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Virginia State Trooper, Gunman Dead Following Shooting At Greyhound Bus Station

RICHMOND, Va. (CBSNewYork/AP) -- A Virginia state trooper and a suspect are dead following a shooting at a Richmond bus station.

Virginia State Police spokesperson Corinne Geller said the gunman was killed after opening fire on a trooper inside a Greyhound Bus station during a training exercise. Two other troopers returned fire.

The trooper who was shot died Thursday evening at a hospital.

Geller said two civilians were also injured, but had non-life-threatening injuries. It was not clear if they had been shot.

Broadcast images showed numerous police cars and heavily armed officers at the scene.

Leigha Schilling, who was between stops on her bus trip from New York to South Carolina, told The Associated Press that she was smoking a cigarette outside the station Thursday when she heard banging. She went back inside briefly and saw people lying on the ground and what appeared to be blood on the floor. A security guard ordered her to get on the floor and she ran back outside, where she heard several shots, she said.

"I was terrified," she said. "I didn't know what was going on."

Charles Leazott works in the marketing department at Electrical Equipment Company, across the street from the bus station. "I glanced out my office window and saw, no exaggeration, what looked to me to be every police officer in the city of Richmond," he told the AP.

Leazott said emergency teams "ran in with stretchers and, in what seemed like an amazingly short period of time, they were coming back out with people on the stretchers."

Vincent Smith was working next door to the Greyhound station when he heard sirens and saw police cars buzzing by.

"The police units just poured in like a river," said Smith, who works at the U-Haul Moving and Storage facility. "I went to the end of the lot and there must have been 30 units just a block away."

Smith said he saw police officers carrying shields and assault weapons. An officer came by and ordered him and his co-workers to stay inside and lock the doors until they're told it was safe again. By late afternoon, he said he had been locked inside for about an hour and a half.

City Councilwoman Reva Trammell called it "the saddest day in the city of Richmond."

"State troopers doing their job and innocent people shot," she said. "Why? This was a senseless act."

The Greyhound Bus Station is located west of the city's downtown area, across from Richmond's minor league baseball stadium and within a former industrial area. It is located on a main thoroughfare connecting a residential district to the stadium and nearby restaurants.

Greyhound issued a statement saying that the Richmond, Virginia, station was "closed until further notice."

(TM and © Copyright 2016 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2016 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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