The Delaware Gazette

Man fatally shoots self on TV after Ariz. chase

BOB CHRISTIE

DAVID BAUDER

Asso­ci­ated Press

PHOENIX — A man fatally shot him­self in the head Fri­day on live national tele­vi­sion at the end of a high-speed car­jack­ing chase that began in Phoenix and ended about 90 min­utes later within 80 miles of the Cal­i­for­nia border.

Fox News was cov­er­ing the chase that began about mid­day using a live heli­copter shot from Phoenix affil­i­ate KSAZ-TV. The man dri­ving a copper-colored four-door sedan stopped, ran into the desert and placed a hand­gun to his head and fired.

The man was declared dead at the scene and hasn’t yet been iden­ti­fied, accord­ing to Sgt. Tommy Thomp­son, a Phoenix police spokesman.

Fox News anchor Shep­ard Smith told view­ers that the video was sup­posed to be on a 10-second delay so it could be cut off from air­ing if some­thing went awry.

“We really messed up, and we’re all very sorry,” Smith said.

Fox apol­o­gized for show­ing the vio­lence on air.

“We took every pre­cau­tion to avoid any such live inci­dent by putting the heli­copter pic­tures on a five sec­ond delay,” said Michael Clemente, exec­u­tive vice pres­i­dent of news edi­to­r­ial. “Unfor­tu­nately, this mis­take was the result of a severe human error and we apol­o­gize for what view­ers ulti­mately saw on the screen.”

More fre­quently than its rivals, Fox News Chan­nel picks up car chases from its local affil­i­ates and airs them live. It’s grip­ping tele­vi­sion, a live mys­tery with no clear res­o­lu­tion, and often pro­vides a short-term rat­ings boost as view­ers tune in to see how it ends. Crit­ics say the chases them­selves rarely rise to the level of national news. The Phoenix sta­tion was not air­ing the chase live when it ended.

Thomp­son said the man allegedly stole a car from a cou­ple at gun­point out­side a Phoenix restau­rant just before 11 a.m. MST.

Police offi­cers located the vehi­cle and began a pur­suit and the man fired sev­eral shots, Thomp­son said. He said the shots hit the police vehi­cle and the offi­cers escaped injury.

The sus­pect headed west on Inter­state 10, then pulled onto a dirt road that Thomp­son said was “70 to 80 miles east of the Cal­i­for­nia line.”

“He got out of the car and shot him­self,” Thomp­son said. “Efforts to revive him were not suc­cess­ful and he was dead at the scene. We don’t have an ID yet.”

Fox returned repeat­edly to shots show­ing the car pass­ing big-rig trucks that typ­i­cally travel at about 70 mph as if they were stand­ing still.

Police cars did not appear to be imme­di­ately behind the car dur­ing most of the chase.

Shep­ard Smith was nar­rat­ing the video and clearly had his doubts about what was being shown from the moment the man stopped the car. “This scares me,” he said.

“You wait for the end of these things and you worry about how they may end up,” he said.

“This makes me a lit­tle ner­vous, I got to tell you. A lit­tle nervous.”

The video showed the man run­ning errat­i­cally in a field before putting the gun to his head and fir­ing. He fell to the ground.

Fox’s pic­ture quickly cut to Smith, who was shout­ing “get off, get off, get off, get off.”

After the com­mer­cial break, Smith apol­o­gized repeatedly.

“That didn’t belong on TV. We took every pre­cau­tion we knew how to take to keep that from being on TV and I per­son­ally apol­o­gize to you that that hap­pened,” he said.

AP News Posted by on Sep 28 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

Leave a Reply

 

Search Archive

Search by Date
Search by Category
Search with Google

Open M - F 8am to 5pm | 740-363-1161 | 40 N. Sandusky Street, Suite 202, Delaware, OH 43015

We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our Web site. For more information click here.
Click on the following for legal information: Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2010 - 2012, Ohio Community Media