Investigators believe that the store was chosen randomly and that the incident was not a hate crime.
Police officers arrive at the scene of an active shooting in Jersey City, New Jersey. Pic/AFP
At least six people, including one police officer, were killed in Jersey City, New Jersey, on Tuesday in a series of gunfights that turned a kosher market place into a battleground and placed a nearby Catholic school into lockdown.
ADVERTISEMENT
Officials said that those deceased included three people in the market as well as two suspected shooters, The New York Times reported.
The slain police officer, Detective Joe Seals, was a longtime veteran with the Jersey City Police Department, according to Chief Mike Kelly.
There was "no indication of terrorism," an official said at a news conference.
Law enforcement officials said that the officer was killed while trying to intercept the two suspects at a nearby cemetery.
The gunmen then fled in a truck and eventually ended up at the kosher supermarket, where they opened fire on police officers and civilians, officials said.
Investigators believe that the store was chosen randomly and that the incident was not a hate crime.
For more than an hour, loud exchanges of gunfire rang out in the Greenville neighbourhood of Jersey City, which is just across the Hudson River from Lower Manhattan. Helicopters circled overhead as police officers swarmed the streets.
The shooting started around 12:30 p.m. (local time), according to officials.
Jersey City's mayor, Steven Fulop, said that there were two separate incidents involved in the shootout. The first was at Bay View Cemetery, and the second took place at the kosher market near the intersection of Martin Luther King Drive and Bayview Avenue.
Governor Philip D. Murphy said in a statement: "Our thoughts and prayers are with the men and women of the Jersey City Police Department, especially with the officers shot during this standoff, and with the residents and schoolchildren currently under lockdown."
Twelve public schools, including the Sacred Heart Catholic School, were placed on lockdown during the attack, a spokeswoman said. The students there had not been harmed.
The shootout and police siege plunged the Greenville neighbourhood of gentrifying Jersey City, a residential area with a diverse population, including a budding community of ultra-Orthodox Jews, into chaos, fear and confusion.
Catch up on all the latest Crime, National, International and Hatke news here. Also, download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates