2012年7月23日星期一
Some of the 58 injured survivors of a massacre
Some of the oakley sunglass cheap 58 injured survivors of a massacre inside a suburban Denver movie theater are recounting the hellish chaos that erupted as a black-clad shooter unleashed two canisters of gas and opened fire during the Friday midnight premiere of "Dark Knight Rises." Twelve people died.
Brent Lowak of Bulverde, Texas, went to the movie with his friend Jessica Ghawi, an aspiring sports journalist who recently moved from Texas to Colorado. Lowak, 27, and Ghawi, 24, were sitting in the sixth or seventh row when Lowak heard the hiss of gas from the canisters, his mother, Sue Greene, said Sunday.
Lowak and Ghawi ducked when they discount oakley sunglasses heard the sound, and Ghawi screamed as a bullet pierced her leg, Greene said.
Lowak – who has been studying to become an EMT – applied pressure to her wound as she screamed. Then she stopped and Lowak realized she had been shot again, and she was soon dead.
"Only then did he leave her," Greene said in an interview at Children's Hospital Colorado, where her son is listed in serious condition. "They were best friends," she said.
Lowak realized he too had been shot and oakley rayban couldn't walk. He crawled away and managed to find his way to a van taking victims to the hospital.
He took a few steps on Sunday, his first since the shooting, but Greene said she doesn't think he will be well enough to attend a memorial for Ghawi.
"He wants so badly to be well enough to be at her memorial service," Greene said.
Stephen Barton said he didn't realize how badly he was hurt by the gunfire until he saw the look on others' faces.
"I remember people looking at me and their eyes just widening because I was covered in blood," said Barton, 22, who is in serious condition at the oakley dispatch Medical Center of Aurora. "Then I realized how bad I must have looked and how serious it was."
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