Tag: school shooting

  • Guns at home of Nashville school shooting attacker seized

    Guns at home of Nashville school shooting attacker seized

    An ex-student opened fire at a school in Nashville, Tennessee, in the US, killing three children and three adults.

    The Covenant School, a private Christian school with pupils ranging in age from three to eleven, was the scene of the attack.

    The three dead students were all nine years old.

    According to police, the suspect entered the school through a door and opened fire. Officers found other weapons during a search of their residence.

    William Kinney, Evelyn Dieckhaus, and Hallie Scruggs are the three children who were killed.

    The adult victims were identified as Cynthia Peak, 61, Mike Hill, 61, and Katherine Koonce, 60.

    The suspect has been identified as 28-year-old Audrey Hale, officers said.

    There has been some confusion about Hale’s gender identity – with police initially describing the attacker as a woman, and later saying that Hale identified as transgender.

    A police spokesperson told Washington Post that Hale “is a biological woman who, on a social media profile, used male pronouns”.

    The shooter was armed with three guns, including a semi-automatic rifle, and was shot dead by police.

    They had left a manifesto and had drawn a detailed map of the school, with entry points. Police are now studying those documents.

    Hale, who had no criminal record, was a former student at the school and officers said they believe “resentment” may have been a motive.

    School buses with children arrive at Woodmont Baptist Church to be reunited with their families after a mass shooting at The Covenant School
    Image caption,School buses with children arrive at a church to be reunited with their families after the shooting

    Police received the first call about the incident at 10:13 local time (15:13 GMT) on Monday.

    The suspect drove to the school and got in by firing through one of the school doors, which were all locked.

    Video later released by Nashville police show Hale using a gun to gain entry by shattering glass panes on the front doors, then wandering the school’s deserted corridors – at one point walking past a room labelled “Children’s Ministry”.

    In the CCTV footage, Hale is wearing what looks like a protective vest and carrying an assault-style rifle in one hand, with a second, similar weapon also visible hanging from the left hip.

    Hale fired shots on the ground floor before moving to the upper floor.

    As police cars arrived, Hale fired on them, striking one in the windscreen, said police.

    One officer was injured by broken glass. Police rushed inside and shot the suspect dead at 10:27.

    A search of a nearby parked car led officers to “firmly believe” that Hale was a former student of the school, said police.

    Police spoke with the attacker’s father during a search of a nearby home that was listed as the shooter’s address.

    Nashville Police Chief John Drake said investigators there found a manifesto and “a map of how all of this was going to play out”, including entry and exit points at the school building.

    He also said the shooter had conducted surveillance while planning the attack.

    In a search of the shooter’s home, more weapons were recovered, in addition to the ones used in the attack, including a sawed-off shotgun and a second shotgun.

    Hale’s mother, Norma Hale, told ABC News: “It is very, very difficult right now”, before asking for privacy.

    A handout photo made available by the Metro Nashville Police Department showing bullet hits in arriving police vehicles
    Image caption,A police handout photo shows bullet holes in arriving police vehicles

    The Presbyterian-affiliated Covenant School is located in the upmarket Green Hills neighbourhood, south of central Nashville.

    In a statement, the school said “our community is heartbroken”.

    “We are grieving tremendous loss and are in shock coming out of the terror that shattered our school and church.”

    The mother of one pupil said her son had been left traumatised. “I think he’s doing better now that he knows that the shooter is dead,” Shaundelle Brooks told BBC News.

    “These are conversations we shouldn’t be having,” she added. “We’re failing our children.”

    Hours after the shooting, a memorial service for the victims was held at the nearby Woodmont Christian Church.

    Senior minister Clay Stauffer tearfully said that Evelyn Dieckhaus’s sister, who is 11, had plans to be baptised in a few weeks, according to local outlet the Tennessean.

    Evelyn’s sister cried as she said, “I don’t want to be an only child.”

    People attend a vigil at Woodmont Christian for those who were killed in a mass shooting at The Covenant School
    Image caption,Vigils took place at the Woodmont Christian Church

    President Joe Biden called the shooting a “family’s worst nightmare”.

    “We have to do more to stop gun violence,” he said, once again urging Congress to pass tougher gun control laws. “It is ripping our communities apart, and ripping at the very soul of this nation.”

    The attack was America’s 129th mass shooting of 2023, according to Gun Violence Archive, a non-profit that tracks gun violence data.

