In Atlanta shooting case, the police called for help for themselves and not their shooting victim

The Atlanta Journal-Constitutional reported Sunday in the SWAT shooting case Police recording reveals urgency after shooting. The press finally got the tapes after an open records request. The officers appear concerned for themselves and not for the elderly person they shot during the drug raid.

There is a clear sense of urgency in their voices on the recorded conversations, and moments of brief shouting can be heard as officers work to coordinate their efforts.

About eight minutes after the initial call for help, a dispatcher repeatedly asks about the condition of the wounded officers. In response, another officer lists their injuries, saying, “We’ve got one in the arm, one in the leg, one in the shoulder.”

There are many references to the wounded officers, but little talk of Johnston. Officers refer to her as a “perp,” or perpetrator. There were no calls for medical assistance for Johnston, who was pronounced dead at the scene.

Maybe they already knew she was dead, but the article mentions nothing about her condition.

At any rate, the police fraternity would be more concerned for the fellow officers that were shot than the person they shot. The fact she fired a gun at them was reason enough to ignore her bullet wounds?

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