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A man placed in handcuffs is led by police near Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School following a shooting incident in Parkland, Florida, on Wednesday. Police said the suspect was a 19-year-old former student at the school. Video still: WSVN.com via REUTERS

Ex-student kills 17 in bloody Valentine’s Day shooting spree at Florida high school

The suspect, identified as Nikolas Cruz, is now in custody, a Broward County Sheriff’s spokesman said

Agencies

A 19-year-old gunman returned to the Florida high school where he had once been expelled for disciplinary problems and opened fire with an assault-style rifle on Wednesday, killing 17 people and injuring more than a dozen others before he was arrested, authorities said.

The violence erupted soon before dismissal at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, a placid, middle-class community about 72km (45 miles) north of Miami.

Television footage showed images, increasingly familiar in America, of bewildered students streaming out of the building with hands raised in the air, as dozens of police and emergency services personnel swarmed the area.

Medical personnel tend to a victim following the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on Wednesday. Photo: AP
A horrific situation
Broward County Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie

Florida’s two US senators, briefed by federal law enforcement officials, said the assailant wore a gas mask as he stalked into the school carrying a rifle, ammunition cartridges and smoke grenades, then pulled a fire alarm, prompting students and staff to pour from their classrooms into hallways.

“There the carnage began,” Senator Bill Nelson told CNN.

Senator Marco Rubio gave a similar account on Twitter.

A chilling mobile phone video clip broadcast by CBS News showed a brief scene of what the network said was the shooting in progress from inside a classroom, where several students were seen huddled or lying on the floor surrounded by mostly empty desks.

A rapid series of loud gunshots are heard amid hysterical screaming and someone yelling, “Oh my God”.

The gunman was arrested later outside, some distance from the school in an adjacent community. CNN, citing law enforcement sources, said the gunman tried to blend in with students who were fleeing the school but was spotted and taken into custody.

He was identified as Nikolas Cruz, who previously attended the high school and was expelled for unspecified disciplinary reasons, Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said at a news briefing hours later.
Nikolas Cruz, the man accused of opening fire at a Florida high school. Photo: Handout

As a high school freshman, Cruz was part of the US military-sponsored Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corp programme at the school, according to Jillian Davis, 19, a recent graduate and former fellow JROTC member at Stoneman Douglas High.

In an interview with Reuters, she recalled his “strange talking sometimes about knives and guns,” adding, “no one ever took him seriously.”

Twitter user Aidan posted this photograph from inside his classroom during the shooting, with the message “My school is being shot up and I am locked inside. I’m f***ing scared right now.” Photo: TheCaptainAidan via Twitter

Chad Williams, 18, a senior at Stoneman Douglas, described Cruz as “kind of an outcast” who was known for unruly behaviour at school, including a penchant for pulling false fire alarms, and was “crazy about guns.”

The gunman surrendered to police without a struggle, Israel said.

He was armed with an AR-15-style rifle and had multiple magazines of ammunition.

“It’s catastrophic,” Israel said.

“There really are no words.” Broward County Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie called it “a horrific situation.”

Twelve of the dead were killed inside the school, two others just outside, one more on the street and two other victims died of their injuries at a hospital, Israel said. He said the victims comprised a mixture of students and adults.

Authorities at two nearby hospitals said they were treating 13 survivors for bullet wounds and other injuries, five of whom were listed in critical condition.

The Valentine’s Day bloodshed in the Miami suburb of gated communities with palm- and shrub-lined streets was the latest outbreak of gun violence that has become a regular occurrence at schools and college campuses across the United States over the past several years.

Students being evacuated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Photo: Reuters

It was the 18th shooting in a US school so far this year, according to gun control group Everytown for Gun Safety.

That tally includes suicides and incidents when no one was injured, as well as the January shooting in which a 15-year-old gunman killed two fellow students at a Benton, Kentucky, high school.

Staff and students told local media that a fire alarm went off around the time the shooting started, sparking chaos as some 3,300 students at the school first headed into hallways before teachers herded them back into classrooms, to seek shelter in wardrobes.

Medical personnel tend to a victim. Photo: AP
Family members embrace following the shooting at the school. Photo: AP

One survivor, Kyle Yeoward, 16, a junior, told Reuters he and about 15 fellow students and a teacher hid in a wardrobe for nearly two hours before police arrived. Yeoward said most of the shooting occurred in the building for the school’s freshman class.

Anguished parents checked on their children.

“It is just absolutely horrifying. I can’t believe this is happening,” Lissette Rozenblat, whose daughter goes to the school, told CNN. Her daughter called her to say she was safe but the student also told her mother she heard the cries of a person who was shot.

 

Televised images showed dozens of students, their arms in the air, weaving their way between law enforcement officers with heavy weapons and helmets, and large numbers of emergency vehicles including police cars, ambulances and fire trucks.

The school had recently held a meeting to discuss what to do in such an attack, Ryan Gott, a 15-year-old freshman told CNN.

“My prayers and condolences to the families of the victims of the terrible Florida shooting,” US President Donald Trump said on Twitter.

“No child, teacher or anyone else should ever feel unsafe in an American school.”

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