Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Seattle bus driver shot in torso drives passengers to safety

Several bullet holes can be seen in the driver's side window of a Metro Bus on Northeast 125th Street, between 32nd and 33rd Avenues Northeast after a shooting in Seattle, Wednesday March 27, 2019. (Dean Rutz / associated press)
By Lisa Baumann and Gene Johnson Associated Press

SEATTLE – A Seattle bus driver hailed as a hero for steering his bus away from a gunman who opened fire on him and his passengers says he was just doing his job but is “glad to be alive.”

Eric Stark was hit in the torso by a bullet, but authorities have said he still managed to turn the bus around and drive his passengers to safety from the gunman walking in a neighborhood who went on to kill two men, apparently at random, before he was taken into custody

Stark, 53, “saved lives and took action even after being harmed,” Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan said.

But Stark, recovering Thursday in an area hospital, told ABC’s “Good Morning America” that “it’s what any other driver” would do “if they were physically able.”

The events unfolded at about 4 p.m. Wednesday in Seattle’s Lake City neighborhood, when the gunman walked up to a 56-year-old female driver, shooting and wounding her. The man, identified in jail records as 33-year-old Tad Michael Norman, then walked on and fired at the bus, hitting Stark, authorities said.

“I ducked down really quick for some cover, did, like, a 2-second assessment of my injuries and figured – well, I can breathe, I can think, I can see, and I can talk,” Stark said from his hospital room. “So for me that was enough to go, ‘OK, we’re getting out of here. I’ve gotta get these people out of here.’ ”

Norman then approached a second motorist and opened fire, killing a 50-year-old man, according to police. After officers arrived, the suspect fled in that victim’s vehicle. He drove a few blocks and then collided with another car, killing the 70-year-old male driver, fire department officials said.

Norman was taken into custody after a brief standoff, police said. King County Jail records showed he was booked on investigation of homicide, robbery and assault Thursday after his release from a hospital for treatment of what were characterized as minor injuries.

Witness John Barrett told KOMO-TV that he was in his garage when he heard what sounded like firecrackers.

He went outside and saw a man pointing a gun at people as he walked down a street, “just firing at anything just without any regard.”

None of the passengers aboard the bus driven by Stark was hurt, the King County Metro Transit agency said.

Stark managed to get off the bus and walk to a gurney so paramedics could take him to the hospital, said Kenneth Price, president of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 587, which represents drivers.

“Our thoughts now are with families of those killed and those injured,” Durkan said. “The entire city of Seattle is pulling for them.”