Shooter Kills 4 at a Georgia High School and a Suspect Is in Custody, Officials Say

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    Police gather outside Apalachee High School after a shooting at the school Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2024, in Winder, Ga. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

    WINDER, Ga. (AP) — A shooter at a Georgia high school killed four people on Wednesday, authorities said, sending students scrambling for shelter in their classrooms — and eventually to the football stadium — as officers swarmed the campus and parents raced to find out if their children were safe.

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    At least nine people were injured and a suspect was in custody, authorities said. It was not immediately clear if the shooter was a student at Apalachee High School in Winder, Georgia, about an hour’s drive from Atlanta.

    “What you see behind us is an evil thing,” Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith said at a brief news conference outside the school. He declined to give details about the suspect. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said four people were dead and at least nine injured.

    The school shooting was just the latest among dozens across the U.S. in recent years, including especially deadly ones in Newtown, Connecticut, Parkland, Florida, and Uvalde, Texas. The classroom killings have set off fervent debates about gun control and frayed the nerves of parents whose children are growing up accustomed to active shooter drills in classrooms. But they have done little to move the needle on national gun laws.

    Jacob King, a sophomore football player, said he had dozed off in his world history class after a morning practice when he heard about 10 gunshots.

    King said he didn’t believe the shooting was real until he heard an officer yelling at someone to put down their gun. King said when his class was led out, he saw officers shielding what appeared to be an injured student.

    Prior to Wednesday’s shooting, there had been 29 mass killings in the U.S. so far this year, according to a database maintained by The Associated Press and USA Today in partnership with Northeastern University. At least 127 people have died in those killings, which are defined as incidents in which four or more people die within a 24-hour period, not including the killer — the same definition used by the FBI.

    Last year ended with 217 deaths from 42 mass killings in the U.S., making 2023 one of the deadliest years on record in the country.

    Ashley Enoh was at home Wednesday morning when she got a text from her brother, who’s a senior at Apalachee High:

    “Just so you know, I love you,” he texted her.

    When she asked in the family group chat what was going on, he said there was a shooter at the school. Enoh’s younger sister, a junior at the school, said she had heard about the shooter and that everything was on lockdown.

    Sophomore Kaylee Abner was in geometry class when she heard gunshots. She and her classmates ducked behind their teacher’s desk, and then the teacher began flipping the desk in an attempt to barricade the classroom door, Abner said. A classmate beside her was praying and she held his hand while the students waited for police.

    Layla Ferrell, a junior, was in a health class when the words “hard lockdown” appeared on a screen in the classroom and lights began flashing. Ferrell said she and her frightened classmates piled desks and chairs in front of the door to create a barricade.

    Helicopter video from WSB-TV showed dozens of law enforcement and emergency vehicles surrounding the school in Barrow County, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of Atlanta.

    When Erin Clark, 42, received a text from her son Ethan, a senior at the high school, that there was an active shooter, she rushed from her job at the Amazon warehouse to the school. The two texted “I love you,” and Clark said she prayed for her son as she drove to the high school.

    With the main road blocked to the school, Clark parked and ran with other parents. Parents were then directed to the football field. Amid the chaos, Clark found Ethan sitting on the bleachers.

    Clark said her son was writing an essay in class when he first heard the gunshots. Her son then worked with his classmates to barricade the door and hide.

    “I’m so proud of him for doing that,” she said. “He was so brave.”

    Students had only started the school year a little over a month ago.

    “It makes me scared to send him back,” she said. “I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

    Traffic going to the school was backed up for more than a mile as parents tried to get to their children there.

    The White House said President Joe Biden has been briefed about the shooting and the administration will coordinate with federal, state and local officials as it receives more information.

    Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said in a statement: “This is a day every parent dreads, and Georgians everywhere will hug their children tighter this evening because of this painful event.”

    The FBI’s Atlanta office said its agents were at the school “coordinating with and supporting local law enforcement.”

    Apalachee High School has about 1,900 students, according to records from Georgia education officials. It became Barrow County’s second largest public high school when it opened in 2000, according to the Barrow County School System. It’s named after the Apalachee River on the southern edge of Barrow County.

    The shooting had reverberations in Atlanta, where patrols of schools in that city were beefed up, authorities said. More patrols of Atlanta schools would be done “for the rest of the day out of an abundance of caution,” Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens said.

    In Winder, Abner said that when she goes home Wednesday night, she hopes to avoid thinking about those terrifying moments in her geometry class.

    “I’ll probably not think about it, even though it happened,” she said. “Just think happy thoughts, don’t think about it anymore.”

    Sophomore Shantal Sanvee, who was in a classroom near the gunshots, kept telling herself over and over again that’s she’s OK.

    “I don’t think I want to be here for like a long time now,” she said.

    As an officer led the students towards the football stadium, freshman Michelle Moncada was in tears. People who she knew had been shot.

    “I was just really, really nervous,” Moncada said.

    The stadium was filled with tear-stricken students wondering whether their friends were okay. She saw one of her friends on the floor. A bullet had grazed him.

    “It doesn’t feel real,” Moncada said.


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    35 Comments
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    Need common-sense laws to control the commies
    Need common-sense laws to control the commies
    7 days ago

    I remember back in the late fifties we would bring our shotguns and hunting rifles and leave them in our unlocked pickup trucks in the high school parking lot. No school shootings then. Disarming only the law abiding by declaring schools “gun free zones”, importing third world savages and removing G-d from society — all of a sudden there are school shootings. Thank you socialist-fascists!

    Biden Is Hamas' Man In Washington.
    Biden Is Hamas' Man In Washington.
    7 days ago

    More people are shot and die every weekend in Chicago.

    lipale
    lipale
    7 days ago

    where’s Biden? where’s Harris? where’s the DA? where’s the courts?

    Jake
    Jake
    5 days ago

    Senator JD Vance of Ohio said on Thursday that school shootings were an unfortunate “fact of life.” Yep, he speaks the truth, at least in the U.S.

    Nachum
    Nachum
    7 days ago

    In order to board a commercial aircraft, we are searched from head to toe in public, sometimes very invasively Yet, the same standard does not apply to our public schools, whereby violent students bring guns to school, and murder at will, with impunity. Nothing has been done to stop this carnage, over twenty five years after Columbine. In Israel, despite scores of terrorist incidents, this garbage does not occur in Israeli schools, and has not occurred in over fifty years. Whatever the Israelis are doing to keep their kids safe in schools, it works. We should learn a lesson from their security procedures in schools.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    7 days ago

    Ok, repeat after me, guns don’t kill people, people kill people. I have yet to witness or be informed of a loaded rifle or gun, sitting on a table or standing in a closet, cause a mass murder. I suppose you would want the DA to charge the gun in this case?? As far as exercising the 2nd Amendment mantras of the left, realize that guns don’t have a cause and are solely at the beck and call of the gun carrier. And if we are making arguments, how about the motorized scooters and bikes that maim or paralyze pedestrians – which amendment does that fall under? How about euthenists or assisted suicide helpers, their amendment protection? As Nixon said, if the President does it, it can’t be illegal. Regarding law enforcement, they are comfortably hiding behind an ignorant, immoral electorate.