Michigan school shooting leaves three students
dead and eight wounded
Students report there had been rumors of possible
violence at the school ‘for a long time’
Maya Yang
and agencies
Wed 1 Dec
2021 02.22 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/nov/30/michigan-school-shooting-oxford
A
15-year-old student opened fire at his Michigan high school on Tuesday, killing
three other students and wounding eight other people, authorities say.
Oakland
county undersheriff Mike McCabe identified the three students who were killed
as a 16-year-old boy and two girls, ages 14 and 17. He said two of the wounded
were undergoing surgery as of Tuesday evening and six others were in stable
condition. One of the people wounded was a schoolteacher, authorities said.
The
suspect’s motives for the attack at Oxford high school in Oxford Township, near
Detroit, were not yet known, McCabe said at a news conference.
“A
15-year-old sophomore student of Oxford high school has been taken into custody
and the handgun was recovered,” a statement from the sheriff’s office said.
“There was no resistance during the arrest and the suspect has asked for a
lawyer and has not made any statements as to a motive.”
McCabe said
investigators would be looking through social media posts for any evidence of a
possible motive. McCabe said the suspect’s parents visited him where he is
being held and advised their son not to talk to investigators, as is his right.
He said as far as he knows, the suspect had no prior run-ins with law
enforcement.
The
sheriff’s office said the first call to emergency services was placed at
12.51pm “about an active shooter at Oxford high school”, adding that the
dispatch “received over 100 911 calls during the incident”. According to police,
the incident unfolded in about five minutes and about 15 to 20 shots were
fired.
Oxford
Township is a small town of about 22,000 people located roughly 30 miles north
of Detroit. More than 100 police officers, including the FBI special agent in
charge, and 60 ambulances responded to the incident.
Officers
arrested the suspect and recovered a semi-automatic handgun, the sheriff’s
office said, adding that it did not think there had been more than one
attacker. Authorities did not immediately identify the suspected shooter.
A medical
helicopter landed shortly after 2pm in the parking lot of the school.
“I’m
shocked,” said Tim Throne, Oxford community schools superintendent. “It’s
devastating,” he said, adding that the school does not have metal detectors and
did not believe there had been discussions about that in the past. According to
McCabe, authorities knew how the student brought the weapon into the school but
did not elaborate.
Oxford high
school students who were interviewed by reporters afterward described a chaotic
scene in which a voice came on over the intercom to announce an active school
shooter, according to the Detroit Free Press. They said they initially did not
know whether it was a drill.
The school
was placed on lockdown, with some students sheltering in locked classrooms
while officers searched the premises. They were later taken to a nearby Meijer
grocery store to be picked up by their parents.
Michigan
governor Gretchen Whitmer called the shooting “horrific”, adding: “My heart
breaks for the students, teachers, staff and families of Oxford high school.
The death of multiple students and the shooting of many others, including a
teacher, is horrific.”
Robin
Redding said her son, Treshan Bryant, is a 12th grader at the school but stayed
home on Tuesday. She said he had heard threats of a shooting at the school.
“This couldn’t be just random,” she said.
Redding
didn’t provide specifics about what her son had heard, but she expressed concern
with school safety in general.
“Kids just,
like they’re just mad at each other at this school,” she said.
people lean
on each other
Bryant said
he texted several younger cousins in the morning and they said they didn’t want
to go to school, and he got a bad feeling. He asked his mom if he could do his
assignments online.
Bryant said
he had heard vague threats “for a long time now” about plans for a shooting at
the school.
“You’re not
supposed to play about that,” he said of the threats. “This is real life.”
School
administrators posted two letters to parents on the school’s website this
month, saying they were responding to rumors of a threat against the school
following a bizarre vandalism incident.
At a vigil
at Lakepoint community church on Tuesday night, Leeann Dersa choked back tears
as she hugged friends and neighbors. Dersa has lived nearly all of her 73 years
in Oxford and her grandchildren attended the high school.
“Scared us
all something terrible. It’s awful,” Dersa said of the shooting. “We’ve had
some tragedies with the young people dying through the years, and we’ve all
come together and all helped each other and we’re still coming together with
them and love them.”
For Greg
Hill, the day twisted his stomach in knots. His children attend the elementary
school in the district, and he brought them to the vigil.
“Just glad
that our children are safe and now it’s time for the community to heal,” Hill,
40, said.
Pastor
Jesse Holt said news of the shooting had flooded in to him and his wife,
including texts from some of the 20 to 25 students who are among the 400-member
congregation.
“Some were
very scared, hiding under their desks and texting us, ‘We’re safe, we’re OK. We
heard gunshots, but we’re OK.’ They were trying to calm us, at least that’s how
it felt,” he said Tuesday night.
One student
texted that she was hiding in a bathroom with a boy who also was seeking
shelter.
After
deputies arrested the shooter, the girl ran from the school and was taken in by
someone living close by until her mom could pick her up, Holt said.
“That’s our
community,” he said. “That’s who we are.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário