Bramble Park Shooting: 5 hospitalised after bramble park shooting in Madisonville
Bramble Park Shooting: 5 hospitalised after bramble park shooting in Madisonville

Bramble Park Shooting: 5 hospitalised after bramble park shooting in Madisonville

Cincinnati police have not made any arrests for the shooting at Bramble Park that injured five people Saturday. This happened during the Madisonville Day event. The chief of police and the event’s organizers gave updates during a press conference on Sunday. “Everybody should be appalled by what happened yesterday, and everyone should be working towards a solution to bringing justice to those who were shot,” said Cincinnati Police Chief Teresa Theetge. On Saturday around 6:30 p.m., officers responded to Bramble Park for reports of a shooting. Lt. Jonathan Cunningham said in a statement Sunday that four of the victims sustained non-life-threatening injuries, but one person is in critical condition

Madisonville Day event was a ‘family reunion’ for the community

Organizers described the event as a family reunion. “Everybody smiling, kids having fun, everybody hugging, just excited just to see we have great things in Madisonville,” said Madisonville Day organizer Damir Gooch. The organizers say they grew up in the area and they wanted to show the youth positive things happen in their community. “There’s hope out here still, not just bad things happen, [we are] giving them a lot of what we wasn’t fortunate to get,” Gooch explained. Gooch is Madisonville Day’s head organizer and he says he is devastated about the shooting. “Sad seeing kids on the ground crying,” he says. “That made everything feel like… really just break your heart.” There was no police presence at the park before the shooting happened.

‘This problem is not going to be solved by police alone’

When asked if police should be at every large event like this, Chief Theetge said it’s not plausible. “This problem is not going to be solved by police alone,” Chief Theetge said. “Our police are understaffed and extremely tired now, and the summer has just begun.” Chief Theetge says despite what happened Saturday, Cincinnati needs to continue to have events like this for kids and teens. “All I ask [is] all 52 neighborhoods continue to do programming for youth, continue to engage, get volunteers involved because we don’t have enough officers to cover every event that we wish people would have in the city,” she added.