Five dead in shooting attack in Maryland newsroom
Lynne Griffin pays her respects at a makeshift memorial near the Capital newspaper offices, where five people were shot and killed Thursday in Annapolis, Md. Griffin was a journalism student under John McNamara, who was one of the people killed at the paper.
(Mark Wilson / Getty Images)A resident buys a copy of the Capital newspaper in Annapolis, Md., a day after five journalists were shot dead in the newsroom.
(Mandel Ngan / AFP/Getty Images)A woman delivers flowers at a memorial to shooting victims at the Capital newspaper in Annapolis, Md.
(Rod Lamkey Jr. / EPA / Shutterstock)Photographer Joshua McKerrow, left, and reporter Chase Cook with the Capital work on putting out the newspaper while awaiting news from their colleagues in Annapolis, Md.
(Ivan Couronne / AFP/Getty Images)Law enforcement officers respond to the deadly shooting at the building that houses the Capital, a daily newspaper in Annapolis, Md.
(Saul Loeb / AFP/Getty Images)Law enforcement officers respond to a shooting at the Capital, a daily newspaper in Annapolis, Md., that killed five.
(Saul Loeb / AFP/Getty Images)Maryland state police officers patrol the area near the scene of a shooting at the Capital newspaper.
(Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press)Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan speaks about the shooting at a news conference in Annapolis.
(Saul Loeb / AFP/Getty Images)The scene outside the Capital newspaper building.
(Joshua McKerrow / Baltimore Sun)Police secure the area outside the building where the shooting occurred.
(Susan Walsh / Associated Press)Law enforcement officers converge at the site of the shooting.
(Susan Walsh / Associated Press)Emergency personnel congregate outside the Capital newspaper building.
(Alex Wroblewski / Getty Images)A New York police officer stands guard in front of ABC headquarters. Security was increased at media locations in Manhattan after a fatal shooting at a newspaper building in Maryland.
(Spencer Platt / Getty Images)New York City police take precautionary measures by assigning officers to news outlets in the wake of the shooting at the Capital newspaper in Annapolis, Md. Here, officers stand in front of the New York Times building on Eighth Avenue.
(Peter Foley / EPA)