Taft, Jan 21 : A 16-year-old student armed with a shotgun walked into a rural
California high school, shot one student and fired at others and missed before a
teacher and another staff member talked him into surrendering, officials
said.
The teen victim was in critical but stable condition, and the
suspect, whose pockets were stuffed with ammunition, was still being
interrogated, Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said at a news
conference.
The suspect used a shotgun that belonged to his brother and
went to bed with a plan to shoot two fellow students, Youngblood
said.
Surveillance video shows the alleged shooter trying to conceal the
gun as he nervously entered Taft Union High School through a side entrance after
school had started.
When the shots were fired, teacher Ryan Heber tried
to get the more than two dozen students out a back door and engaged the shooter
in conversation to distract him, Youngblood said. Campus supervisor Kim Lee
Fields responded to a call of shots fired and also began talking to the
teen.
"They talked him into putting that shotgun down. He in fact told
the teacher, 'I don't want to shoot you,' and named the person that he wanted to
shoot," Youngblood said.
"The heroics of these two people goes without
saying. ... They could have just as easily ... tried to get out of the classroom
and left students, and they didn't," the sheriff said. "They knew not to let him
leave the classroom with that shotgun."
The shooter didn't show up for
first period, then interrupted the class of 28 students.
Youngblood said
the suspect alleges the two students he targeted had bullied him for more than a
year, but the sheriff couldn't confirm the allegations.
"Certainly he
believed that the two people he targeted had bullied him, in his mind. Whether
that occurred or not we don't know yet," Youngblood said.
Youngblood did
not release the student's disciplinary record, saying he didn't have
it.
The shotgun is believed to belong to the boy's brother and was in the
boy's home, Youngblood said.
The Sheriff's Department did not release the
boy's name because he was a juvenile and had yet to be charged. But many
students and community members said they knew the boy and said he was often
teased, including Alex Patterson, 18, who went to Taft with the suspect before
graduating last year.
"He comes off as the kind of kid who would do
something like this," Patterson said. "He talked about it a lot, but nobody
thought he would."
Trish Montes, who lived next door to the suspect, said
he was "a short guy" and "small" who was teased about his stature by many,
including the victim.
"Maybe people will learn not to bully people,"
Montes said. "I hate to be crappy about it, but that kid was bullying
him."
Montes said her son had worked at the school and tutored the boy
last year, sometimes walking with him between classes because he felt sorry for
him.
"All I ever heard about him was good things from my son," Montes
said. "He wasn't Mr. Popularity, but he was a smart kid. It's a shame. My kid
said he was like a genius. It's a shame because he could have made something of
himself."
The wounded student was flown to a hospital in Bakersfield and
was listed in stable but critical condition. Officials said a female student was
hospitalized with possible hearing damage because the shotgun was fired close to
her ear, and another girl suffered minor injuries during the scramble to flee
when she fell over a table.
Officials said there's usually an armed
officer on campus, but the person wasn't there because he was snowed in. Taft
police officers arrived within 60 seconds of first reports.
Bakersfield
television station KERO reported receiving phone calls from people inside the
school who hid in closets. About 900 students are enrolled at the high school,
which includes ninth through 12th grades.
Wilhelmina Reum, whose daughter
Alexis Singleton is a fourth-grader at a nearby elementary school, got word of
the attack while she was about 35 miles away in Bakersfield and immediately sped
back to Taft.
"I just kept thinking this can't be happening in my little
town," she said.
"I was afraid I was going to get hurt," Alexis said. "I
just wanted my mom to get here so I could go home."
Taft is a community
of fewer than 10,000 people amid oil and natural gas production fields about 120
miles northwest of Los Angeles.
The attack there came less than a month
after a gunman massacred 20 children and six women at Sandy Hook Elementary
School in Newtown, Conn., then killed himself.
That shooting prompted
President Barack Obama to promise new efforts to curb gun violence. Vice
President Joe Biden, who was placed in charge of the initiative, said he would
deliver new policy proposals to the president by next week.
Sen. Dianne
Feinstein, D-Calif., said in a statement that her father had attended Taft Union
and she has visited the school over the years.
"At this moment my
thoughts and prayers are with the victims, and I wish them a speedy recovery,"
Feinstein said. "But how many more shootings must there be in America before we
come to the realization that guns and grievances do not belong
together?"
Ends
SA/EN
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» Sheriff: Calif. teen planned attack on classmates
Sheriff: Calif. teen planned attack on classmates
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