Bangkok Post

School shooting leaves two dead

Teenage boy opened fire on fellow students

-

LOUISVILLE: A teenage boy opened fire with a handgun at a Kentucky high school early on Tuesday, killing two fellow students and wounding more than a dozen people in the latest mass shooting to hit the United States.

The unnamed 15-year-old student, now in custody, is alleged to have carried out the attack at Marshall County High School in Benton, a small town in western Kentucky.

Two students of the same age died of gunshot wounds, while 13 other people were shot and five suffered other injuries during the shooting, Kentucky State Police said, adding that those hurt ranged in age from 14 to 18 years old.

Students ran from the scene after hearing shots, local media reported, and the school was placed on lockdown as the incident unfolded.

They were later bussed to a neighbouri­ng school where parents could retrieve them, the Marshall County Tribune-Courier newspaper said.

Fourteen of those hurt were male and six were female. Four of them are still in hospital — three in “critical but stable” condition and one in “stable” condition, according to police.

The suspected shooter was apprehende­d in a “non-violent” manner, and will be charged with both two counts of murder and multiple counts of attempted murder, Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin said.

One of the students died at the scene and the other after being taken to a hospital.

The shooter struck just as the school day was starting.

“The incident began at 7.57am [local time] when a 15-year-old student armed with a handgun entered the high school and started shooting,” Kentucky State Police Commission­er Rick Sanders said.

A 911 emergency call was placed soon after, and first responders were at the scene by 8.06am, he said.

The suspect “was apprehende­d by the sheriff’s office officer that was the first to arrive,” Mr Sanders said.

State police had recently been in the area “teaching students and faculty how to respond to an active shooter situation, and everybody in that high school reacted appropriat­ely,” he said.

An “SRO,” or “School Resource Officer”, responsibl­e for safety at the school, was present.

“The SRO that was assigned to the school went through a tough time this morning,” Mr Sanders said, but did not provide further informatio­n on the officer’s actions during the shooting.

“This is a tremendous tragedy and speaks to the heartbreak present in our communitie­s,” Mr Bevin said a statement. “It is unbelievab­le that this would happen in a small, close-knit community like Marshall County.”

According to Everytown for Gun Safety, a group that works to reduce gun violence, the most recent school shooting in Kentucky occurred in September 2014, when one student shot and wounded another in the hallway of Fern Creek High School in Louisville.

The US as a whole is plagued by mass shootings, including two in recent months that left dozens of people dead.

Guns are the source of one of the most bitter and enduring divides in American politics.

Most Democrats advocate gun control for reducing deadly shootings, while many Republican­s — backed by the powerful National Rifle Associatio­n gun lobby — oppose restrictio­ns on firearms ownership.

 ?? AP ?? People hold candles during a vigil at Impact Church in Benton, Kentucky on Tuesday. The vigil was held for victims of the Marshall County High School shooting earlier in the day.
AP People hold candles during a vigil at Impact Church in Benton, Kentucky on Tuesday. The vigil was held for victims of the Marshall County High School shooting earlier in the day.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand