'Daniel Victor Jones' was a former
maintenance worker at a hotel in
Long Beach,
California, who is infamous for committing
suicide in the middle of a busy
Los Angeles transition loop between the Harbor and Century Freeways on
live television in
May 1998. The supposed cause of his suicide was his resentment at his
HMO for apparently inadequately treating him for his
cancer and
HIV infection, as evidenced by a
videotape and a
phone call he made and a banner he presented shortly before he shot himself through the chin. The circumstances surrounding his death being put on live TV led some critics to question the Los Angeles' media's practice of covering live car chases, which the Jones case was initially treated as by television reporters.
Timeline of the incident
According to ''
The Los Angeles Times'', three weeks prior to the incident, Jones told an anonymous friend that he had a growth coming out of his neck, which later turned out to be cancer. According to this friend, Jones felt that he was getting the runaround from his
healthcare insurer. Jones's sister Janet also told the
Associated Press that Jones's best friend revealed to her that her brother was HIV-positive.
At 3:00 p.m. one day in May of 1998, Jones drove his
pickup truck to the transition loop between the Harbor and Century Freeways, accompanied by his dog. He stopped on the loop's
carpool lane, and began aiming a
shotgun at other passing cars, causing motorists to dial
911. Police responded immediately, and
LAPD helicopters flew over the scene, while members of the LAPD's Special Weapons Team began to assemble. News helicopters from
KNBC and
KCBS also arrived on the scene to uncover the unfolding standoff.
Soon after the LAPD shut down the highway, Jones used his
cellular phone to dial 911 himself. According to the dispatcher who received the call, "He was just rambling...He mentioned he was unhappy about HMOs" During his call, Jones fired several rounds, including one that tore a hole through the roof of the truck.
At 3:38, Jones pulled a videotape out of his
knapsack, wrapped in clothing, before putting it back inside the knapsack and throwing it over the loop's median wall onto the freeway below. On the videotape, seen afterwards by police, Jones further expressed his resentment against HMOs and predicted his suicide. After disposing of the knapsack, he exited his vehicle and unfurled a banner onto the empty roadway reading, "HMO's ''[sic]'' are in it for the money. Live free, love safe or die."
Jones returned to his pickup truck, where he ignited a
Molotov cocktail. The ensuing fire engulfed the pickup, and also burned Jones, who caught fire on his hair, pants, and socks. In pain, he peels off the charred socks and pants and then his underwear. Naked from the waist down, he approached the median wall as if considering to jump, making obscene gestures at the helicopters. After a moment, however, he walked away from the wall and returned to his truck, where he retrieved a
shotgun. He leaned the shotgun on the median wall before placing the barrel at his chin and pulling the trigger, killing himself in a graphic fashion.
Aftermath
The fact that Jones's suicide was televised live caused considerable controversy, not only because of the graphic nature of the act, but because the incident occurred at a time when children were watching afternoon
cartoons, which were interrupted at some stations to cover the soon-to-be grisly scene. The incident also called into question the
journalistic merit of constantly covering high-speed car chases, which the news media in Los Angeles is famous for doing and which the Jones incident was initially thought of as.
Trivia
★ The exact moment where Jones killed himself was put into a
montage in
Michael Moore's
documentary ''
Bowling for Columbine''. The montage shows actual footage of murders and suicides committed with guns, including the infamous televised suicide of politician
Budd Dwyer.
See also
★
Budd Dwyer
★
Christine Chubbuck
★
List of unusual deaths
Links
★
Reprint of the ''Los Angeles Times'' story
★
''New York Times'' article on the news coverage of the tragedy