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Bus driver shooting in Ohio probed as possible hate crime

DAYTON, Ohio - Authorities said Wednesday that they are investigating whether the shooting of a bus driver who said a book of Bible verses in his pocket helped stop two bullets could have been a hate crime.

Bus driver Rickey Wagoner, who is white, told Dayton police that he was outside his bus early Monday when three black men shot at him, with two bullets hitting the book in his shirt pocket and one hitting his leg. He said he was also stabbed in the arm.

Wagoner, 49, was released from the hospital Tuesday.

Police Chief Richard Biehl said Wednesday that he became concerned about the possibility of a hate crime after reading the initial police report and that he forwarded the report to the FBI's Dayton office.

"They are working with us," he said.

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Police say it was this book that Rickey Wagoner says was in his shirt pocket when he was shot. Two bullet holes can be observed in the book. CBS affiliate WHIO
According to a police report obtained by CBS affiliate WHIO, Wagoner told police he believed the shooting might have been part of a gang initiation. Wagoner told investigators he heard one of the suspects tell another to kill him "if you want to be all the way in the club" and that they were there to "shoot a polar bear" - street lingo for a white person, reports the station.

Biehl told the station police are looking into the street gang initiation as well.

Biehl said police recovered a .25-caliber semi-automatic pistol and a knife along with four spent rounds and three live rounds from the gun. He said the spent rounds match the number of shots heard on an audio recording from the bus.

"We are looking to get the audio and video of the bus recording enhanced," he said.

Biehl said there were no witnesses and no video of the shooting.

Police are analyzing evidence that includes the knife, shell casings, bullets and the gun.

Wagoner, a driver for the Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority, said he stopped the bus to check a mechanical problem around 5 a.m. Monday when the men approached him. Wagoner told police he fought back and grabbed the gun and that the men fled. Wagoner told police he fired at them before driving the bus to safety and calling for help.

He described the attackers as young black males wearing dark blue bandanas that covered their faces. He said they were likely in their late teens and fled in a dark-colored 1990s model Ford, reports WHIO.

Wagoner said in his 911 call that he felt two shots to his chest.

"It just feels like I've been hit with a sledgehammer," Wagoner said on the 911 call.

Police said two small-caliber bullets hit the booklet called "The Message," which has Bible verses in contemporary language, and were found lodged inside the book.

Police on Wednesday displayed a photo of the book that showed where two bullets entered through its cover. When asked about the book's thickness, police used as an example a book that appeared to be about an inch thick.

Wagoner told police he just started carrying the book about a week earlier.

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