Santa Fe New Mexican

Shooter in custody after 2 killed, 17 injured

Expert fears people growing numb to horror

- By Alan Blinder and Daniel Victor

ATLANTA — On Tuesday, it was a high school in small-town Kentucky. On Monday, a school cafeteria outside Dallas and a charter school parking lot in New Orleans. And before that, a school bus in Iowa, a college campus in Southern California, a high school in Seattle.

Gunfire ringing out in U.S. schools used to be rare, and shocking. Now it seems to happen all the time.

The scene in Benton, Ky., on Tuesday was the worst so far in 2018: Two 15-year-old students were killed and 17 people were injured.

It was one of at least 11 shootings involving school property recorded since Jan. 1, and roughly the 50th of the academic year.

Researcher­s and gun control advocates say that since 2013, they have logged school shootings at a rate of about one a week.

“We have absolutely become numb to these kinds of shootings, and I think that will continue,” said Katherine Schweit, a former senior FBI official and the coauthor of a study of 160 active shooting incidents in the United States.

Some of the shootings at schools this year were suicides that injured no one else; some did not result in any injuries at all. But in the years since the massacres at Columbine High School in Colorado, Virginia Tech and Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., gun safety advocates say, all school shootings seem to have lost some of their capacity to shock.

Shannon Watts, the founder of Moms Demand Action, a gun safety group, said that was because in 2012 in Newtown, “20 first-graders and six educators were slaughtere­d in an elementary school.”

“The news cycles are so short right now in America, and there’s a lot going on,” she said. “But you would think that shootings in American schools would be able to clear away some of that clutter.”

Gov. Matt Bevin of Kentucky said the gunman who opened fire Tuesday morning at Marshall County High School in Benton, near the western tip of the state, was not a man at all, but a 15-yearold student. The authoritie­s said the student entered the school with a handgun just before 8 a.m., fired shots that struck 14 people, and set off a panicked flight in which five more were hurt.

One girl who was shot, Bailey Nicole Holt, died at the scene; a boy, Preston Ryan Cope, died of his injuries at a hospital.

The suspect, who was not immediatel­y identified, was taken into custody in “a nonviolent apprehensi­on,” Bevin said, and officials said he would be charged with two counts of murder and several counts of attempted murder. But the authoritie­s had not yet decided whether to the charge the suspectas a juvenile or as an adult.

Of the 17 people injured, five remained in critical condition, law enforcemen­t officials said.

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