The National - News

Man charged with killing 17 pupils and teachers at a school in Florida

▶ Nikolas Cruz, 19, legally owned an assault rifle, ammunition and smoke grenades, police say

- ROB CRILLY New York

The 19-year-old man arrested after a mass shooting at a school in Florida has been charged with 17 counts of murder as authoritie­s faced growing questions about why they failed to act on a string of warning signs.

Nikolas Cruz was arrested on Wednesday about a mile from the scene of the killings at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Pupils, staff and neighbours described a troubled young man as it emerged the FBI had been warned about his activities last year.

President Donald Trump consoled the nation yesterday in a televised address with a message to those affected by the attacks. “We are here for you,” he said.

He also offered a message to children worried about future attacks.

“If you need help turn to a teacher, a family member, a local police officer or a faith leader. Answer hate with love, answer cruelty with kindness,” he said, adding that he planned to visit Parkland, Florida, where the shooting happened.

The killings marked the 18th gun incident at an American school so far this year, according to advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety, prompting fresh, familiar calls for tighter restrictio­ns on lethal weapons.

Police said Cruz was a former student at the school. He allegedly returned shortly before classes ended with a legally owned AR-15 assault rifle, smoke grenades and multiple magazines of ammunition.

They described how he set off the fire alarm so that pupils streamed out of classes as he opened fire.

Witnesses said he pursued victims through hallways, before fleeing the building along with other pupils amid the chaos.

Students said they had been worried about his behaviour, describing how he posed with weapons for photograph­s posted on social media.

Dakota Mutchler, 17, said he had once been friends with Cruz.

“He started going after one of my friends, threatenin­g her, and I cut him off from there,” he said, adding that Cruz had been expelled from school last year.

Last autumn, a YouTube vlogger warned authoritie­s about comments left on a video.

“I’m going to be a profession­al school shooter,” said a user named Nikolas Cruz, prompting Ben Bennight to email a screenshot of the comment to the FBI, according to Buzzfeed News.

Cruz’s father died a few years ago and his mother died in November, said Jim Lewis, a lawyer representi­ng the family with whom Cruz was living.

He brought with him an AR15 assault rifle when he moved in, the lawyer said, and had been treated for depression which the family attributed to his mother’s death.

“They didn’t see any danger. They didn’t see any kind of predilecti­on this was going to happen,” Mr Lewis told CNN.

The first victim of the attack to be publicly identified was Aaron Feis, an assistant coach on the school’s football team, who was shot while shielding students.

Mr Trump’s address will anger gun-control advocates who fear Republican­s will shift blame to mental illness.

“We are committed to working with state and local leaders to help secure schools and tackle the difficult issue of mental health,” he said.

He made the same point in an earlier Twitter post, earning immediate condemnati­on. A Twitter user believed to be a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School hit back at Mr Trump in a message that quickly went viral.

“I don’t want you condolence­s …” said @chaddiedab­addie.

“Multiple of my fellow classmates are dead. Do something instead of sending prayers.

“Prayers won’t fix this. But gun control will prevent it from happening again.”

Melissa Falkowski, a teacher at the school, described how she had shepherded her students into a cupboard as the mayhem unfolded.

“Broward County Schools has prepared us for this situation and to still have so many casualties, at least for me, it’s very emotional. Because I feel today that our government, our country has failed us and failed our kids and didn’t keep us safe,” she said.

Wednesday’s shooting was the second worst attack at a school in American history, second only to the 26 people shot dead at an elementary school in New town, Connecticu­t, in December 2012.

Yet opinion polls suggest momentum is shifting towards the gun lobby.

In 1993, Pew found a clear majority in favour of greater gun control – 57 per cent over 35 per cent.

In its latest survey, the lead had narrowed to 51 per cent of respondent­s saying gun control was more important than gun rights, compared with 47 per cent who said the opposite.

Iain Overton, the director of Action on Armed Violence and the author of Gun Baby

Gun, said the Second Amendment, guaranteei­ng the right to bear arms, was too deeply entrenched to allow tougher legislatio­n.

“The Gordian Knot that is the Second Amendment – one made up of twisted strands of civil liberty arguments, political financing, healthy profits from an unrestrain­ed firearm industry, and a cultural mantra of the virtues of ‘good guys’ with guns – means it will take more than a massacre to change the law. It would take a social revolution.”

 ?? EPA ?? A woman is comforted by a police officer after the shooting on Wednesday at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, soon after 17 pupils and teachers were shot dead. Several more were injured at the high school north-west of Miami
EPA A woman is comforted by a police officer after the shooting on Wednesday at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, soon after 17 pupils and teachers were shot dead. Several more were injured at the high school north-west of Miami
 ?? AFP ?? Shooting suspect Nikolas Cruz yesterday at Broward County Jail in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after he was charged with 17 counts of premeditat­ed murder
AFP Shooting suspect Nikolas Cruz yesterday at Broward County Jail in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after he was charged with 17 counts of premeditat­ed murder

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