PARKLAND, Fla. — An American nightmare unfolded Wednesday afternoon at a South Florida high school after police say an expelled teenager returned to campus and opened fire with an assault rifle, killing 17 and wounding 15 more in the worst school shooting in
Florida history.
Just
before dismissal at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland,
thousands of students puzzled at the sound of a fire alarm were launched
into a panic when gunfire punctuated the din. As teachers and students
fled through hallways and hid under desks, a gunman opened fire, leaving
a trail of bodies and stunned confusion in his wake.
The
Broward Sheriff’s Office says Nikolas Cruz, 19, walked the halls of the
high school wielding an AR-15 and equipped with multiple magazines.
U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson of Florida told reporters that Cruz pulled a fire
alarm and then, wearing a gas mask, began tossing smoke bombs and
shooting people as they ran through the haze.
Police
say Cruz gunned down a dozen people inside buildings on the school’s
sprawling campus, two more on the grounds, and one more on the corner of
Pine Island Road as he fled. Two more died at the hospital. Many
underwent surgery at Broward Health hospitals.
The
Broward Sheriff’s Office says the school, home to about 3,200 students,
had been cleared by early evening. They did not identify any victims.
“It’s
a day that you pray, every day when you get up, that you will never
have to see. It is in front of us. I ask the community for prayers and
their support for the children and their families,” Schools
Superintendent Robert Runcie, appearing at a media staging area near the
school, told WSVN-TV. “Potentially there could have been signs out
there. But we didn’t have any warning or phone calls or threats that
were made.”
The shooter, identified by Sheriff
Scott Israel as Cruz, managed to make it off campus before he was
cornered and taken into custody near the community entrance to Pelican
Pointe at Wyndham Lakes in Coral Springs. He was transported to Broward
Health North, and then sped away from the hospital in a police escort.
Israel, whose triplets once attended the high school, called the shooting a “detestable act” and “catastrophic.”
He
did not name a motive for the shooting, which he said doesn’t
immediately appear to have been prompted by any confrontation. Nor did
he explain why Cruz, known by other students as a loner infatuated with
guns and knives, was expelled from school beyond saying that it was for
disciplinary reasons.
A teacher at the school told
the Miami Herald that Cruz, 19, had been identified as a potential
threat to fellow students in the past. Math teacher Jim Gard says he
believes the school administration had sent out an email warning
teachers that Cruz had made threats against other teenagers in the past.
Another student interviewed by the Herald said Cruz was punished once
for having bullet casings at school.
“We were told
last year that he wasn’t allowed on campus with a backpack on him,”
said Gard, who said Cruz had been in his class last year. “There were
problems with him last year threatening students, and I guess he was
asked to leave campus.”
The shooting began just
before dismissal, after Cruz pulled the fire alarm. Students and
teachers were puzzled because the school had already held a fire drill
that day. Still, some left their bags by their desk and walked out of
their classrooms.
Then the shots started.
“Six
kids ran back into my room, and I locked the door, turned out the
lights and had the kids go to the back of the room,” Gard said. “I told
the kids to hang in there, it may still be a drill.”
It wasn’t.
Nicholas
Coke, who was sitting in English class when the fire alarm went off,
described people jumping fences, running behind the middle school and
staying in classrooms to cower and pray after gunshots went off. Some
students took photos and posted video to social media.
“I wasn’t going to stick around and find out what was going on,” he said.
A
video posted to social media showed students hiding under desks,
screaming as at least 20 gun shots rang out. Some students believed
there was a second shooter at the school, but the Broward Sheriff’s
Office gave no indication that was the case.
On
the first floor, Geovanni Vilsant, 15, said he was in a Spanish
classroom when a fire alarm went off, urging all the students out of
their classrooms. Then, two minutes later, gun shots rang out enveloping
the three-floor building in explosions.
Geovanni, a freshman, said he saw three bloody bodies on the floor as he was fleeing the school.
“There was blood everywhere,” he said. “They weren’t moving.”
His elder brother, who jumped a fence and sought refuge in a nearby neighborhood, ran back around to try to find Geovanni.
“I had to go back for him,” Bradley Vilsant said from a nearby Walmart where the brothers fled with about 100 other students.
Some
at the school said a football coach and security guard, Aaron Feis, was
shot when he jumped in front of several students, although that report
remains unconfirmed.
As students hid and escaped,
SWAT teams swarmed the sprawling campus. The FBI-led Joint Terrorism
Task Force, consisting of local, state and federal agents, sent a squad
to the school to assist the Broward Sheriff’s Office and other law
enforcement.
Initially, they urged teachers and
students to remain barricaded inside until police reached them.
Eventually, they began clearing buildings one at a time. Students
streamed out in a line with their hands up. Others ran like mad,
bookbags strapped to their backs.
Federal authorities said they don’t believe the high school shootings are related to terrorism.
Worried
parents trying to find their children stood by helpless. Authorities
designated pick up for students at North Heron Bay Marriott, South at
Betty Stradling Park.
Parents, some of whom were
still searching for their kids after 8 p.m., stood about a mile away as
police blocked them from getting closer to their children. Many spoke on
their cellphones trying to calm their children down.
Denise
Perez paced as she spoke to her daughter Marsiel Baluja. Her daughter
told her that she was sitting between Publix and Walmart with a bunch of
other students. They were surrounded by armed marshals.
“Just stay calm, baby,” she said.
Perez just wanted to get closer to her daughter.
“This is really hard,” she said as she cried.
Victoria
Olvera, 17, a junior, was able to walk out after getting clearance by
police officers. She said she was in history when she heard shots.
“Everyone started running,” she said.
As
the evening wore on, and students had been safely evacuated from the
school, attention turned to those who were wounded in the gunfire. Dr.
Evan Boyar, medical director for the department of emergency medicine at
Broward Health North, said of the eight patients at Broward Health
North, three patients remained in critical condition and three were
stable.
“As a human being, you can imagine that they would be in shock or be emotional about the whole situation,” Boyar said.
Boyar said the hospital routinely runs drills to be prepared for situations like this.
Doctors
would not disclose details further than that regarding injuries to any
of the patients or the suspect. However, Dr. Igor Nichiporenko, the
medical director for trauma at Broward Health North, did say that all of
the victims suffered from gunshot wounds. Three patients were still in
the operating room, Nichiporenko said.
“They’re going to have successful surgeries. They’re going to recover,” Nichiporenko said. “They’re going to go home.”
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