LOS ANGELES — Video from cameras worn by deputies who responded to a mass shooting at a Southern California bar in 2018 and recordings of calls for help released Tuesday captured the chaos, horror and confusion of the massacre that left a dozen people dead.
Terrified patrons hiding from a gunman still stalking victims reported the shooting in whispers to dispatchers, while others sobbed over the trauma of an event still unfolding. Officers encountered patrons running for their lives and a man bleeding in the parking lot while friends tried to save him.
The footage and audio from the Borderline Bar and Grill shooting was released Tuesday by the Ventura County sheriff's after a court fight by The Associated Press and other news outlets who sought the evidence under public records laws.
While the evidence was documented in a more than 400-page report on the shooting released in July, it was the first time the video and call recordings were released.
Investigators concluded that Ian David Long, 28, who served as a Marine in Afghanistan, felt college students disdained veterans and targeted the Thousand Oaks country bar because it was student night. Long took his own life as police surrounded the building on Nov. 7, 2018.
As lines rang off the hook at a sheriff's call dispatch center, a woman reporting the shooting whispered: "We're hiding. The guy's probably still here."
When a dispatcher asked another woman if she saw the shooting, she responded: "It's still happening!"
Patrons were still running for cover when the first officers arrived.