Student shot at Md. high school
Associated Press
PERRY HALL, Md.
A 15-year-old student opened fire on the first day of classes at a Baltimore County high school Monday, getting off two shots and wounding a classmate before being rushed by teachers, authorities said.
The assailant was taken into custody after the shooting and was cooperating with investigators, police said. Baltimore County Police Chief James Johnson said police do not believe the shooter was targeting the victim, a 17-year-old male. Johnson did not identify the type of weapon the shooter used.
Jordan Coates, a 17-year-old student who was in the cafeteria at the time of the shooting, said the student used a shotgun.
The shooter walked into the cafeteria of the Perry Hall High School about 10:45 a.m., Johnson said. He fired one shot before being grabbed by teachers, and then another shot went off, the police chief said.
Johnson said the shooter acted alone. He did not answer questions about a possible motive.
Baltimore County State’s Attorney Scott Shellenberger said it was too early to know what charges the shooter would face. Police said they would work with prosecutors to determine whether he would be charged as an adult.
The victim remained in critical condition at Maryland Shock Trauma Center on Monday evening, a hospital spokeswoman said.
The suspect’s father spoke to a reporter at his home Monday evening and said his son was the shooter. The Associated Press is not identifying the teen or his family because he is a juvenile and has not been charged. When asked about a motive for the shooting, the father indicated his son had been bullied. He gave no further details.
A woman who also was at the home and said she was related to the father, gave the following statement on the family’s behalf: “We are horrified. We did not see this coming, and our thoughts and prayers are with the victim and the victim’s family.”
No one answered the door Monday evening at the home of the alleged shooter’s mother. A sign at the house said, “We don’t call 911” and had a carved relief of a gun.
Coates said he watched teachers, including guidance counselor Jesse Wasmer, pin the student against a vending machine.
“My back was to the door. I heard a pop and thought it was a bag because people do that, but then I heard another one,” Coates said. “And I turned around and a teacher had a kid pinned up against the vending machine, and I saw the barrel, and another shot goes off and people just start running.”
Coates credited Wasmer with helping to stop the shooting, and numerous students went on Twitter to thank him.