Social media played big role during, after attack on paper
BALTIMORE — Amid a devastating attack that killed five people at a historic Maryland newspaper, journalists at the paper took to social media to seek help and report on the fatal shooting.
In the immediate aftermath of the Thursday afternoon shooting, they identified who was safe and voiced their first waves of grief. They also used social media to explain journalism’s truth-telling mission, trying to demystify what journalists do in an era when they’re often attacked as spreading “fake news.”
News of the Thursday massacre began with a chilling tweet sent at 2:43 p.m. by a reporter at The Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Maryland’s capital. Intern Anthony Messenger told NBC’s “Today” show that he handed his phone to another reporter, who tweeted: “Active shooter 888 Bestgate please help us.” Amid the chaos, reporter Selene San Felice had the bearings to share the newsroom’s street address.
Later in the day, as he waited to be interviewed by investigators, the Annapolis newspaper’s crime and courts reporter tweeted that a “single shooter shot multiple people at my office, some of whom are dead.” The reporter, Phil Davis, revealed that the gunman “shot through the glass door to the office.”