"The Vigilantes immediately stopped the show and Tom was relieved of his weapon," Bob Randall, the city's marshall, said in a statement cited by the Tucson Sentinel. "During inspection of his weapon, it was discovered that there was one live round in the cylinder with five expended casings indicating the gun had held six live rounds prior to the skit."
In addition, a woman identified as Debbie Mitchell was grazed by a bullet. She, however, refused treatment.
Other bullets reportedly struck local businesses and nearby buildings.
Tombstone is known for its historical reenactments of Old West gunfights, and Sunday's incident happened during the city's annual "Helldorado Days" celebration. Next week marks the anniversary of the Oct. 26, 1881 "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral."
Mayor Dusty Escapule told the Sentinel that the Vigilantes won't be allowed to perform reenactments "until it can be determined all weapons are safely loaded with blank ammunition as required."
Also on HuffPost:
1981: The Attempted Assassination Of President Ronald Reagan
1993: The Brady Handgun Violence Act
1994: The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act
2007: The U.S. Court of Appeals For The District Of Columbia Rules In Favor Of Dick Heller
2008: Supreme Court Strikes Down D.C. Handgun Ban As Unconstitutional
Nvidia's quarterly results blew away estimates again on Wednesday, and as the company moves to its next-generation chips its CEO sees supply, not demand, serving as its biggest challenge.
Marvin Harrison Jr., Fanatics said, “rejected or ignored every request” from the company while refusing to fulfill obligations of their contract that was signed last May.
All five of these hitters were drafted highly in fantasy baseball leagues. So far, they have not lived up to their ADPs — and that's an understatement. Scott Pianowski analyzes.
Clark set the Indiana Fever’s franchise record for turnovers (10), shot 5-of-15 from the floor and struggled with the Connecticut Sun’s physical defense.