Tag Archive: shooting


Student charged in Utah school bomb plot (AP)

ROY, Utah – The two teens had a detailed plot, blueprints of the school and security systems, but no explosives. They had hours of flight simulator training on a home computer and a plan to flee the country, but no plane.

Still, the police chief in this small Utah town said, the plot was real.

“It wasn’t like they were hanging out playing video games,” Roy Police Chief Gregory Whinham said Friday. “They put a lot of effort into it.”

Dallin Morgan, 18, and a 16-year-old friend were arrested Wednesday at Roy High School, about 30 miles north of Salt Lake City, after a fellow student reported that she received ominous text messages from one of the suspects.

“If I tell you one day not to go to school, make damn sure you and your brother are not there,” one message read, according to court records. “We ain’t gonna crash it, we’re just gonna kill and fly our way to a country that won’t send us back to the U.S.,” read another message.

While police don’t have a motive, one text message noted they sought “revenge on the world.”

The suspects say they were inspired by the deadly 1999 Columbine High School shootings in Littleton, Colo., and the younger suspect even visited the school last month to interview the principal about the shootings and security measures.

However, one suspect told authorities it was offensive to be compared to the Columbine shooters because “those killers only completed 1 percent of their plan,” according to a probable cause statement.

The teens had so studied their own school’s security system that they knew how to avoid being seen on the facility’s surveillance cameras, authorities said.

Whinham said the “very smart kids” had spent at least hundreds of dollars on flight simulator programs, books and manuals, studying them in anticipation of carrying out their plan to bomb an assembly at the 1,500-student high school.

While authorities said the suspects believed they could pull it off, experts said, it would have been a long shot.

Royal Eccles, manager at the Ogden-Hinckley Airport, about a mile from the school, said it would have been nearly impossible for the students to steal a plane or get the knowledge to fly one using flight simulator programs.

“It’s highly improbable,” Eccles said. “That’s how naive these kids are.”

Whinham said authorities searched two homes and two cars and found no explosives, but added that police continue to search other locations. The chief said it appeared that “a key component of their plan was not developed.”

“I wouldn’t want to say that they don’t have it or that they weren’t ready for it,” he said. “I’m just saying that we haven’t found anything that says they were ready for it yet.”

Whinham said it appeared the suspects, who have no criminal history, also had prepared alternate attack plans, but he declined to elaborate. He also declined to say whether any firearms were found during their searches.

“Most houses have firearms in them,” he said. “This is the state of Utah.”

While authorities have said they have not found any explosives, they charged Morgan on Friday with possession of a weapon of mass destruction.

The basis for the charge wasn’t immediately clear, though one of the elements of that offense is conspiracy to use a weapon, not necessarily possessing one. Prosecutors say they are considering additional charges.

Morgan has been released on bond, pending a court hearing Wednesday. The 16-year-old, whom The Associated Press isn’t naming because he’s a minor, remained held pending further court hearings.

Whinham said he knew both suspects personally, given the small size of the suburban Utah town of roughly 36,000 people. He said he had met with both of the suspects’ parents and they were “devastated.”

The 16-year-old suspect’s father declined comment Friday, and no one answered the door at Morgan’s home.

The plot “was months in planning,” said Whinham, who also noted Morgan told investigators the 16-year-old had previously made a pipe bomb using gun powder and rocket fuel.

In Colorado, Columbine Principal Frank DeAngelis confirmed Friday he met with the 16-year-old suspect on Dec. 12 after the teenager told him he was doing a story for his school newspaper on the shootings.

DeAngelis said he frequently gets requests from students doing research on the shootings, and the request from this one wasn’t unusual.

“He asked the same questions I get from many callers and visitors asking about the shooting,” DeAngelis said. He said the student wanted details about the shooting, the aftermath and the steps taken since then to protect the school.

Police said the student told them Roy school officials would not allow him to write the story.

DeAngelis said he was shocked when he got a call from Utah police on Wednesday asking if he had met with the youth. He said the interview raised no red flags but that he would do things differently with future requests.

“This was definitely a wake-up call. This is the first time this has happened,” DeAngelis said.

Police credit the suspects’ schoolmate with helping foil their plan, though Whinham said the school didn’t have any assemblies set, and the suspects revealed no specific dates to pull off the attack.

Sophomore Bailey Gerhardt told The Salt Lake Tribune she received alarming text messages from one of the suspects and alerted school administrators.

“I get the feeling you know what I’m planning,” read one of the messages, according to court records. “Explosives, airport, airplane.”

___

Associated Press writer Steven K. Paulson in Denver contributed to this report.

