Eyewitnesses of the shootout that killed one of the Boston bombing suspects believe that police officer Richard Donohue was injured and almost killed by his colleagues, who were firing at the fleeing suspect.
In a 10-minute shootout in Watertown, Boston Marathon bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev was fatally injured, while his brother Dzhokhar escaped. Donohue, a 33-year-old transit officer, took a gunshot to his right thigh and suffered severe blood loss that sent him into cardiac arrest and almost killed him.
With a severed femoral vein and artery, the wounded officer lost all of his own blood and his heart stopped beating for 45 minutes before he was resuscitated.
Initial reports made no mention of the cause of Donohue's gunshot wounds, but newly-released eye reports suggest that he was struck by friendly fire. Rob Mullen, a Watertown resident and eyewitness, told the Boston Globe that he watched as all the officers fired simultaneously at the black SUV that the Dzokhar used to escape.
“Every cop out there just unloaded everything he had on the SUV,” Mullen said, recalling the scene as he saw it from the second-floor window of his house on Laurel Street.
Watertown resident Jane Dyson told the Globe that she watched the SUV speed away “with that appeared to be several police officers running close behind, firing weapons, trying desperately to stop the vehicle.”
Up to 300 rounds of ammunition were fired during the violent shoot-out to capture the Boston bombing suspects, but there is little evidence that Dzhokhar was in possession of a gun. The Tsarnaev brothers allegedly set off a number of explosives, including another pressure cooker bomb and pipe bombs.
By the time Donohue was hurt, Tamerlan Tsarnaev was handcuffed, injured and run over by the SUV his younger brother was driving as he tried to escape.