Advertisement

Police officer kills teenager who turned up at high school prom with rifle and started shooting

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Nikita Deep, 16, a student at Antigo High School, embraces a family friend at Antigo United Methodist Church following a morning service on Sunday, a day after a shooting at the school prom. Deep is class president at the school and was involved in the coordination of the prom.Photo: AP

An 18-year-old man opened fire with a high-powered rifle outside of a high school prom in northern Wisconsin, wounding two students before a police officer who was in the parking lot fatally shot him, authorities said Sunday.

Advertisement

Investigators did not say whether they believe the two students were specifically targeted or discuss a possible motive for the shooting outside Antigo High School late Saturday. But a school administrator said it appeared that the gunman — identified by police as Jakob E. Wagner — intended to go into the dance and start shooting randomly. Friends said Wagner was a student at the school.

The two prom-goers who were wounded were shot as they exited the building, according to Eric Roller, the chief of police in Antigo, a community of about 8,000 people roughly 240km north of Milwaukee.

“Officers were in the parking lot patrolling the activities and heard the shots and an officer immediately fired upon the shooter, stopping the threat,” Roller said. He said the gunman was then taken into custody. Wagner died at a hospital.
Two Antigo police department vehicles sit in front of the entrance to Antigo High School on Sunday, the day after an 18-year-old gunman opened fire late Saturday outside of a prom at the school. Photo: AP
Two Antigo police department vehicles sit in front of the entrance to Antigo High School on Sunday, the day after an 18-year-old gunman opened fire late Saturday outside of a prom at the school. Photo: AP

In a statement, the Unified School District of Antigo said Wagner approached the school with a high-powered rifle and a large ammunition clip. The district said the “quick actions” taken by police and district staff to secure the building “prevented what might have otherwise been a disaster of unimaginable proportions.”

Advertisement

Interim district administrator Donald B. Childs said on Sunday that it appears Wagner intended to go into the building and shoot at people at the dance.

“We have no reason to believe at this point it was targeting anybody specifically,” Childs said, adding that the shooting outside the entrance happened “from some distance.”

Advertisement