Seven Lessons About Covering Crime from a 50-Year News Veteran

He’s been beaten and berated for doing his job, but despite the dangers, Bob Aaron says he still loves being a T.V. reporter.

Those dangers made international news when two young reporters in Roanoke, Va. were shot and killed by a former co-worker on live T.V.

On this week’s Front Porch Podcast, Aaron tells funny and touching stories from his 50 years as a reporter, and answers the question, what keeps you going?

On being attacked on assignment in Clay County last summer

Aaron was investigating a complaint about animals being mistreated in a remote area of Clay County, W.Va. The farmer’s son confronted him.

“I decided I wasn’t going to get out of the road. I was on public property,” Aaron said. “I had a couple of second thoughts when I saw the guy was about 100 pounds heavier than me.

Man attacking Bob Aaron with tripod.

“He actually picked up the tripod I was using and swung it at me,” hitting Aaron and sending him to the hospital.

The man received three months home confinement and must pay the station for damaging the equipment.

When Sheriff’s deputies allowed him to get beat up

When Aaron worked in Waterloo, Iowa, he went to a mobile home park where a man was holding his wife with high-powered rifle.

Two of the man’s brothers jumped Aaron. It was cold and icy, a real “hockey fight,” Aaron said. But none of the deputies came to his aid.

“I was amazed that nobody was helping me,” he said. “Everyone was perfectly happy to let this guy beat me up while I was out doing my job.”

Why? Because police felt his station has compromised an earlier investigation.

When a dangerous situation was diffused by a lack of skill

Aaron went to cover a murder on the Logan-Boone County line, and ran into a potentially dangerous situation.

“The relatives were throwing rocks at me,” he said. “But their aim was pretty bad, so it didn’t become an issue.”

On covering labor strikes

One strike in Rum Creek, West Virginia became violent.  Miners took their stand on a low-water bridge.

They would use steel cable to chain cars on the bridge.  Coal trucks became battering rams, knocking the cars aside, while picketers ripped mirrors off the trucks.

One day, police attempted to clear the bridge. A woman was knocked over, and the crowd became agitated. Aaron worried about his safety.

“But instead, they push me up to the front, to get good video of what’s going on.”

On covering accident scenes with respect for the victims

“People say, ‘That’s my wife, that’s my brother, you can’t shoot that.’” Aaron said.

“You certainly don’t want to get in a fight with the father of some little child who’s been killed in an accident because you’re taking pictures there. You try to be tasteful and understanding,” he said.

“We’re not going to take pictures of an uncovered, dead drowning victim, naked, being loaded in an ambulance.”

On how the Virginia shooting changes things

WCHS staff have received training from police about “situational awareness.” They’ve been advised to carry an emergency trauma kit to stop bleeding.

Aaron says they were told this: If you are conscious five seconds after something happens, you have 80 percent chance of surviving it, but you have to do something to take care of yourself.

“The troubling thing about this is, maybe this is the first shooting of its kind, like Columbine was the first shooting of its kind. And you always wonder if some nutjob will decide to take advantage of this situation and do this someplace else.”

On why he keeps at it, after five decades

“I guess I like to be where the action is. I like to be on the street.”

Bob Aaron is a senior reporter/producer for WCHS/WVAH-TV in Charleston-Huntington. He’s worked for WCHS for 33 years.

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Two Va. TV Station Employees Shot During Live Broadcast

The general manager of a TV station in Virginia says two crew members were fatally shot on air in central Virginia.
Jeffrey A. Marks, general manager of WDBJ-TV, identified the two killed as Alison Parker and Adam Ward. Parker was 24, Ward 27.

 
The station says in tweets and in a story on its website that the incident happened Wednesday morning at a shopping center on a lake in Moneta.

Update: 3:02 p.m.:

Officials say they don’t yet know a motive in the fatal on-air shooting of a reporter and a cameraman from a TV station in Virginia.

Authorities say they know the suspect, Vester Flanagan, was a former employee at the station, WDBJ-TV. They say they don’t know if the shooting was racially motivated. Flanagan was black and had formerly complained about racial bias at the station.

Flanagan died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound hours after the Wednesday morning shooting. He went by Bryce Williams on the air. 

 
Update: 3:00 p.m.:

 
A law enforcement official says the suspect in the on-air shooting of two TV station employees died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Franklin County Sheriff W.Q. “Bill” Overton Jr. gave that detail Wednesday during a news conference.

Officials say suspect Vester Flanagan died at 1:26 Wednesday at a hospital in northern Virginia. Authorities say the man killed his former co-workers – reporter Alison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward – during a live broadcast for WDBJ-TV on Wednesday morning outside a shopping mall.

The station has said Flanagan went by Bryce Williams on the air. While he worked at the station, they say, he was angry and difficult to work with. He was fired. 

 
Update: 12:20 p.m.:
 
As the Virginia TV station that saw a reporter and cameraman fatally shot in a live broadcast went live for its noon broadcast, the station shared more details about the suspect.

WDBJ-TV said Wednesday that suspect 41-year-old Vester Lee Flanagan II appeared on air at the station as Bryce Williams.  

Video of the shooting was posted on the Twitter account and Facebook page of someone under the name Bryce Williams. The video showed an outstretched arm holding the handgun and firing repeatedly at Parker as she tried to run away.

Also, ABC News reported that someone using the name Bryce Williams sent the organization a lengthy fax that it has turned over to authorities.

WDBJ-TV general manager Jeffrey Marks and an anchor spoke to viewers for the Wednesday broadcast, several hours after the early morning shooting. They told viewers more about the victims –  reporter Alison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward. They spoke about the victims as family members at the station. Both were dating co-workers.  

 
Update: 11:45 a.m.:
 
An official has identified the suspect in the fatal on-air shooting of a reporter and cameraman from a TV station in central Virginia.

Becky Coyner with dispatch and records at the Augusta County Sheriff’s Office says the suspect is 41-year-old Vester Lee Flanagan II, of Roanoke.  

The suspect has not yet been apprehended by police.

 
Original Post 10:50 a.m.:

 
The incident was caught on video. In it, Parker is interviewing someone about tourism on Bridgewater Plaza in Franklin County. She was smiling when suddenly at least eight shots were heard. The camera appeared to be dropped on the ground. The reporter can be heard screaming.

The station then switches back to a shot of an anchor back at the station, who has a shocked expression on her face.

Marks later appeared on the air and said neither the station nor officials know the motive for the shooting or any identify of a suspect.

Later, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe identified the shooter as a “disgruntled” TV station employee. 

McAuliffe said on a WTOP radio show police are pursuing the suspect on westbound I-64 and an arrest is “imminent.”

Marks said employees of the Virginia TV station are now being told to stay in the building are are being provided with police protection.

The station is based in Roanoke, Virginia, and serves the southwest and central part of the state. The shopping mall is just off Smith Mountain Lake.
 
Moneta is about 25 miles southeast of Roanoke.
 

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