Los Angeles Times

Shots spark panic at Palmdale school

Police arrest 14-year-old who they say opened fire and hurt 1 student

- brittny.mejia @latimes.com alene.tchekmedyi­an @latimes.com james.queally @latimes.com Times staff writer Joseph Serna contribute­d to this report.

The 911 calls poured in Friday morning during zero period at Highland High School in Palmdale. Nearly 100 callers reported an incident on campus: There was a person with a gun, possibly holding hostages in the school library.

Eventually, it was determined that a 14-year-old former student who had recently transferre­d out had brought a rifle to the campus and fired about 10 rounds, at least some from a bathroom, authoritie­s said.

One student was wounded. The 15year-old is expected to fully recover, authoritie­s said, and no one was held hostage in the library.

But the shooting sparked widespread panic and drew a massive lawenforce­ment response to the school, where students were advised to shelter in place as the campus went on lockdown. Several students texted and tweeted that they could hear gunfire, urging others to stay away. The closest trauma center cleared its operating room schedule in case staff needed to treat mass casualties.

“When you think about what we

went through today and the fact that it worked out as well as it did, a lot of training goes into this,” Los Angeles County Sheriff Jim McDonnell told reporters Friday afternoon. “The outcome was much better than anybody could have anticipate­d.”

The suspect, who was not identified, was detained in a nearby shopping center parking lot on suspicion of attempted murder, McDonnell said. It was unclear whether the suspect and the injured student knew each other, but authoritie­s were investigat­ing a motive and had searched the teen’s home.

“The potential was for anybody ... to take a stray round there, whether they were aimed at or not,” McDonnell said. “A very dangerous situation, but as far as trying to estimate what he was aiming for — too early to do that.”

Early Friday, the suspect’s mother had called an LAPD officer, a family friend, telling him she was having trouble with her son, who had run away from the house.

Shortly after the shooting, about 7:40 a.m., the suspect’s father called the same LAPD officer. The boy had just called, the father said, and said he had shot his gun in the air and was headed toward Vons, McDonnell said. The off-duty officer found the boy in the supermarke­t parking lot.

An SKS rifle was recovered from an open field west of the school shortly after 8:30 a.m., McDonnell said. The student allegedly brought the gun to school in a bag, but McDonnell did not say how or where the boy got it.

Deputies cleared the school and deemed it safe by 9 a.m. and lifted the lockdown shortly before 10:30 a.m., officials said.

In a strange twist, about 20 minutes after the high school shooting, authoritie­s said they fielded calls reporting a second shooting at Manzanita Elementary School, seven miles away.

But they found no evidence there of shots fired. It was unclear whether the reports were a mistake or meant to be a distractio­n.

“We’re still looking into that,” McDonnell said. “That’s something we’re going to look very closely at.”

Students and staff members who were on their way to Highland High School described a frantic scene Friday morning.

Matthew Polovina, an interprete­r for deaf students at the school, said he was coming in early to help a student study for a history test. But the student sent Polovina an alarming text message at 7:03 a.m.

“Don’t come!!! Gunner is here!” the text read.

“Why huh?” Polovina responded.

“Shooter is here,” the student said.

Later Friday morning, parents, students and staff gathered around the school, waiting for students to be released. Johnny Lewis Sr., whose 17-year-old son is a student at the school, raced over with his wife Friday morning after hearing reports about the shooting.

“We didn’t know at that time if our son was in danger, injured or shot or what,” he said. “It’s just ridiculous with all the guns in schools. I never knew it would happen to us here.”

Ana Salazar received a Snapchat message from her son saying he had locked himself in a room because there was a shooter at school. The 17-year-old had arrived early to print out some homework. Salazar left her job in Encino and drove to the school, where she waited for her son to be released.

“How does somebody that young get a gun?” she asked. “What goes into them to say, ‘Yeah, I can shoot a person,’ at that age? It’s unimaginab­le.”

Terrance McAllister, 17, said he was walking up to the school with friends when someone ordered them to turn back and warned them about the shooting.

“I was just hoping everyone was all right,” he said. “I hoped everyone was safe.”

School district officials have met with the injured student and his family to offer their support. Antelope Valley Union High School District is prepared for students to return to campus Monday and will have additional counselors, psychologi­sts and staff available at all campuses.

“We are incredibly grateful for the actions of Highland High School teachers and staff and our first responders who courageous­ly protected the lives of our students today,” said Assistant Supt. of Personnel Brett Neal.

“We know that every second is important in a situation like this, and we couldn’t be more thankful.”

After the lockdown was lifted, students and parents had emotional reunions.

“Mom!” shouted Angel Mathews, 15, as she ran into her mother’s arms, tears streaming down her face.

Angel said she heard a total of four gunshots as students began to run for safety. She hid in a classroom with friends.

“I’ve read about a school shooting in a book,” she said. “I didn’t know this was actually going to happen.”

Parents and students around the country have been on edge since February, when a gunman killed 17 people inside a high school in Parkland, Fla. In the week after that incident, police across Southern California were inundated with threats against schools.

The Los Angeles Unified School District’s police department reported at least 160 such threats in the nine days after the Parkland massacre, and a tip from a school resource officer led Los Angeles County sheriff ’s deputies to arrest a 17-yearold student at El Camino High School in Whittier that month who was accused of threatenin­g to “shoot up” the school after a teacher took away his earphones.

The student said he was only joking, but deputies later found two semiautoma­tic rifles, two handguns and 90 high-capacity magazines at the student’s home. His older brother, a U.S. Army veteran, claimed the firearms belonged to him.

 ?? Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? STUDENTS REUNITE with their families after a lockdown was lifted at Highland High School. A former student fired about 10 rounds on campus Friday morning, authoritie­s said, wounding one 15-year-old.
Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times STUDENTS REUNITE with their families after a lockdown was lifted at Highland High School. A former student fired about 10 rounds on campus Friday morning, authoritie­s said, wounding one 15-year-old.
 ?? By Brittny Mejia, Alene Tchekmedyi­an and James Queally ?? JENNIFER MONTANO embraces her son Ruben Murillo-Villa, 16. “I never knew it would happen to us here,” another parent said.
By Brittny Mejia, Alene Tchekmedyi­an and James Queally JENNIFER MONTANO embraces her son Ruben Murillo-Villa, 16. “I never knew it would happen to us here,” another parent said.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? A SHERIFF’S deputy leads students out of Highland High School in Palmdale after a 14-year-old opened fire on campus Friday morning, injuring one student. “The outcome was much better than anybody could have anticipate­d,” L.A. County Sheriff Jim...
Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times A SHERIFF’S deputy leads students out of Highland High School in Palmdale after a 14-year-old opened fire on campus Friday morning, injuring one student. “The outcome was much better than anybody could have anticipate­d,” L.A. County Sheriff Jim...
 ??  ?? FAMILIES reunite after the school lockdown was lifted, about three hours after the shooting. Authoritie­s said it is too early to determine a motive for the attack.
FAMILIES reunite after the school lockdown was lifted, about three hours after the shooting. Authoritie­s said it is too early to determine a motive for the attack.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States