Times Colonist

‘If you move, I’m going to shoot you’

Survivors say teen suspect made chilling threat, then started firing

- PAUL J. WEBER and JUAN A. LOZANO

SANTA FE, Texas — The gunman in the Texas school mass shooting began his attack by firing a shotgun blast through an art classroom door, sending panicked students to the entryway to block him from getting inside, witnesses said Saturday.

He fired again through the wooden part of the door and fatally hit a student in the chest. He then lingered for nearly 30 minutes in a warren of four rooms, killing seven more students and two teachers before exchanging gunfire with police and surrenderi­ng, officials said.

Dmitrios Pagourtzis, 17, has been arrested for the attack.

Freshman Abel San Miguel saw his friend Chris Stone killed at the door and got grazed in the stomach by another volley of shots. He and others survived by playing dead. “We were on the ground, all piled up in random positions,” he said.

Junior Breanna Quintanill­a was in art class when she heard the shots and someone say: “If you all move, I’m going to shoot you all.”

The gunman walked in, pointed at one person and declared: “I’m going to kill you.” Then he fired.

“He then said that if the rest of us moved, he was going to shoot us,” Quintanill­a said.

When Quintanill­a tried to run out a back door, she realized the gunman was aiming at her. He fired in her direction.

“He missed me,” she said. “But it went ahead and ricocheted and hit me in my right leg.” She was treated at a hospital and spoke with a bandage wrapped around her wound.

“It was a very scary thing,” Quintanill­a said. “I was worried that I wasn’t going to be able to make it back to my family.”

In their first statement since Friday’s massacre, Pagourtzis’ family said the bloodshed “seems incompatib­le with the boy we love.

“We are as shocked and confused as anyone else by these events that occurred,” the statement said, offering prayers and condolence­s to the victims.

The family said it remained “mostly in the dark about the specifics” of the attack and that it shared “the public’s hunger for answers as to why this happened.”

Zach Wofford, a senior, said he was in his agricultur­al shop class when he heard gunfire from the art classroom across the hall. He said substitute teacher Chris West went into the hall to investigat­e and pulled a fire alarm.

“He saved many people,” Wofford said of West.

The Houston branch of the FBI said on Twitter Saturday that 13 people were wounded in the attack, up from the 10 previously reported. Hospitals reported treating 14 people with shootingre­lated injuries Friday, and the reason for the discrepanc­y was not clear.

In addition to a shotgun and a handgun, the gunman also had several kinds of homemade explosive devices, but they were not capable of detonating, said Galveston County Judge Mark Henry, the county’s chief administra­tor.

Investigat­ors found a group of carbon dioxide canisters taped together, and a pressure cooker with an alarm clock and nails inside. But the canisters had no detonation device, and the pressure cooker had no explosive material, Henry said.

“They were intended to look like IEDs, but they were totally non-functional,” Henry said, referring to improvised explosive devices common in the early years of the U.S.-led war in Iraq.

Authoritie­s have offered no motive, but they said in a probable-cause affidavit that the suspect had admitted to carrying out the shooting. The suspect told police that when he opened fire, he avoided shooting students he liked “so he could have his story told,” the affidavit said.

From first word of the shooting, at 7:32 a.m. Friday, until confirmati­on that a suspect was in custody, the attack took about half an hour.

Dispatch records indicate that authoritie­s first entered the building about seven minutes later after learning of the assault. The suspect was said to be in custody at 8:03 a.m.

Henry said he did not think the attack was “30 minutes of shooting,” and that assessment was consistent with other officials who said authoritie­s contained the shooter quickly.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said the assailant got a handgun and shotgun from his father, who owned them legally.

But it was not clear whether the father knew his son had taken them or if the father could face prosecutio­n. State law makes it illegal to give a gun to anyone under 18, except under the supervisio­n of an adult for hunting or sport shooting.

Pagourtzis, who appeared to have no prior arrests or confrontat­ions with law enforcemen­t, made an initial court appearance on capital murder charges Friday. A judge denied bond and took his applicatio­n for a court-appointed attorney.

The shooting in Santa Fe, a city of 13,000 people about 48 kilometres southeast of Houston, was America’s deadliest such attack since the Florida massacre that killed 17 and energized the teenled gun-control movement.

 ??  ?? Wellwisher­s place flowers, a sign and balloons on a tree outside Santa Fe High School on Saturday as students and teachers were allowed back to parts of the school to retrieve their belongings.
Wellwisher­s place flowers, a sign and balloons on a tree outside Santa Fe High School on Saturday as students and teachers were allowed back to parts of the school to retrieve their belongings.

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