Nashville school shooter carefully plotted attack
that killed six, police say
Three children and three adults killed in attack
Police killed attacker, 28, a former student
Biden repeats his call for meaningful gun control
reform
Martin
Pengelly and agencies
Mon 27 Mar
2023 21.35 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/mar/27/tennessee-nashville-school-shooting-covenant
A former
student killed three children and three adults at a Christian elementary school
in Nashville on Monday, armed with two “assault-style” weapons and a handgun
after elaborately planning the massacre by drawing out a detailed map and
conducting surveillance of the building, police said.
The
shooting at the Covenant school in Nashville was the latest in a series of mass
shootings in a country that has grown increasingly unnerved by bloodshed in
schools.
Officers
shot and killed the attacker at the Covenant school, attached to the Covenant
Presbyterian church in the Tennessee state capital.
Nashville
police identified the victims as Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs and William
Kinney, all nine years old; Cynthia Peak, a substitute teacher, aged 61;
Katherine Koonce, aged 60; and Mike Hill, a custodian, aged 61.
The website
of school, a Presbyterian establishment founded in 2001, lists a Katherine
Koonce as the head of the school. Her LinkedIn online profile says she has led
the school since July 2016.
For Megan
Hill, the day’s agony unfolded over six long hours, marked by posts on Facebook
in which she identified herself as the niece of one of the victims.
“Shooting
at the school where my Dad, my uncle and my stepmom work please pray right
now,” she wrote at about noon local time.
Six hours
later, she posted an update.
“I’m just
in shock and disbelief,” wrote Hill. “My heart is broken I do not understand why
someone would shoot up a school with precious babies inside.”
“My uncle
lost his life in this shooting today,” she wrote. “My mom’s brother Lord help
me and my family please pray for all my cousins.”
Lamenting
the “heartbreaking” attack, Joe Biden repeated his call for Congress to pass
meaningful gun control reform including an assault weapons ban.
“We have to
do more to stop gun violence ripping our communities apart,” the president said
at the White House. “It’s ripping the soul from this nation.”
The
Nashville police chief, John Drake, said: “I was literally moved to tears to
see this and the kids as they were being ushered out of the building.”
In 2020,
guns overtook auto accidents as the leading cause of death among children and
teens.
Rachel
Dibble, who was at the church as families found their children, described the
scene as everyone being in “complete shock”.
“People
were involuntarily trembling,” said Dibble, whose children attend a different
private school in Nashville. “The children … started their morning in their
cute little uniforms, they probably had some Froot Loops and now their whole
lives changed today.”
Dr
Shamendar Talwar, a social psychologist from the United Kingdom who is working
on an unrelated mental health project in Nashville, raced to the church as soon
as he heard news of the shooting to offer help. He said he was one of several
chaplains, psychologists, life coaches and clergy inside supporting the
families.
man holds
head
“All you
can show is that basically that we are all here together … and hold their hand
more than anything else,” he said.
Jozen
Reodica heard the police sirens and fire trucks blaring from outside her office
building nearby. As her building was placed under lockdown, she took out her
phone and recorded the chaos.
“I thought
I would just see this on TV,” she said. “And right now, it’s real.”
From her
office nearby, Kelly Stooksberry could see parents rushing to park their cars
on the side of the road before sprinting to locate their children. She saw one
woman fall to her knees and grab her chest.
“It was
gut-wrenching,” she said.
The shooter
was named as Audrey Elizabeth Hale, 28, and from Nashville.
Drake said
Hale was a former student at the school. He also said Hale identified as
transgender.
Entry was
gained by shooting through a door, Drake said, adding that maps had been drawn
of the school, including entry points, and he said, “We have a manifesto, some
writings that we’re going over.”
Hale had
“no [criminal] history at all”, Drake said, adding that one AR-style weapon in
the attack was a rifle and one a pistol while the other gun was a handgun.
Police believed two of the guns were obtained legally, Drake said.
Authorities
were speaking to the shooter’s father, Drake added.
Don Aaron,
a police spokesperson, said the first call about the shooting came at 10.13am.
The shooter, Aaron said “entered on the lower floor. There were shots all over
the floor before [the shooter] went to the upper level. And it was on the upper
level where [the shooter] was confronted by police and killed.”
The
shooting happened in a “lobby-type area” and “not in a classroom per se”, Aaron
said. The shooter was dead by 10.27am.
Drake said
the school had an active shooter protocol. He said some children “evacuated to
a wood line” behind the school, while some went to a fire hall. After the
shooting, children were seen walking, holding hands and surrounded by police
cars, to the nearby Woodmont Baptist church, to be reunited with parents.
Aaron said
there were no police personnel assigned to the school. Drake said security
footage would be released.
The
shooting was just the latest such horrific event. Last May, in Uvalde, Texas,
19 children and two teachers were killed at an elementary school. More
recently, a six-year-old shot his teacher in Virginia and a high-school student
in Colorado shot two administrators.
According
to the K-12 School Shooting Database resource, there have been at least 89
instances of gun violence at kindergarten through 12th-grade schools or during
school activities in the US this year.
The
Nashville shooting was the 128th US mass shooting this year, according to the
Gun Violence Archive, which defines a mass shooting as one where at least four
people are wounded or killed, not counting the attacker.
The
Covenant School has about 209 students from pre-school through sixth grade and
42 staff members, Aaron said. A woman whose mother teaches at the school told
reporters they texted as the attack took place.
Avery
Myrick said: “She said she was hiding in the closet and that they were shooting
all over, and that they were potentially trying to get into a room. It was
really scary, really sad.”
Hannah
McDonald, a reporter for News Channel 5, told viewers her mother-in-law worked
at the school but was on a break when the shooting happened.
“My
mother-in-law is the front-desk angel,” McDonald said. “The school is kind of
situated sideways, if you will. So the front door is actually on the side of
the building. And that’s where she sits, and so you walk down a long exterior
pathway to the front door, and then you see her smiling face in the morning
there. She was outside the school and she heard gunshots.”
Drake said:
“It could have been far, far worse.”
David
Rausch, director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, said authorities
sent “heartfelt prayers to the families … of these victims”.
He added:
“Now I know there’ll be people who want to criticise us for prayers. That’s the
way we do that in the south. We believe in prayer and we believe in the power
of prayer. So our prayers go out to these families.”
Ramon
Antonio Vargas and the Associated Press contributed reporting


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