Kentucky school shooting kills 2, wounds 13, teen arrested
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By micheal k
BENTON,
Ky A 15-year-old boy opened fire with a handgun just
before classes started at his high school in rural western Kentucky on
Tuesday, killing two fellow students and wounding 13 other youths before
he was arrested, the state's governor and police said.
The
shooter, who has not been officially identified, entered a common area
at Marshall County High School in Benton shortly before 8 a.m. (1400
GMT), pulled out a pistol and began firing at students, witnesses told
Kentucky media.
The
suspect will be charged with two counts of murder and multiple counts
of attempted murder, the Kentucky State Police said. Police have not
released a motive for the shooting but said they believed the gunman
acted alone.
The
bloodshed at the school of nearly 1,150 students in a small farming
town was the latest outbreak of gun violence that has become a regular
occurrence at schools and college campuses across the United States over
the past several years.
The
students killed were Bailey Hope, a 15-year-old girl, and Preston Cope,
a 15-year-old boy, state police said. Five of the victims were in
critical condition, police said, but hospital officials said they
expected all those wounded in the incident to survive.
"I
see this guy draw from his side and he pulls out a pistol. I didn't
even know what was going on. And then it registered. About the time it
registered, this guy was sitting here pulling the trigger into all of
us," student Bryson Conkwright told TV station WKRN.
"I can hear the gunshots. He was shooting in our group," said Conkwright, showing where a bullet grazed his hand.
Kentucky
State Police previously reported that 14 people were shot, including
the two who died, but changed that number to 15 late on Tuesday. Apart
from those who were shot, five other people were also injured in the
chaos, police said. All 20 of the victims were between 14 and 18 years
old.
At
least one hospitalized student suffered a broken jaw from falling and
being trampled while trying to escape, Marshall County prosecutor Jeff
Edwards said in a phone interview.
Edwards
toured the school, from which he, his wife and their children all
graduated, describing signs of the scramble to flee from the gunfire.
Backpacks, cellphones and clothes were strewn in the main area where the shooting occurred, he said.
"When it happened, apparently everyone left everything laying," Edwards said. "It made it real, seeing the disarray."
A WOUNDED COMMUNITY
The
school serves Marshall County, which has a population of about 31,000,
and the shooting hit the community hard. Churches held vigils on Tuesday
night, including the First Christian Church in Benton, where about 150
people gathered for prayers for the victims.
"I
don't know how to start healing myself and I don’t know how the
students will be able to heal because they will have to be in that
school every day," said Alexandra Smith, a former student at the school
who attended the church vigil.
Kentucky
Governor Matt Bevin's voice choked with emotion and he paused to
collect himself at a news conference earlier on Tuesday where he spoke
of the shooting.
"There's no good answer for it," Bevin said.
Bevin said the suspect was apprehended at the school "in a non-violent" manner but did not elaborate.
Students
followed training they had recently received from state police in how
to respond to such incidents, authorities said, crediting police for
arriving on the scene quickly and apprehending the suspect.
Helicopters
took five victims, including the boy who later died, to the nearest
Level 1 Trauma Center, about 120 miles (190 km) away at the Vanderbilt
University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee.
White
House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said President Donald Trump had been
briefed on the shooting. "Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims
and the families there," she said.
(Additional
reporting by Colleen Jenkins in Winston-Salem, N.C., Peter Szekely in
New York, Suzannah Gonzales and Chris Kenning in Chicago, Ben Klayman in
Detroit and Ian Simpson in Washington; Writing by Steve Gorman and Jon
Herskovitz; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Peter Cooney and Paul Tait)
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