Student charged in Utah school bomb plot
(AP)

Teen in Texas school shooting says he was bullied (AP)

HOUSTON – A Houston teenager accused of shooting a classmate in the leg at school says he was defending himself from a group of boys who have been bullying him.

Warren Lewis remained jailed Wednesday after he was arrested for the shooting a day earlier. The student who was shot is expected to recover.

The North Forest Independent School District says it’s still investigating how Lewis got the handgun into the campus and past metal detectors.

During a court appearance Wednesday, the 18-year-old Lewis told a judge that he had filed complaints with the school about the boys who had been threatening him.

The school district, however, says it hasn’t found any record of complaints by Lewis or his family.

Teen in Texas school shooting says he was bullied
(AP)

Shooting at Houston high school injures student (AP)

HOUSTON – A school official says an 18-year-old brought a gun inside a Houston high school and shot another student in the leg despite metal detectors on the campus.

North Forest school district spokeswoman Sue Davis says the 16-year-old who was shot was taken to a hospital in stable condition Tuesday. She says the shooter was detained by a government teacher who also happens to work as a deputy constable.

Davis says the teacher wrapped up the 18-year-old senior without a struggle. The student was taken into police custody.

Davis says the 16-year-old didn’t appear to be the shooter’s intended target but couldn’t immediately say if there was another target or if the shooting was accidental.

The school’s metal detectors are only turned on in the morning. The shooting happened around lunchtime.

Shooting at Houston high school injures student
(AP)

2 students shot, wounded at Texas middle school (AP)

EDINBURG, Texas – Authorities suspect hunters may have shot two South Texas middle school students who were wounded by gunfire Monday afternoon while trying out for a basketball team.

Two boys — ages 13 and 14 — were shot, said Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Trevino. Classes were not in session at Harwell Middle School when the shooting happened around 4:45 p.m., but the school complex was immediately placed on lockdown. Edinburg school district spokesman Gilbert Tagle said a number of after-school activities were going on besides the basketball tryouts, including a concert and a faculty meeting. He estimated as many as 200 children could have been on campus.

One of the wounded boys was in critical condition Monday night with a bullet embedded in an organ. The other was stable and awaiting X-rays, Trevino said.

At the time of the shooting, one of the boys was going for a layup. The other was waiting his turn to try out, Trevino said.

The sheriff said it was too early to say whether the students were targeted or if the shooting was accidental.

Investigators believe the shots may have come from hunters on adjacent farm property, Trevino said. The shots did not come from the campus and were not a result of a drive-by, he said.

Harwell Middle School opened just this year on the rural property northeast of Edinburg, which is about 50 miles northwest of Brownsville. Homes line the road approaching the school, but open fields stretch out behind it and to the north.

Investigators have spoken with owners of surrounding farms and the land was being leased to deer hunters, Trevino said. Authorities interviewed some hunters who were found on adjoining properties.

The outdoor court where the shooting took place was north of the school complex at an athletic facility that includes a football field, track and tennis courts, said Oziel Garzia, a 14-year-old eighth-grader.

Annette Vargas Ugalde, a 15-year-old eighth grader, said she was about to board her bus near the gym after school when school officials started rushing students indoors.

“They told us to, `Get inside, get inside,’” she said.

She said she heard no shots but saw a group of people on the outdoor court standing near one boy on the ground. A school nurse tended to him while another boy was sitting up.

Annett said she boarded her bus and it left.

Samuel Cepeda, a 15-year-old eighth-grader, said gangs have been a problem at the school, and he has worried about security. However, Trevino said investigators do not believe the shooting was gang related.

Classes will go on as scheduled Tuesday, but with increased security and counselors available to speak with students, said Tagle, the district spokesman.

2 students shot, wounded at Texas middle school
(AP)

Ky. college locked down after shooting near campus (AP)

BEREA, Ky. – Berea College in central Kentucky was put on lockdown as authorities searched for a suspect in a shooting nearby that killed one person and left another injured.

Berea Police Capt. Ken Clark said police in the Louisville area took a 27-year-old man into custody after a brief standoff Monday. Charges are pending.

Clark said officers were dispatched at 7:12 a.m. Monday to an apartment near Berea College and found one person dead and another injured. Their names were not immediately released.

Clark said police believe an altercation late Sunday at the residence is connected to the shooting.

Berea College spokesman Tim Jordan said the school was locked down as a precautionary measure.

Ky. college locked down after shooting near campus
(AP)

Two students accused in North Carolina school shooting (Reuters)

WINSTON-SALEM, North Carolina (Reuters) – Two North Carolina teenagers have been arrested over the shooting of a 10th grade girl at a high school after surveillance video showed them with a rifle on campus, officials said on Tuesday.