    According to data compiled by Education Week, there have been 12 school shootings that have resulted in deaths or injuries in the US this year up until the end of last week.

  • School shootings: At least 3 people killed and 11 others injured in Brazil

    Local authorities in the Brazilian state of Espirito Santo said that a shooter opened fire at two schools on Friday, leaving at least three people dead and 11 others hurt.

    The attacks happened in the little town of Aracruz, which is located 50 miles north of Vitoria, the state seat.

    Police have detained the alleged shooter, who was shown on security tape with a semi-automatic pistol, dressing in uniform, and hiding his face. Authorities have not yet named the culprit, but the 16-year-old has been recognized by local media, including CNN affiliate CNN Brasil.

    The governor said the attacks took place at the Primo Bitti school and the Praia de Coqueiral Educational Center.

    Police officers on the scene at the Primo Bitti school on Friday.
    Police officers on the scene at the Primo Bitti school on Friday. Kadija Fernandes/AFP/Getty Images

    Speaking to the media, Public Safety minister Marcio Celante said police believe the suspect acted alone based on security video but acknowledged that further investigation was needed to ascertain more details on the incidents.

    Celante also revealed some of what the security video showed.

    “The first criminal action was to access the school by breaking the padlock. He had access to the teachers’ room,” Celante said, adding that “afterward, he moved to another school, where he made more victims.”

    Brazil’s president-elect, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, called the incident an “absurd tragedy.”

    “It’s with sadness that I was informed about the attacks at the Aracruz schools in Espirito Santo. My solidarity goes to the family of the victims in this absurd tragedy,” Lula tweeted.

    Local residents gather outside the police station where the alleged perpetrator of two school shootings is being held in Aracruz.
    Local residents gather outside the police station where the alleged perpetrator of two school shootings is being held in Aracruz. Kadija Fernandes/AFP/Getty Images

    Brazilian minister Victor Godoy also joined his government peers in expressing his sympathies.

    “My condolences to the parents, relatives, and employees of the Primo Bitti State Elementary and Middle School and the Praia de Coqueiral Educational Center, in Aracruz. I submit for the record my repudiation of this manifestation of violence,” Godoy wrote on Twitter.

     

  • Michigan school shooting: A teen has pleaded guilty to the murder of classmates

    A Michigan teenager has pleaded guilty to killing four pupils and wounding seven others in a high school shooting rampage.

    Ethan Crumbley, 16, is being tried as an adult on terrorist and first-degree murder charges.

    He was 15 when he opened fire at Oxford High School in November 2021, about 30 miles north of Detroit.

    The gunman faces a possible life sentence without parole.

    On Monday, Crumbley pleaded guilty in a Michigan court to 24 charges, including one count of terrorism, four counts of first-degree murder, seven counts of assault with intent to murder, and 12 counts of possession of a firearm.

    The terrorism charge is an unusual one in US school shooting cases. Prosecutors said they brought the charge forward to acknowledge the impact the shooting rampage had on the community at large.

    The gunman agreed that on 30 November 2021, he packed a handgun and ammunition in his backpack and brought it to school.

    He then loaded the firearm in the bathroom before firing more than 30 shots at staff and students in the school hallway.

    Four students were killed in the shooting rampage: Tate Myre, 16, Madisyn Baldwin, 17, Hana St Juliana, 14, and Justin Shilling, 17. Six other students and a teacher were wounded.

    Prosecutors have argued the attack was “absolutely pre-meditated”, saying Crumble had spoken about killing students the night before the shooting.

    “This was not an impulsive act,” said Oakland Country prosecutor Karen McDonald in December 2021 when the charges were first announced.

    The gunman’s parents, James, and Jennifer Crumbley, are also facing four counts of involuntary manslaughter.

    Prosecutors have argued that they ignored warning signs of violence and did not store the gun their son used in a safe place. They have both pleaded not guilty.

    Crumbley used a semi-automatic handgun that his father purchased for him as a Christmas gift four days before the shooting.

    The case appears to be the first in the US in which the parents of a young school shooter have also been charged.

    Earlier this year, the gunman’s attorney said they would pursue an insanity defence. Instead, he entered a guilty plea.

    Prosecutors said on Friday that no plea deals, reductions, or sentencing agreements were made in the case.

    The gunman is expected to appear in court again in February 2023, where victims of the shooting will have an opportunity to deliver impact statements. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled at a later date.