Shocking video captures shots ringing out and crowd parting in panic at deadly Super Bowl parade
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A Kansas City Chiefs fan hoping to film “generic footage” of “Travis Kelce yelling” at his team’s Super Bowl celebration instead captured the horrifying moment shots rang out — and the sea of packed fans parted in panic.
The shocking video footage shows the densely packed crowd decked out in white, red and gold at Wednesday’s celebration that ended with a mom dead and 22 others injured.
The cameraman, who asked to remain anonymous, said he set the camera high just to get “generic footage,” specifically hoping to capture the team’s beloved tight end Kelce in celebration mode.
Instead, it caught the shocking sound of bullets cracking out — and “what it looks like when someone fires [around] 20 bullets in 3 seconds in the middle of the crowd,” he told Storyful.
A barrage of gunshots can be heard firing off about a minute and 40 seconds into the clip, which shows one section of the celebration — attended by hundreds of thousands of fans — quickly starting to clear. Frantic fans can be heard screaming out in fear as a large section of the parade route is vacated.
The Kansas City Police Department said one person died and a total of 22 were wounded by gunfire. Children’s Mercy Hospital Kansas City said that the facility is treating nine kids with gunshot wounds.
Lisa Lopez-Galvan, a mother of two and a dedicated Chiefs fan, died during surgery at a local hospital after being shot in the abdomen.
Police announced at an evening press conference that one person was killed and 22 others injured, including nine kids, when multiple gunmen opened fire at the end of the victory parade — attended by thousands of fans.
Three people were taken into custody by police following the shooting.
The shooting is not terror-related, law enforcement sources told The Post.
Follow The Post’s coverage of the mass shooting at the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl parade:
“I’m angry at what happened today. The people who came to this celebration should expect a safe environment,” Kansas City Police Chief Stacey Graves told reporters at a press conference.
“Because of bad actors, which were very few, this tragedy occurred even in the presence of uniformed law enforcement officers,” she said, noting there were some 800 cops deployed in the area at the time of the shooting.
Video posted on social media shows police officers and military personnel sprinting into the train station shortly after shots were fired.
KCPD confirmed that no officers were involved in the shooting.
One person, possibly a gunman, was chased down and tackled by heroic Chiefs fans before police took them into custody, another video shows.
Graves said her department was working to determine whether the person in the video was a person they have in custody.
The suspects have not been identified.
The shooting remains under investigation.
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