UPDATE: New information from police states that the child was not shot, they were injured by debris during the shooting.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A man is facing multiple attempted murder charges after he allegedly shot into a home and injured a woman and a two-year-old.

On March 1, Memphis Police officers responded to a shooting in the 2800 block of Eden Park Drive.

When they arrived, they found a woman with a gunshot wound to her leg. Previous reports stated that a two-year-old was shot in the face, but Memphis Police later corrected the information, noting that the child was not shot but sustained injuries from debris.

The woman told investigators that she was walking into the house and was with the injured toddler and two other juveniles when Jamison Cameron allegedly approached the residence and began firing multiple shots, striking her.

Jamison Cameron. (SCSO)

Memphis Police said Cameron called the woman at the shooting scene and told her “It was an accident” and questioned why she brought his name.

She also told officers that other victims were in the residence, including a five-month-old and a 14-year-old, when the shooting occurred.

The woman told investigators that Cameron is the brother of one of the victims and the cousin of the others.

According to the police report, none of the victims could tell them why he’d shot them or into the residence.

Cameron has been charged with five counts of attempted second-degree murder, five counts of employing a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony, reckless endangerment, and aggravated child abuse and neglect.

Retired Shelby County Sheriff Captain, Bennie Cobb said he can’t wrap his head around this crime.

“It’s very, very disturbing to me as a citizen, number one, as a parent and a grandparent, that somebody would just take that opportunity to indiscriminately shoot into a house full of people, without regards for life,” Cobb said.

Cobb told WREG there are two factors playing recurring roles in nationwide and citywide gun violence crimes.

“We have mental illness that’s running rampant in Shelby County and across the United States,” Cobb said. “And of course, with the ability to get these guns, you don’t have to have a background check, you don’t have to ask some of the questions that you’d have to answer if you had to take a training class to get a handgun permit.”

The permitless gun carry law has been in effect in Tennessee since July of 2021. Throughout the years, some lawmakers have attempted to repeal the legislation, but those attempts have been unsuccessful.

Cobb says the law will not change; therefore, more effort should be put towards alternative forms of gun safety.

“We have to start looking at enforced training that say that, if you gone carry permitless, then you need to take a class that give you an understanding of how dangerous guns are, the consequences behind the violence that’s being perpetrated.”

Cameron is being held on a $750,000 bond and is set to stand before a judge on Monday.

Both shooting victims were listed in non-critical condition. They were released from the hospital on Saturday, police say.