The 15-year-old girl was shot in the neck and wounded on Monday at Cape Fear High School in Fayetteville during an outdoor lunch break, prompting a lockdown of that campus and a nearby middle school.

Investigators were initially perplexed about the source of the bullet because students and a school resource officer at the scene did not report seeing anyone with a gun.

But surveillance video later showed the two suspects inside a school building with a rifle, Cumberland County Sheriff's spokeswoman Debbie Tanna said.

Authorities now believe the gun was fired from an indoor hallway in the direction of an outdoor breezeway where the girl was struck, Tanna said. They don't yet know what prompted the shooting but don't believe the girl was the intended target.

“She just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time,” Tanna said.

The girl was hospitalized with a bullet lodged in her neck and had been in stable condition as of Monday night, Tanna said. Local media later reported she was in critical condition and on a ventilator on Tuesday, citing authorities.

The suspected 15-year-old shooter, whose name was not released, was charged with attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. An 18-year-old man, Ta'Von McLaurin, was arrested on a felony aiding and abetting charge.

Tanna said investigators were looking into the possibility the incident was gang-related.

The high school reopened on Tuesday with additional sheriff's deputies on and around campus “to make sure there are no repercussions as a result of the shooting and that this is the end of that particular incident,” Tanna said.

Despite the increased security, fewer than half of the school's 1,500 students showed up for class, school officials said.

(Editing by Jerry Norton and Cynthia Johnston)

Two students accused in North Carolina school shooting
(Reuters)

2 taken into custody in NC high school shooting (AP)

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. – Two teenagers were in custody in the shooting of a 15-year-old fellow student who was wounded in the neck during a lunch period outside her North Carolina high school, and a sheriff said Monday the pair will be charged.

The two suspects and the victim attend Cape Fear High School in Fayetteville, Cumberland County Sheriff Earl “Moose” Butler said at a news conference. Both suspects participated in the shooting and were being questioned, he said. The weapon, a .22 Daisy rifle and shell casings have been recovered.

Abercrombie was in stable condition after surgery at Cape Fear Valley Medical Center.

The sheriff said the two were apprehended with the help of surveillance video which showed them carrying the rifle inside the school. He said investigators don’t think Abercrombie was the intended target, but no motive has been established.

“Why did they shoot? I don’t know,” he said.

The high school and nearby Mac Williams Middle School were locked down for hours before students were allowed to go home.

Sheriff’s office spokeswoman Debbie Tanna said there would be an increased number of deputies at the high school and middle school on Tuesday.

Asked how long they would be on the campuses, Tanna said, “As long as it takes to make sure the school has been put back in order and students and parents feel confident about their safety.”

A police officer assigned to the high school was standing near Abercrombie when she was shot at about 1 p.m. and immediately called 911, Tanna said.

Students from the middle school were sent home before their high school counterparts, who were still gradually leaving the campus by 6 p.m. Students were searched by police and left the building in long lines holding their hands above their heads before boarding buses that took them from campus.

2 taken into custody in NC high school shooting
(AP)

Colo school shooting verdict: not guilty, insanity (AP)

GOLDEN, Colo. – A man charged with attempted first-degree murder in the shooting and wounding of two eighth-graders at a Colorado middle school was found not guilty by reason of insanity Wednesday.

Bruco Strong Eagle Eastwood, who was armed with a rifle, was tackled and held by two teachers shortly after the February 2010 attack at Deer Creek Middle School that recalled memories of the 1999 mass shooting at nearby Columbine High School.

Eastwood was charged with a total of 15 crimes. Jurors found him not guilty by reason of insanity on all but one charge: possession of a weapon on school grounds, which carries a sentence of up to 1 1/2 years in prison. Sentencing will be Nov. 15.

After the verdict, Deborah Weber, mother of one of the wounded students, said she was disappointed because she felt prosecutors proved that Eastwood was sane at the time of the shootings

“I don’t think that people should confuse mental illness with insanity, which is of the legal kind,” Weber said. “I don’t think that legal insanity should absolve someone of doing time.”

Defense attorney Katherine Spengler said she would appeal that conviction.

Eastwood, who has been at the Colorado Mental Health Institute in Pueblo since the summer of 2010, continues to struggle to understand why he did what he did, Spengler said.

“Mr. Eastwood is an extremely ill man … and he is incredibly remorseful about what he did, and we’re glad that the children are recovering,” Spengler said.

She said he continues to get treatment at the state hospital.

