Luis Manuel Medina Explained

Luis Manuel Medina
Birth Date:March 31, 1968
Birth Place:Consuelo, San Pedro de Macorís Province, Dominican Republic
Death Date:February 14, 2017 (age 49)
Death Place:San Pedro de Macorís, San Pedro de Macorís Province, Dominican Republic
Death Cause:Fatal gunshot wound
Body Discovered:103.5 FM Radio San Pedro de Macoris
Resting Place:Consuelo, San Pedro de Macorís Province, Dominican Republic
Resting Place Coordinates:18.5593° N by 69.2967° W
Nationality:Dominican
Education:Universidad Central del Este
Occupation:Broadcast journalist, host and sports announcer
Years Active:25 years
Employer:103.5 FM HICC, as well as Estrellas Orientales
Known For:"Milenio Caliente" radio program and as the voice of the Estrellas Orientales baseball team
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Luis Manuel Medina (March 31, 1968  - February 14, 2017) was a Dominican broadcast journalist and host for the FM radio station 103.5 HICC in San Pedro de Macorís, Dominican Republic. He was fatally shot along with his producer during a Facebook live-streaming video.[1] [2]

Personal life

Luis Manuel Medina was a native of the Dominican Republic, born on March 31, 1968. Medina was raised in Consuelo, San Pedro de Macorís Province.[3] He graduated from the communications program at Universidad Central del Este, a private university in his home province.[4] He is buried in Consuelo, San Pedro de Macorís Province.

Career

Medina was a broadcast journalist for twenty-five years.[5] He was employed by 103.5 HICC, an FM radio station located in San Pedro de Macorís Province.[6] At 103.5 FM, Medina co-hosted a popular morning radio program titled Milenio Caliente (Hot Millennium in English),[7] where he often gave live news updates. He also hosted other radio shows for 103.5 FM.[8] Before he worked for 103.5, Medina was employed by Radio Dial and worked on the news program Reportero 670. Medina was also widely known as the voice of the Dominican professional baseball team, Estrellas Orientales.[9]

Death

Luis Manuel Medina was fatally shot on February 14, 2017, during a Facebook live-streaming broadcast in the Centro Comercial del Este area.[10] The attacker first opened fire on Medina's co-producer, Leonidas Martínez, in the station while Medina was reading the news for a live news update for Milenio Caliente.[11] Gunshots could be heard in the background along with a female voice yelling "Shots! Shots! Shots!"[12] The attacker then entered the recording studio and shot and killed Medina. Both Medina and Martínez were killed during the attack. A station secretary, Dayana García de Fernandez, was injured in the stomach and required surgery at the Centro Médico Macoríx, a hospital.[13] [14] The attacker was later identified as José Rodríguez, a 59-year-old man who had a grievance with the pair over either land or as a result of their media work, such as a report from a week earlier about polluted lands.[15]

Context

The murder of journalists in the Dominican Republic is rare. In Medina's case, there was no immediate motive, although Medina had criticized a political movement in San Pedro de Macorís Province.

Journalists killed on air or in front of a camera have become more common since 2015. In the United States, journalist Alison Parker and camera operator Adam Ward were killed on air on August 26, 2015. The Committee to Protect Journalists has highlighted the danger to journalists.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dominican Republic radio hosts killed during Facebook Live broadcast. Eric Levenson . Sarah Faidell. CNN.
  2. Web site: Journalist killed while broadcasting on Facebook Live. 14 February 2017.
  3. Web site: Crime of two speakers causes consternation. Listin Diario. 2017-02-15.
  4. Web site: CENTRAL UNIVERSITY OF THE EAST (UCE). Univerzities. /
  5. Web site: Death of Dominican Journalists Shows Dangers of Press Freedom - MediaFile. 2 March 2017.
  6. News: Radio journalists shot dead live on air. 15 February 2017. BBC News.
  7. News: Facebook Live Killing of Dominican Journalists Leads to Arrest of 3 Men. Kimiko de. Freytas-Tamura. 15 February 2017. The New York Times.
  8. Web site: Radio hosts killed during Facebook Live. 19 February 2017.
  9. Web site: Two journalists shot dead during Facebook Live broadcast. . 15 February 2017.
  10. Web site: Facebook Live captures four fatal shootings in one day. .
  11. Web site: Murder of journalists in Dominican Republic caught on Facebook Live. 2017-02-15.
  12. Web site: 2 Dominican journalists killed during live transmission. . 2017-02-14.
  13. Web site: Two radio journalists shot and killed during live broadcast in the Dominican Republic - Committee to Protect Journalists. cpj.org.
  14. Web site: 2 Journalists Shot Dead In Dominican Republic During Facebook Live Stream. Nick. Visser. 15 February 2017. Huff Post.
  15. News: Journalists shot dead during Facebook Live video in Dominican Republic. Nina. Lakhani. agencies. 14 February 2017. www.theguardian.com. The Guardian.