An unidentified gunman on Wednesday shot dead a reporter and a cameraman on live television when they were interviewing a businesswoman, stunning viewers across the US.
Alison Parker was doing the interview at about 6.45 a.m. at Bridgewater Plaza near Moneta, Virginia, when shots rang out. Both women screamed, CNN reported.
As the camera fell to the ground, the audience caught the briefest glimpse of a man who appeared to be pointing a gun towards the downed cameraman.
The station immediately cut away to a shocked anchor in the studio of WDBJ channel. Reporter Parker, 24, and cameraman Adam Ward, 27, were killed.
The woman being interviewed, Vicki Gardner, executive director of the Smith Mountain Lake Regional Chamber of Commerce, was shot in the back and was in surgery.
The gunman was believed to have fired six or seven times, WDBJ general manager Jeff Marks said.
The assailant was on the run, media reports said. A massive manhunt was launched to track him down. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives as well as the FBI were taking part in the investigation.
It is with extreme sadness that we report WDBJ7's Alison Parker and Adam Ward were killed in an attack this morning. http://t.co/oC9s4vLJXV
— WDBJ7 (@WDBJ7) August 26, 2015
All schools in the area were shut down.
Authorities know the identity of the man believed to be the shooter, a law enforcement official told CNN. "We do not know the motive," Marks said.
This is the suspected shooter, Vester Flanigan, who is also known as Bryce Williams. He is a former WDBJ7 employee. pic.twitter.com/ngXrqHVLmw
— WDBJ7 (@WDBJ7) August 26, 2015
He called the twin murders a "terrible crime against two fine journalists".
"Our hearts are broken," Marks said on air, explaining that Parker's and Ward's colleagues were "holding back tears".
Parker was the morning reporter for the Roanoke station and a native of Virginia. She started with WDBJ as an intern, her biography on the station's website said.
She previously worked with another CNN affiliate, WCTI, in Jacksonville, North Carolina.
She was a graduate of James Madison University's School of Media Arts and Design in Harrisonburg.