A bus driver and passenger opened fire on each other on a moving Charlotte transit bus earlier this month, leaving both injured, transit authorities said.
via: NBC News
Dramatic video shows a bus driver and passenger opening fire on each other on a moving bus in Charlotte, North Carolina, earlier this month following an argument that left both men seriously injured, transit authorities said.
The shootout, which unfolded on May 18 while others were onboard the bus, began after a passenger identified by authorities as Omarri Tobias got up while the vehicle was moving, and asked the driver to let him off between stops, according to Charlotte Area Transit System officials.
The driver, David Fullard, told Tobias he would have to wait until the next designated stop and an “argument ensued,” Brent Cagle, the interim CEO for CATS, said at a news conference.
In video of the altercation released by CATS last week, the bus driver and passenger appear to have an exchange before Tobias can be seen pulling out a gun, with Fullard taking out a firearm right after.
Bullets can then be seen shattering a barrier between the driver and the passenger. It was not immediately clear from the video who fired first. CATS did not immediately respond to an overnight request for comment from NBC News.
Both Tobias and Fullard suffered life-threatening injuries, but are now stable and expected to make full recoveries, Cagle said.
Tobias faces several charges over the incident, including assault with a deadly weapon, he said.
It was not immediately clear if Fullard would face any charges in connection with the incident.
RATP Dev, the third-party operator of the city’s buses, said it had “parted ways” with Fullard after he violated employee policy by carrying a firearm on the job, according to NBC affiliate WCNC, which is based in Charlotte. RATP Dev did not immediately respond to an overnight request for comment from NBC News.
Cagle said an investigation found Fullard did not use any of a number of alarm systems available to bus drivers, according to WCNC. He also said it was standard procedure to not allow passengers off between bus stops, but said drivers can make an allowance if necessary.
Attorney Ken Harris, who represents Fullard, told WCNC the bus driver had worked with CATS for nearly 20 years.
“Mr. Fullard is a long-term employee of the CATS bus system,” Harris said, ahead of the announcement that RATP Dev had parted ways with the bus driver. “He loves his job and he wants to continue to be there and we want to make sure we address any issues that could come up related to this incident.”
Harris also said that incidents of bus drivers being injured and assaulted while doing their jobs have been a persistent issue in Charlotte.
“You have these incidents that happen over and over again, where drivers are being assaulted, shot at, shot, or killed,” Harris said earlier this week. “It creates a situation where drivers fear that they won’t make it home.”
In February 2022, a CATS bus driver, Ethan Rivera, was shot in what authorities said was believed to be a road rage incident. He died from his injuries the next day, according to WCNC.
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