View Single Post
Old 10-09-2006, 08:55 AM  
Anthony
Keyboard Warrior
 
Anthony's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: One of the outer rings of Hell
Posts: 9,653
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/15716383.htm

Quote:
No one injured in middle school shooting
Associated Press

JOPLIN, Mo. - A student armed with an AK-47 assault rifle walked into Memorial Middle School on Monday morning and fired a weapon, but did not hit anyone, police said. No injuries were reported.

The student, who was not identified, pointed the gun at two students and Principal Steve Gilbreth and Assistant Superintendent Steve Doerr and asked them, "not to make me do this," said School Superintendent Jim Simpson.

The 13-year-old male student then raised the gun and fired a shot into the ceiling, breaking a water pipe. After firing the shot, he said again, "Please don't make me do this," Simpson said.

"It was a very close call," Simpson said.

Doerr and Gilbreth persuaded the student to leave the building, where he was confronted by two police officers who had their weapons drawn. The student dropped the rifle and was taken into custody, Simpson said.

Joplin police Officer Curt Farmer said officers found a note in the student's backpack indicating that he had placed an explosive in the school, which has about 700 students. Students in the school were moved to nearby Joplin Memorial Hall, where parents were advised they could take them home.

Simpson said the school will be closed for the day while police search the building.

The student was wearing a makeshift mask, and had been planning an attack for a "long time," Simpson said.

Simpson said authorities did not know whether others were involved in the possible attack.

The shooting happened about 7:45 a.m., 10 minutes before school started.

A mother who was dropping her son off at the school didn't let him get out of the car when she saw Gilbreth "waving crazily" as police cars pulled up behind her.

Blake Spivak, former advertising director for The Joplin Globe, sat in her car with her son, Cooper, as Gilbreth walked back into the school flanked on either side by police carrying guns and dressed in flack jackets.

"I couldn't have left if I wanted to. Police were heading into the school with weapons drawn and the principal was pointing to the east side of the school," Spivak told the Globe.

Spivak said after about 10 minutes, a police officer walked by her car and told her she needed to get down or get her car away from the scene.

"I managed to get to the parking lot where there were about 30 kids congregated," she said. "Parents were arriving to check on their kids."

Spivak said Gilbreth later came out and gathered the students together to let them know the student with the gun had been arrested.

"He assured them that their friends were safe and that no one had been hurt," Spivak said. "The principal seemed very much in control and in command of the situation."

Joplin, which has about 40,900 residents, is in southwest Missouri, on the Kansas border about 140 miles south of Kansas City.

Schools across the country have been on alert after three deadly school shootings in three states in the span of a week, and several schools have been locked down or closed entirely during the past two weeks because of threats.

In Pennsylvania Amish country Monday morning, church bells tolled across the region in remembrance of the five young girls who were shot to death at their one-room schoolhouse one week earlier.
__________________

Anthony is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote