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8-Year-Old Boy Among People Injured By Celebratory Gunfire On New Year’s Eve

An 8-year-old boy was one of two people wounded in Texas after gun owners rang in the new year by firing their weapons into the night air, which was captured in several alarming videos posted on social media.

The child was asleep in his Houston home when a bullet came through the wall and struck him in the hand just before midnight Thursday, authorities said. He was taken to a nearby hospital and is expected to survive, Houston police spokesman John Cannon told HuffPost.

Eleven miles away and about 30 minutes later, a 24-year-old woman was shot in her stomach by a bullet that came through the wall. The woman’s 70-year-old grandfather was detained after witnesses told police he was firing off a gun in the backyard in celebration. The woman was taken to a hospital and is also expected to survive, Cannon said.

Cannon said he was unable to provide an exact number of reported gunfire incidents across Houston on Thursday night and Friday morning, but Police Lt. Emanuel Pavel told local station KTRK that he responded to as many as seven reports.

“It’s unfortunate that, on a day when people should be celebrating and having a good time, they end up, they’re hurting someone else or even killing somebody,” Pavel said.

In Arlington, Texas, police are investigating the shooting death of a 4-year-old boy who was struck while inside of his apartment early Friday. Additional information on that incident, which happened around 12:30 a.m., was not immediately available, a police spokesperson told HuffPost.

The overnight shootings weren’t isolated to Texas.

Videos posted to social media showed guns being fired in various parts of St. Louis, despite local officials’ earlier pleas for residents to “end the tradition of celebratory gunfire.”

Several St. Louis residents told local station KSDK that they planned to leave the city ahead of Thursday night’s celebrations precisely because of the anticipated gunfire.

“I don’t like the fact that I have to leave the city where we live on New Year’s Eve or Fourth of July, but it’s better than me or my kids or my wife getting killed by a stray bullet,” said Bradley Hoffman, who said his car’s windshield was struck by a bullet last New Year’s Eve while it was parked outside his bedroom window.

The exact number of overnight gunfire reports in St. Louis County were not immediately known, though New Year’s Eve “always” brings more gunfire alerts, a spokesperson for the county’s police department told HuffPost.

In Kansas City, Missouri, police on Thursday reminded residents of the dangers of celebratory gunfire by sharing a photo of a bullet hole that they said entered a couple’s bedroom last year while they were sleeping. The hole appears just a few inches from the bed’s headboard.

Elsewhere in the country, a 24-year-old man was hospitalized in Omaha, Nebraska, early Friday after what was initially believed to be a fireworks-related injury turned out to be a gunshot wound. The victim said he did not know how he was injured by gunfire, police said in a report.

When fired into the air, bullets can return to the ground at speeds greater than 200 feet per second, which can cause injury or death, according to a 2004 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The report examined celebratory gunfire in Puerto Rico and said that, in the territory alone, an estimated two people are killed and 25 others wounded by such New Year’s Eve incidents.

Once fired into the air, it typically takes between 20 and 90 seconds for a bullet to return to earth, depending on the angle it was fired at and the gun’s muzzle velocity and caliber, according to a 2017 report by Forbes Magazine.



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