District Attorney Scott Storey said Eastwood will remain at the state hospital for an indeterminate time until he is deemed legally sane and released. His case will be reviewed every six months. Storey added that the average stay in the state hospital, for homicide cases is 7 1/2 years and in Eastwood’s case could be less.

“It was a case that had to be tried,” Storey said afterward. “You can’t have somebody come onto our school grounds and shooting at students … He’s profoundly mentally ill. I respect the jury’s verdict, but I don’t agree with it …. I have no regrets for taking this case to trial.

“There are certain cases that just outrage me to the core. This is one of them.”

During the trial, defense lawyers showed jurors portions of Eastwood’s rambling journal that referred to mutants or transformers that were taking over his body.

“They want me to have nothing. Instead, they have me suffering, alive but in pain,” Eastwood noted in one entry.

Eastwood had written in his notebook before last year’s shooting that the voices were becoming more threatening. The notebook included doodles of a man under attack.

Prosecutors told the jury that Eastwood knew the difference between right and wrong when he shot the two children as they were leaving their school.

“He yelled that they were going to die,” Alexis King said. “He knew it was wrong and his behavior can’t be excused.”

Prosecutors said Eastwood approached a group of students and asked, “Do you like going to this school?” before shooting student Reagan Weber in the arm.

He then aimed at Matt Thieu, who was running away, prosecutors said. Thieu suffered a chest wound the size of a saucer plate.

Teachers David Benke and Norm Hanne were hailed as heroes for tackling the shooter and holding him until deputies arrived.

At issue during the trial was whether Eastwood knew the difference between right and wrong at the time of the shootings.

Chief Deputy District Attorney Steve Jensen said testimony indicated that Eastwood knew it was wrong to take his father’s gun. After the shooting, Jensen said that during two hours of videotaped questioning with investigators, Eastwood repeatedly said he knew what he did was wrong, that he had hatred and anger.

“We had a videotape where we covered extensively the defendant’s state and whether he knew the difference between right and wrong,” Jensen said.

But Jensen said that state law prohibited an expert who studied the 1999 Columbine High School shootings, Dr. Steven Pitt, from personally examining Eastwood on behalf of prosecutors.

Three doctors who examined Eastwood testified that he was legally insane.

But when it came to Pitt’s testimony, he said there were several indications that Eastwood was sane but that he couldn’t render a final opinion about whether Eastwood could distinguish right from wrong because Pitt hadn’t personally interviewed Eastwood.

“The first question the jury sent out was, “Why didn’t Dr. Pitt interview the defendant,” Jensen said, adding that the judge could not legally explain why. “So this left a bit of a void … Obviously this had a big impact.”

Colo school shooting verdict: not guilty, insanity
(AP)

Jurors deliberate in Colo. school shooting trial (AP)

GOLDEN, Colo. – Jurors in the trial of a man charged with wounding two students outside a Colorado middle school have started their deliberations.

Closing arguments in the trial of Bruco (BROO’-so) Strong Eagle Eastwood were Friday in Golden. KUSA-TV in Denver reports (http://bit.ly/pEHPG5) jurors are set to resume deliberations Tuesday.

Eastwood has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to 15 charges, including attempted first-degree murder, in the shooting at Deer Creek Middle School last year. The school is just miles from Columbine High School, the site of one of the nation’s deadliest school shootings.

Eastwood’s lawyer had shown jurors portions of a rambling journal in which Eastwood referred to mutants or transformers taking over his body, but prosecutors said Eastwood knew the difference between right and wrong.

___

Information from: KUSA-TV, http://www.9news.com

Jurors deliberate in Colo. school shooting trial
(AP)

2 adults dead in murder-suicide at Calif. school (AP)

JURUPA VALLEY, Calif. – An apparent murder-suicide that left a man and a woman dead forced the lockdown of a Southern California high school on Wednesday, authorities said. No students were injured.

The shooting occurred about 10:40 a.m. after a school resource officer who works for the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department heard what he thought was a gunshot coming from the parking lot at Patriot High School in Jurupa, said sheriff’s spokeswoman Courtney Donowho. The school was immediately placed on a lockdown as sheriff’s investigators searched the campus.

The woman who was found dead was a volunteer at the school, Donowho said. No information was immediately released about the man. The motive for the shooting is under investigation.

No students were unaccounted for and they were being released in three phases throughout the afternoon.

Most high schools in Riverside County have deputies who act as school resource officers, Donowho said.

“They are there for exactly these types of incidents,” she said. “Our primary concern is student safety.”

Jurupa is about 50 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.

2 adults dead in murder-suicide at Calif. school
(AP)

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