Los Angeles Times

Two wounded in Maryland school shooting

The gunman, 17, is killed by a campus officer. The victims are hospitaliz­ed.

- By Jenny Jarvie Jarvie is a special correspond­ent.

A 17-year-old student fired a handgun at a high school in southern Maryland on Tuesday morning and wounded two classmates before being killed in an exchange of gunfire with a school resource officer, authoritie­s said.

The gunman, Austin Wyatt Rollins, was confirmed dead at 10:41 a.m., St. Mary’s County Sheriff Timothy K. Cameron said.

One of the victims, a 16year-old girl who authoritie­s said had a “prior relationsh­ip” with the shooter, was in critical condition after being taken to a hospital from Great Mills High School, about 60 miles southeast of Washington.

The other victim, a 14year-old boy, was in stable condition at a hospital.

“On this day we realized our worst nightmare,” Cameron said. “Our greatest asset, our children, were attacked in … a bastion of safety and security, one of our schools.

“The notion of ‘it can’t happen here’ is no longer a notion,” he said.

The shooting happened at 7:55 a.m. in a school hallway. The resource officer, Blaine Gaskill, a 34-year-old sheriff ’s deputy, responded immediatel­y, exchanging gunfire with the shooter, Cameron said. Gaskill was not injured.

After a brief lockdown, students were evacuated by bus to a vocational center to be reunited with their families.

The Maryland shooting comes a month after a gunman rampaged through Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., killing 14 students and three staff members with an assault rifle.

The Feb. 14 massacre spurred the formation of a student movement across the country to push lawmakers for stricter gun control measures. Hundreds of Great Mills students participat­ed in a national school walkout last week to protest gun violence.

On Monday, Maryland’s Senate followed the House in passing a bill banning the manufactur­e, sale, possession and use of “bump stocks,” which allow semiautoma­tic rifles to mimic fully automatic weapons.

The Maryland House has also passed bills that would force people convicted of domestic violence or deemed mentally ill or dangerous by a judge to surrender their guns.

At a news briefing Tuesday, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said legislator­s should do more to bolster school security.

After the Parkland shooting, Hogan proposed investing $125 million to heighten school security to reinforce doors and windows and install panic buttons, security cameras and metal detectors.

An additional $50 million, he suggested, should be funneled into new school safety grants to fund school resource officers, counselors and additional safety technology.

“We need more than prayers,” said Hogan, a Republican. “We’ve got to take action. We’ve got one of the most aggressive school safety plans in America that we introduced several weeks ago as emergency legislatio­n, and the Legislatur­e’s failed to take action on it.… To me, it’s outrageous we haven’t taken action yet on something so important as school safety.”

 ?? Win McNamee Getty Images ?? STUDENTS at Great Mills High School in Maryland walk to meet their parents after the shooting.
Win McNamee Getty Images STUDENTS at Great Mills High School in Maryland walk to meet their parents after the shooting.

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