A Metro mechanic is dead and three other people are injured after a gunman opened fire at Potomac Avenue station in Southeast D.C. early Wednesday. D.C. police arrested Isaiah Trotman, 31, of Southeast D.C., in connection to the shooting, according to a news release. Trotman is charged with first-degree murder while armed, kidnapping while armed and assault with a dangerous weapon (gun). What D.C. police Executive Assistant Chief Ashan Benedict termed a “series of individual events,” began when the suspect brandished a gun while engaging with passengers on a Metrobus. Detectives said they believe the gunman followed one of the riders off the bus and shot them in the leg before entering the station.
“He’s walking around, brandishing a firearm, and just randomly engaging people in conversation, he’s clearly agitated about something,” Benedict said, addressing media on Wednesday morning. After shooting a second person in the leg at a fare machine, the gunman reached the platform and confronted a woman. Witnessing this, Benedict said two Metro employees attempted to intervene — one of whom was shot and killed. 
I just left meeting with a group of @wmata team members, many of whom worked with our hero colleague Mr. Cunningham. Their care for each other will get us through this tragedy. A request to our customers, please show patience and grace to our team as we mourn & recover. Thx you🙏
— Randy Clarke (@wmataGM) February 2, 2023
Mary Whelan, one of Cunningham’s longtime neighbors, told WTOP news partner NBC Washington that she was devastated by the news of his death, but not surprised to hear that he died trying to save the lives of others. “I see [Cunningham] come and go everyday to work. Everyday he pulls in with a truck. And to think that he left today and he didn’t come back, that he was doing something for another human being … He was helping people. He didn’t have to do that.” Neighbor Eleanor Adcock said Cunningham “looked out for his family and he looked out for the neighborhood … Obviously, he looked out for strangers, too.” WTOP’s John Domen contributed to this report.
