men can be seen shoving one another before they fall over the railing.

About 16 seconds after they fell, the off-duty agent shot and killed the man, 28-year-old Troy Bullock, police said.

Riders on the crowded Metro platform can be seen running to safety after hearing the gunshots.

Police released the incident report about the fatal encounter between an FBI agent and man at Metro Center station, but what they left out may be just as important as what's in it. News4's Walter Morris reports.

Bullock died in the shooting. The FBI agent suffered non-life threatening injuries, police said. No one else at the station was hurt.

D.C. police released the incident report for the fatal shooting on Saturday. The report redacts the FBI agent’s name and the weapon’s serial number.

Instead of using the agent’s home address, as is typical of these reports, the document lists the agent's place of employment, the FBI’s headquarters in downtown D.C.

Notably, Bullock's criminal history is also included.

News4 reached out to police for comment on the content of the incident report.

An off-duty FBI agent fatally shot a man at Metro Center station, police say. News4's Jackie Bensen has more on how active shooter training helped a witness warn others about the danger.

Police haven't released any information on why the FBI agent shot Bullock or why they appeared to struggle with each other before going over the rail.

A law enforcement source familiar with the investigation told News4 Bullock was engaging with another man on the platform before the FBI agent intervened. Police have interviewed that man, the source said.

Detectives recovered a handgun from Bullock, police said. Authorities have not said if Bullock pulled the gun or whether or not the FBI agent knew Bullock was armed.

The FBI has not released the name of the agent involved.

'It was very scary; I have never seen anything like it'

Witness Lisa Crawford said she was on her phone like many other riders when her train pulled into Metro Center and she looked up.

"It was like a zombie movie,” she said. “People were running for their lives."

Crawford said she yelled, "Everybody get down! Active shooter!"

"I was screaming at the top of my lungs," she said.

Crawford, who said she teaches math at a school near the White House, said an active shooter training video shown at work about a week ago gave her the strength to do it.

"And then the train took off," she said.

When the train got to Gallery Place, people started helping others get up and the train operator told everyone to get off the train, Crawford said.

Two shootings took place hours apart in the Metro system. News4's Walter Morris has the transit agency's response.

"People just ran out the train," she said.

She and others eventually got back on the train and continued their commutes.

"It was very scary; I have never seen anything like it," Crawford said.

DC police, FBI investigate

The Metropolitan Police Department is leading the investigation with the FBI’s cooperation, Benedict said.

"The FBI takes any shooting incident involving our agents or task force members seriously," the FBI Washington Field Office said in a statement.

Investigators processed the scene and interviewed witnesses.

'Gun problem in America'

Metro General Manager Randy Clarke said Thursday shootings in the transit system are the result of the "gun problem in America."

"I don't think this is being political in any nature: We have a gun problem in America," Clarke said. "That's not Metro's problem. We are impacted by that."

"I'm really tired of it," Clarke said, expressing frustration and sadness about the calls he's fielded after violent incidents. "The biggest thing in this job is, what happens when you get a phone call when one of your employees or customers gets killed?"

He went on to praise the actions of the train operator who "sped through that station after she got word ... and kept people out of danger" during the Metro Center shooting, and reassured riders that they are safe on Metro trains and platforms.

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