Bloody bandages still littered the parking lot of Minneapolis’ Boom Island Park when park keeper Isaac Bruestle and a co-worker arrived to clean up the gruesome mess left after Sunday night’s chaotic shooting that left one woman dead and five men injured.
The park workers were tasked with clearing the debris Monday morning after the police tape came down. Disturbed by the sight, they were also annoyed that the cleanup of bloody medical trash, syringes and oxygen masks was assigned to them and not removed already by the medical responders, police or the firefighters who hosed down the asphalt.
“It’s just hard to see that,” Bruestle said. “I knew there was going to be a ton of stuff here, but I didn’t really want to have to clean that up.”
More than 100 people were at a gathering near the parking lot of the riverside park Sunday night when a barrage of shots rang out, creating what Police Chief Brian O’Hara described as a “war zone.” Surveillance camera footage from a nearby house showed several bursts of gunfire, followed by several cars speeding out of the parking lot towards the intersection of Sibley Street NE. and 8th Avenue NE.
Killed in the shooting was 23-year-old Stageina Whiting of Brooklyn Center, while one of the men suffered life-threatening injuries. No arrests have been announced.
In a statement Tuesday, Parks Superintendent Al Bangoura said that “following Sunday’s horrific incident, which does not appear to be a random shooting at this time, we installed a mobile camera and increased patrols at Boom Island Park.”
“We will continue to consider other safety measures, as needed, including future closing of parking lots.”
The shooting and its aftermath were familiar to one in 2022, when seven people were shot and critically wounded during a large July 4 gathering.