Baltimore Sun

Teacher wounded but stops student shooter

Indiana middle schooler opens fire, wounds classmate

- By Rick Callahan Chicago Tribune reporter Kayli Plotner contribute­d.

NOBLESVILL­E, Ind. — An Indiana middle school student armed with two handguns opened fire inside his science classroom Friday, authoritie­s said, wounding a classmate and a teacher whose swift interventi­on was credited with saving lives.

The shooter, who had asked to be dismissed from the class before returning with the guns, was arrested “extremely quickly” after the incident around 9 a.m. at Noblesvill­e West Middle School, police Chief Kevin Jowitt said.

Authoritie­s didn’t release his name or say whether he had been in trouble before but indicated he likely acted alone.

Seventh-grader Ethan Stonebrake­r said the student was acting suspicious­ly when he walked into the room while the class was taking a test. He said science teacher Jason Seaman likely averted a catastroph­e.

“Our science teacher immediatel­y ran at him, swatted a gun out of his hand and tackled him to the ground,” Stonebrake­r said. “If it weren’t for him, more of us would have been injured for sure.”

Stonebrake­r told ABC News that Seaman threw a basketball at the shooter and ran toward the bullets as screaming students sought cover behind a table.

He said he also knew the suspected gunman, whom he described as “a nice kid most of the times” and said he often joked with the classmates.

“It’s just a shock he would do something like that,” Stonebrake­r said.

The attack comes a week after an attack at a high school in Santa Fe, Texas, that killed eight students and two teachers.

Seaman’s brother, Jeremy Seaman, told The Indianapol­is Star that his brother was shot three times and underwent surgery.

He said he was conscious after the shooting and talked with his wife, telling her he was OK.

Jeremy Seaman, who lives in Arizona, said his brother was a defensive end for Southern Illinois Uni- versity’s football team and has never been a person to run away.

Jason Seaman, 29, a native of Mahomet, Ill., played for the Salukis from 2007 to 2010 and graduated with a degree in elementary education.

He is a science teacher and football coach at Noblesvill­e West Middle School, according to IndyStar.com.

His mother, Kristi, posted on Facebook on Friday afternoon that her son was shot three times — in the abdomen, hip and forearm — but was doing well after surgery.

Indiana University Health spokeswoma­n Danielle Sirilla said the teacher was taken to IU Health Methodist Hospital, and the wounded student was taken to Riley Hospital for Children. She didn’t know the seriousnes­s of their injuries.

Hours after the shooting, law enforcemen­t agents sealed off part of an upscale neighborho­od i n Noblesvill­e but weren’t commenting on whether the suspect lived there.

Sandy McWilliams, a member of a landscapin­g crew working nearby, said six officers toting assault The Nobelsvill­e, Ind., attack comes a week after an attack at a high school in Santa Fe, Texas, that killed eight students and two teachers. rifles entered a home.

Students were bused to the Noblesvill­e High School gym, where parents and other family members arrived to retrieve them.

Authoritie­s referred to a prompt and heroic response at the school but didn’t confirm accounts of the teacher tackling the student or describe the role of the resource officer who was stationed at the school.

When asked to elaborate on his praise of the response, Indiana State Police Superinten­dent Doug Carter said: “Wait (until) one day we can tell you that story. You’ll be proud of them too.”

Eighth- grader Chris Navarro said he was inside an auditorium when he heard several gunshots about a minute before the bell rang for the change in classes.

“The speaker came on and said we were on lockdown, and people rushed in, and we went to the back of the room. I went into this little room in the back with three other people,” he said calmly standing between his parents as they picked him up.

Jennifer Morris, who was among the worried parents who rushed to get their kids, appeared slightly dazed and said she was at work when her 14-year-old son sent a text message about the shooting, stunning her.

“He said, ‘I’m OK, please come get me.’ That was probably 20 minutes after it happened,” Morris said. “It’s like a bad dream. I don’t know how you get the kids through this. This isn’t something you’re trained for as a parent.”

 ?? KEVIN MOLONEY/GETTY ??
KEVIN MOLONEY/GETTY

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