The Niagara Falls Review

Shooting leaves 1 dead

At least 9 people injured in violence at rural Kentucky high school

- STEPHEN LANCE DENEE

BENTON, Ky. — A person opened fire inside a rural Kentucky high school Tuesday morning, killing one and injuring nine others. Police led a suspect away in handcuffs and said there is no reason to suspect anyone else in the nation’s first fatal school shooting of 2018.

Hundreds of students ran for their lives out of Marshall County High School, jumping into cars and running down a highway, some not stopping until they reached a McDonald’s restaurant more than a kilometre away.

“They was running and crying and screaming,” said Mitchell Garland, who provided shelter to between 50 and 100 students inside his nearby business. “They was just kids running down the highway. They were trying to get out of there.”

Garland said his son, a 16-yearold sophomore, jumped into someone’s car and sped away before joining others inside his business.

“Everyone is just scared. Just terrified for their kids,” Garland said. “We’re a small town and we know a lot of the kids.”

A half-dozen ambulances and numerous police cars converged on the school, along with officers in black fatigues carrying assault rifles. Federal authoritie­s responded, and Sen. Mitch McConnell sent staffers. Gov. Matt Bevin rushed from the Capitol to the scene. Parents left their cars on both sides of an adjacent road, desperatel­y trying to find their kids.

Authoritie­s released no immediate details on the shooter or motive.

Kentucky State Police have no reason to suspect anyone else, detective Jody Cash told the Murray Ledger & Times.

One person died at the scene and nine were injured, a former county sheriff, Brian Roy, told the Louisville Courier-Journal. Seven were taken to hospitals, some by helicopter, Darlene Lynn of Marshall County Emergency Management told WDRB-TV. Five of them were flown about 193 km to Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., spokeswoma­n Tavia Smith said.

“It is unbelievab­le that this would happen in a small, close-knit community like Marshall County. As there is still much unknown, I encourage people to love each other,” Bevin said in a statement.

Marshall County High School is about 30 minutes from Heath High School in Paducah, Kentucky, where a 1997 mass shooting killed three and injured five. Michael Carneal, then 14, opened fire there about two years before the fatal attack at Columbine High School in Colorado.

Tuesday’s shooting happened as students gathered in a common area around 8 a.m. Sixteenyea­r-old Lexie Waymon said she and a friend were talking about the next basketball game, makeup and eyelashes when gunshots pierced the air.

“I blacked out. I couldn’t move. I got up and I tried to run, but I fell. I heard someone hit the ground. It was so close to me,” Waymon said. “I just heard it and then I just, everything was black for a good minute. Like, I could not see anything. I just froze and did not know what to do. Then I got up and I ran.”

It was chaotic outside the school as parents and students rushed around trying to find each other, said Dusty Kornbacher, who owns a nearby floral shop. “All the parking lots were full with parents and kids hugging each other and crying and nobody really knowing what was going on,” he said.

 ?? RYAN HERMENS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Matt Bevin speaks during a news conference at the Marshall County Board of Education following a shooting at Marshall County High School in Benton, Ky., that left one person dead and at least nine others wounded. A suspect was arrested at the...
RYAN HERMENS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Matt Bevin speaks during a news conference at the Marshall County Board of Education following a shooting at Marshall County High School in Benton, Ky., that left one person dead and at least nine others wounded. A suspect was arrested at the...

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