Gunfire Reported Near Camp Shelby for Second Straight Day

Soldiers of Company A, 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment "Desert Rogues," 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, try to escape the heat while refreshing their knowledge concerning warrior skills level 1 and the Ranger Handbook, during an exportable combat training center training event located at Camp Shelby, Miss., June 9. At Camp Shelby, the Rogues will act as the opposing force in support of the 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment, a National Guard unit headquartered in Knoxville, Tenn. This event is of great significance in that it is the first time a battalion from the regular Army has acted as OPFOR for a reserve component unit since this practice was stopped after 9/11 due to the regular Army's high rate of deployment. Not only does it signify that the Army is getting back to the way it used to be before the conflicts, but it also signifies a large step towards embracing the total Army concept. The training exercise is scheduled to be more than a month long, and will be finished in the last week of June. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Richard Wrigley, 2nd ABCT, 3rd ID, Public Affairs NCO)

JACKSON — (CNN) For the second straight day, an unidentified man has fired gunshots near the Camp Shelby military post in southern Mississippi, the National Guard said Wednesday.

The latest gunfire happened about 8 a.m. CT Wednesday in the same area where gunshots were reported on Tuesday, near a military checkpoint east of the base, Mississippi National Guard spokesman Lt. Col. Christian Patterson said.

County authorities and the military are looking for whoever fired the shots, described in both cases as a “white male in a red pickup truck, make and model unknown,” Patterson said.

Information on whether anyone was targeted in either case wasn’t immediately available, though authorities noted that soldiers were at the checkpoint on the county road during Tuesday’s incident.

Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant said Wednesday that all available personnel “will be utilized to locate the suspect” and make an arrest.

“The soldiers at Camp Shelby and across the state can and should take appropriate steps to defend themselves as necessary,” Bryant said.

“This is one of the reasons I recently signed an executive order directing certain National Guard personnel to be armed.”

Wednesday’s shots were “fired into the air,” Patterson said in a news release.

In the first incident, a man driving a pickup allegedly fired shots near two soldiers who were at a checkpoint on a road east of the base, Perry County Sheriff Jimmy Dale Smith said.

Smith said Tuesday evening that it wasn’t clear whether that shooting was intentional or could have been related to hunting.

Smith’s description of the pickup was slightly different than Patterson’s: The sheriff said authorities were looking Tuesday for a maroon pickup with black rims.

Two people investigators questioned Tuesday in connection with another vehicle have been cleared in the case, Smith said.

Active and reserve troops train at the Camp Shelby Joint Forces Training Center, which covers more than 134,000 acres in southern Mississippi about 100 miles from Jackson.

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2015 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. (Photo: CNN)

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