San Antonio Express-News

Denver school shooting suspect dead; parents demand improved security

- By Colleen Slevin and Jesse Bedayn

DENVER — A 17-year-old student was found dead in the Colorado woods after being accused of shooting and wounding two administra­tors at his Denver high school where students and parents were already fed up over recent violence and a lack of action by officials, authoritie­s said Thursday.

The shooting occurred Wednesday morning at East High School, not far from downtown, while two administra­tors searched Austin Lyle for weapons, a daily requiremen­t because of the boy’s behavioral issues, authoritie­s said.

Lyle fled after the shooting, and his body was found Wednesday night near his car in a remote, mountainou­s area about 50 miles southwest of Denver, outside the small town of Bailey, in Park County. The county coroner’s office confirmed early Thursday that the body was Lyle’s.

The cause of death wasn’t released, pending an autopsy.

The shooting, at a time of rising gun violence on school campuses across the U.S., has stoked a backlash against a policy adopted in Denver several years ago of not putting police or armed personnel into schools.

The administra­tors who were shot were unarmed, Denver schools spokespers­on Scott Pribble said.

“It stuns me that we have civilian people ... charged with having to search a student or anyone for weapons,” said Mo Canady, executive director of the National Associatio­n of School Resource Officers.

He said patting down students for weapons should fall to trained, armed school resource officers fitted with body armor.

If a resource officer had done the search at East High School, he added, “for the most part, I don’t see it being a tragedy.”

Students from East High School and others across Denver rallied at the state Capitol on Thursday to push for gun reform.

“We’re scared to go to school,” East High School sophomore Anna Hay said. “We want to have these legislator­s look us in our eyes when they tell us they won’t pass gun legislatio­n.”

As Wednesday’s shooting unfolded, Hay could hear sirens from emergency vehicles and had a sinking realizatio­n that the threat was real.

“Watching your friends and the fear in their eyes ... it’s the worst feeling in the world.”

The city’s Board of Education convened a special meeting Thursday to discuss the shooting and school security. The meeting came after parents who converged on the 2,500-student East High campus Wednesday voiced frustratio­n that officials weren’t adequately protecting their children.

The shooting occurred at a school shaken by frequent lockdowns and violence, including the recent killing outside the school of a classmate that prompted East High School students to march on the Colorado Capitol earlier this month.

“I am sick of it,” said Jess Haase, who planned to talk with her daughter about taking her out of classes for the rest of the school year.

 ?? David Zalubowski/associated Press ?? Students call for gun control measures during a rally outside the Capitol in Denver on Thursday, the day after a shooting left two administra­tors injured at East High School.
David Zalubowski/associated Press Students call for gun control measures during a rally outside the Capitol in Denver on Thursday, the day after a shooting left two administra­tors injured at East High School.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States