Marines honored after Wilmington nightclub shooting

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Two Marines received medals after providing emergency aid during a fatal June 6 shooting at a Wilmington, North Carolina, nightclub.

Why this matters

The account shows how military emergency training was applied in a civilian mass-casualty situation. It also documents how the Marine Corps publicly recognized the actions of two service members off duty.

Two U.S. Marines were recognized last month for providing emergency aid after a June 6 shooting at Unhinged Nightclub in Wilmington, North Carolina, where one person was killed.

Cpl. Johnny Tamayo and Cpl. Emily Martinez, both assigned to 3rd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, received the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal and the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal, respectively, according to a Marine Corps release.

The Marines had recently returned from a 10-month deployment and were out with friends when gunfire began inside the nightclub.

Tamayo was upstairs when the shooting started.

“As soon as the gunshots rang out, I already knew what they were,” Tamayo said in the release. “I looked down and saw the victim at the bottom of the staircase. Everybody else had already run out, so I instinctively ran down there.”

According to the release, Tamayo treated the victim, looked for other casualties and possible threats, directed someone to call 911, and used towels to try to control bleeding from a gunshot wound to the victim’s neck.

Martinez was outside when the shots were fired and realized Tamayo had not left the building with the crowd. She went back inside and helped provide emergency aid until police arrived, according to the release.

The victim later died from his injuries.

“They executed exactly how a United States Marine should, and I’m immensely proud of them,” Master Sgt. James Boles, 3/6 communications chief, said in the release.

Both Marines said their response reflected their training.

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