CORRECTS SPELLING TO SHERIE - Sherie Williams, left, and Theresa Williams, center, speak to the media as they leave the Baylor University Medical Center, Friday, July 8, 2016, in Dallas. Theresa Williams said her sister Shetamia Taylor, who was attending a rally with her four teenage sons in downtown Dallas, was shot in one of her legs. |
DALLAS
(AP) -- A Texas woman who was wounded when she threw herself over her
son during the attack on a Dallas protest march said Sunday she would go
to another demonstration to show her boys that she's not a quitter.
Shetamia
Taylor, who attended the march with her four sons, also thanked Dallas
police for protecting her in the chaos that erupted Thursday night. She
says officers shielded her as bullets whizzed through the air around
them.
"They had no regard for their own life. They stayed there with us. They surrounded my son and I," she said.
Taylor,
in a wheelchair with her right leg immobilized, told a news conference
at Baylor University Medical Center that she always held police officers
"in a very high place" and notes that her youngest son wants to be a
cop.
"I never had an issue with police officers," she said. "If anything it made my admiration for them greater."
Taylor,
who is black, said she went to the march to protest the killings of
black men by police in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and outside St. Paul,
Minnesota, and previous encounters between blacks and police.
She
said the attack on the march in Dallas, which killed five officers and
injured seven others, wouldn't deter her from demonstrating again. She
wants her sons - ages 12, 13, 15 and 17 - to know it was an isolated
incident.
"I don't want them to think that I am a quitter, because I am not," she said.
Taylor said she and her sons were getting ready to leave the march when they heard two shots and saw an officer fall.
"As he was going down, he said, 'He has a gun. Run,'" she recalled.
As they fled, she felt a bullet hit her in the back of the leg.
She said she tackled her 15-year-old son, Andrew, and "laid on top of him."
An
officer then jumped on top of them. "And there was another one at our
feet. And there was another one over our heads. And there were several
of them lined against the wall," she said. "And they stayed there with
us. And I saw another officer get shot right in front of me."
Two of her other sons escaped through a parking garage, while the fourth fled the gunfire with another woman he didn't know.
Taylor
suffered a bad fracture of her tibia just below her right knee, one of
her doctors said. It was repaired with a plate and screws, but it will
be two to three months before she can put weight on her leg.
Taylor says she wonders where the country is going to go from here.
"I'm just a mother and a wife," she said. "I'm not an activist. I'm not a politician. I just want to protect my family."
She stressed that most police officers deserve praise and not all of them are "out to get us."
"These
are the people you call when you're in a situation. You gotta remember
that," she said. "What are we gonna do if they stop policing? What are
we gonna do? ... Who are you gonna call?"