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http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2019225972_robbery22m.html?cmpid=2727
A suspected jewelry-store robber, wearing a white rubber mask and carrying a tray of platinum-colored rings, shot and wounded a hotel security guard Friday morning, but was captured by a group of bystanders.
The wounded man, 35, who works at the Mayflower Hotel, suffered a non-life-threatening wound to his arm, said Deputy Seattle Police Chief Nick Metz. He was taken to Harborview Medical Center in stable condition, according to Kyle Moore, spokesman for the Seattle Fire Department.
The incident began around 10:30 a.m., when a gunshot was fired during a robbery inside Express Jewelers, located on the second floor of Westlake Center, according to police. Bank employees at the shopping mall's Wells Fargo branch heard the gunshot and triggered their panic alarm, which alerted police, Metz said.
The robbery suspect ran eastbound from the mall and was chased by the Mayflower security guard, according to Metz and witnesses.
On the northwest corner of Seventh Avenue and Stewart Street, directly across from the federal courthouse, the robber turned and fired three shots at the pursuing security guard, said Jarome Neil, a 12-year Army veteran, who ducked when he heard the shots.
Neil joined several other men who tackled and held the suspect.
A man wearing a white chef's shirt emerged from nearby Hotel Max and grabbed the robber in a bear hug from behind, Neil said.
Merlyn Parker, a 38-year-old Real Change newspaper vendor, grabbed the robber's arm and shoulder.
"I got him in a headlock and took him to the ground and put my knee on his neck," Neil said. During the scuffle, the robber's handgun dropped to the ground, along with the tray of platinum-colored rings he'd been carrying, according to Parker and Neil.
The men said security guards from the federal courthouse ran across Seventh Avenue and helped them hold down the suspect until Seattle police arrived. The robber had been wearing a white rubber mask, they said.
"He probably had 20 rings, platinum or silver-colored," said Parker, the son of a retired Ferry County sheriff's chief deputy.
"He was fighting hard. It was crazy," said Neil. The mask the robber wore "looked like a Michael Meyers mask," he said, referring to the main character in the Halloween slasher films.
Metz said the men who intervened put themselves in a dangerous spot.
"It's very risky. We tell folks they shouldn't be trying to tackle or chase down anybody," he said. "... It's not a safe thing to do."
Parker said he didn't think twice about becoming involved.
"These people are my people, they're people who help me put food on the table every night," he said of those who work in the area.
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