Sacramento police confirmed three gunshots were fired at a local ABC station Friday, Sept. 19 amid nationwide outrage at the network's decision to suspend "Jimmy Kimmel Live!"
At least three bullets struck the ABC10 television station with one hitting the lobby window shortly around 1:30 p.m. local time, Sacramento Police Department Public Information Officer Anthony Gamble confirmed at a news conference.
There were no injuries despite the building being occupied at the time, according to Gamble.
Detectives are searching for the vehicle the suspect used in the shooting and Gamble clarified the investigation is too preliminary to determine a motive yet.
"I don't know if this was targeted or if this was a random act," Gamble told reporters Friday afternoon. "But what I could tell you is our detectives are on the scene and they're going to be conducting follow up while we're going to try to figure who is responsible for this."
A day earlier on Thursday, Sept 18, demonstrators protested outside the TV station to condemn ABC's announcement that Jimmy Kimmel's late night talk show would be "pre-empted indefinitely." The suspension followed outrage over comments the Emmy-winning comedian made about the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk on a Monday, Sept. 15 episode.
On Sept. 17, Nexstar Media announced it would not air episodes of Kimmel's show across its ABC affiliate stations and Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr seemingly threatened the network, Disney and Kimmel during commentator Benny Johnson's YouTube show saying "we can do this the easy way or the hard way."
The ABC10 studio is home to local station KXTV, Channel 10, which is not owned by Disney despite the entertainment giant owning ABC.
Gamble confirmed that there were no protests outside the ABC10 building at the time of the shooting.
Around 15 people demonstrators participated in the Thursday protest for about an hour, the Sacramento Bee reported.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Gunfire strikes ABC10 building amid outrage over 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' suspension
Reporting by Anthony Robledo, USA TODAY / USA TODAY
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