The Welland Tribune

Shooting an accident

Girl arrested after gun goes off at school, wounding 2 of her fellow students

- AMANDA LEE MYERS

LOS ANGELES — Jordan Valenzuela was in class when he heard the bang, and then the screaming.

In a classroom next door, a 15- year- old boy had been shot in the head, a 15- year- old girl was shot in the wrist and several others were struck by broken glass.

Jordan says that his 12- yearold classmate at Salvador B. Castro Middle School told him it was an accident.

The sobbing girl told him: “I didn’t mean to. I had the gun in my backpack and I didn’t know it was loaded and my backpack fell and the gun went off,” the seventhgra­der said.

The shooting was reported just before 9 a. m. at the school, which has about 365 students in grades 6- 8.

The girl was taken into custody minutes after the shooting.

TV video from helicopter­s showed a dark- haired girl in a sweatshirt being led from the school in handcuffs as anxious parents and family members gathered on a street corner, many crying and talking on their phones as they waited.

Police interviewe­d the girl and agreed it was an accident. On Thursday evening, long hours after chaos and panic had subsided, the girl was booked into Juvenile Hall on suspicion of negligentl­y dischargin­g a firearm on school grounds.

Five people were injured in the shooting. The most seriously hurt was a 15- year- old boy who was shot in the head but doctors said the bullet didn’t hit anything vital or life- threatenin­g.

“This child was extremely lucky,” said Dr. Aaron Strumwasse­r at Los Angeles County- USC Medical Center. “I think he will do fine ... I anticipate he’ll make a full recovery.”

A 15- year- old girl was shot in the wrist but Strumwasse­r said the injury was minor.

Three other people had minor face or head injuries, some from broken glass, but weren’t shot, officials said.

An 11- year- old boy and a 12- yearold girl were treated at the hospital and released while a 30- yearold woman who is a school staff member had only minor injuries, Los Angeles city police said in a statement.

Shallin Lopez, a seventh- grader, was in the room at the time of the shooting. She said she never saw a gun.

“I just saw something pop,” she said. “It was loud. I didn’t see her shoot.”

Jordan Valenzuela, the 12- yearold student who was next door, said by telephone that after her heard the gunshot and screaming, children in the other classroom started banging on the door connecting the two rooms.

He and some other children opened it and began trying to help the victims. Jordan said he noticed his friend sitting at her desk with her hands covering her face.

Jordan said later, the girl asked him to hide the backpack with the gun in it.

“I said ‘ No,’ ” he said. “Then I moved away from her because I was a little bit scared.” But, he said, “she doesn’t do bad things, she just stays quiet.”

The shooting left parents shaken.

Claudia Anzueto, Jordan Valenzuela’s mother, said the boy was crying when he called her from a borrowed cellphone to tell her he was OK.

“Not safe, very insecure,” Anzueto said of the school. “I fear for my son’s life. You know what I mean, you really hear about things like this in the news, and just to hear that something like that happened so close to home, it scared the life out of me.”

Most weapons “that our young people get their hands on” come from their homes or those of other family members, Los Angeles School Police Department Chief Steve Zipperman said.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how she managed to bring it into class, he said.

The district has a policy requiring every middle and high- school campus to conduct daily random searches by metal- detector wands at different hours of the school day for students in the sixth grade and up.

Student Melanie Valencia, 13, said the school did a random security search Thursday, but that she has never been checked.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People pick up students after a shooting at the Salvador B. Castro Middle School near downtown Los Angeles, Calif., on Thursday. A 15- year- old boy was shot in the head and a 15- year old girl was shot in the wrist.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People pick up students after a shooting at the Salvador B. Castro Middle School near downtown Los Angeles, Calif., on Thursday. A 15- year- old boy was shot in the head and a 15- year old girl was shot in the wrist.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada