Chief Contee said the fact that the gunfire appeared to have been directed randomly toward people on the street speaks to “the depravity of some of the individuals we have to face in our communities.”
For hours after the shooting, dozens of police cars and emergency vehicles remained on Connecticut Avenue, with several blocks still closed to traffic. Additional emergency vehicles, including a truck adorned with the insignia of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, also arrived on the scene.
Laila, a freshman at the Edmund Burke School who declined to share her last name, said she was walking from a CVS store toward the school when she heard the first round of shots. She thought it was construction noise.
“Then the second round of shots happened and my friends were running,” she wrote in a message on Instagram. She and others were told that there was a shooter in the area. She and her friends ran to her house nearby, she said.
Parents waited for their children outside the school. The police said that a family reunification site had been established at the Cleveland Park Library, on the 3300 block of Connecticut Avenue.
One woman, who asked to be identified only by her first name, Birtukan, said she was walking to pick up her 13-year-old daughter at Edmund Burke around 3:30 p.m. when her daughter texted her to say not to come to the school.
“Are you safe,” the text read. “I love you.”
The shooting happened near student housing at the University of the District of Columbia, the university said on Twitter.