Current:Home > reviewsIn the chaos of the Kansas City parade shooting, he’s hit and doesn’t know where his kids are -Keystone Capital Education
In the chaos of the Kansas City parade shooting, he’s hit and doesn’t know where his kids are
View
Date:2025-04-23 10:08:26
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jacob Gooch was having what was sure to be the best day of his year, hanging out with his wife and children and friends in the massive, happy, high-fiving crowd of fellow Kansas City Chiefs fans at the parade celebrating their Super Bowl victory. Then he heard “pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop,” and saw flying debris and people coming toward him.
He didn’t realize it was gunshots until after he felt his ankle or foot burning. He tried to run but collapsed and army-crawled up a median. People asked him what was happening, and he told them, get down; get away! His wife was there, and she had been hit. His daughter and two sons? Where were they? And why couldn’t he walk?
“It was bullets, and it was panic, and it was like, ‘Oh, are they going to shoot again?’ ” he said Thursday, the day after the parade. “We had to get our kids and take cover, and I couldn’t help get our kids, and that killed me. I had to sit there and just wonder what was going to happen next.”
Gooch, his wife and his oldest son, 13, were among 23 people shot at the end of Wednesday’s parade, one of them fatally: Lisa Lopez-Galvan, a 43-year-old DJ known as Lisa G. and host of a local radio show on Tejano music.
Police say the shooting appears to have stemmed from a dispute among several people in a crowd of perhaps a million people watching the parade. Two juveniles face what prosecutors said where “gun-related and resisting arrest” charges. Gooch said his wife and daughter saw someone pull a gun.
Gooch was shot in the ankle, and the bullet broke a couple of bones before exiting through his foot. His wife was shot in the calf but could walk. His oldest son has a bullet in his foot. Officers or paramedics got them into a medical tent, and they eventially went to a hospital.
Gooch, a 37-year-old resident of Leavenworth, Kansas, about 25 miles northwest of Union Station, related his experiences in an Associated Press interview outside his apartment, his crutches leaning against the door jamb behind him. He wore a Chiefs cap and T-shirt.
He said he, his family and friends were in a crowd leaving the celebration in front of Union Station when the shooting started.
“We had heard a lady telling a guy, ‘Not right now. This isn’t the time or this isn’t the place,’ or something like that. And then pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop. You know, now, in my head, I’m thinking it’s fireworks,” Gooch said. “What I’m about to describe is all within, like, four seconds, real quick.”
Gooch said he is expecting three to six months of physical rehabilitation for his injuries, and he will be off work. His disability benefits were arranged quickly because he messaged his boss after getting shot — and, he said, did a Snapchat professionally.
“I don’t want people to be scared. I mean, this could happen anywhere at any time. It’s like, OK, I’m scared. I just gotta keep going,” he said.
Gooch said his family is now unsure about hanging out outside Union Station at another Super Bowl parade. He is not, and he expects to go back for a parade for another championship next year.
“I took a bullet for y’all. Y’all better go back next year,” Gooch said.
____
Hanna reported from Topeka, Kansas. Associated Press writers Trisha Ahmed in St. Paul, Minnesota, contributed to this story.
____
Ahmed is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Pregnant Sienna Miller Addresses 14-Year Age Gap With Boyfriend Oli Green
- Secret filming in sports isn't limited to football. It's just hard to prove.
- Geminids meteor shower peaks this week under dark skies
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- St. Louis Blues fire Stanley Cup champion coach Craig Berube
- A volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island is sacred to spiritual practitioners and treasured by astronomers
- See Kate McKinnon Transform Into Home Alone's Kevin McCallister For Saturday Night Live
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Missouri launches a prescription drug database to help doctors spot opioid addictions
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Ancestry, 23&Me and when genetic screening gifts aren't fun anymore
- Man shot to death at large Minneapolis homeless encampment that has been slated for closure
- Fed holds rates steady as inflation eases, forecasts 3 cuts in 2024
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Andre Braugher was a pioneer in playing smart, driven, flawed Black characters
- Author Cait Corrain loses book deal after creating fake profiles for bad reviews on Goodreads
- Oklahoma City voters approve sales tax for $900 million arena to keep NBA’s Thunder through 2050
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Comedian Leslie Liao talks creative process, growing up in Orange County as child of immigrant parents
State tax collectors push struggling people deeper into hardship
'Stressed': 12 hilarious Elf on the Shelf parent rants to brighten your day
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Australian court overturns woman’s 2-decade-old convictions in deaths of her 4 children
Technology to stop drunk drivers could be coming to every new car in the nation
The Netherlands, South Korea step up strategic partnership including cooperation on semiconductors