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What We Know About Georgia High School Shooting Suspect Charged With Killing 4

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What We Know About Georgia High School Shooting Suspect Charged With Killing 4

Four people were killed and nine others injured after a 14-year-old student opened fire Wednesday at Apalachee High School in northern Georgia, authorities said. More information emerged about the suspect as officials tried to determine how the teen obtained the gun and a motive for the latest school shooting in the US

Previous tips about threats

More than a year ago, tips about online posts threatening a school shooting led Georgia police to question a 13-year-old boy, but investigators didn’t have enough evidence to make an arrest. On Wednesday, that boy opened fire at his high school outside Atlanta, killing four people and wounding nine, officials said.

The teen, identified as 14-year-old Colt Gray, has been charged as an adult in the deaths of Apalachee High School students Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo, both 14, and teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39, and Christina Irimie, 53, Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Chris Hosey said at a news conference.

At least nine other people — eight students and a teacher at the school in Winder, about an hour northeast of Atlanta — were taken to the hospital with injuries. All were expected to survive, Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith said.

Gray is currently being held at the Gainesville Regional Youth Detention Center, Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice spokesman Glenn Allen told CBS News on Thursday.

Barrage of gunfire

Armed with an assault rifle, the teenager pointed the weapon at students in the school hallway when his classmates refused to open the door so he could return to his math classroom, classmate Lyela Sayarath said.

The teen had left the second-period algebra classroom earlier, and Sayarath suspected that the quiet student who had recently transferred was skipping again.

But he came back later and wanted to go back to the classroom. Some students wanted to open the locked door, but instead they went back.

“I guess they saw something, but for some reason they didn’t open the door,” Sayarath said.

As she looked at him through a window in the door, she saw the student turn and heard a barrage of gunfire.

“There were about 10 to 15 at a time, right behind each other,” she said.

The math students dove to the ground and occasionally crawled around, looking for a safe corner to hide.

Two school resource officers encountered the shooter within minutes of a report of shots fired, Hosey said. The teen immediately surrendered and was arrested.


4 dead, 9 injured in Georgia high school shooting

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According to Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith, police were alerted to the threat by a new security system that had been installed about a week earlier. Smith noted that there were three school resource officers on campus at the time of the shooting.

Teen previously questioned by FBI

The teen was questioned after the FBI received anonymous tips in May 2023 about online threats to commit an unspecified school shooting, the agency said in a statement.

FBI Atlanta said on social media On Wednesday evening, the FBI’s National Threat Operations Center discovered the messages originated in Georgia and “the FBI’s Atlanta Field Office forwarded the information to the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office,” which borders Barrow County.

The sheriff’s office interviewed the then-13-year-old and his father, who said there were shotguns in the house but the teen didn’t have unescorted access to them. The teen also denied making threats online.

The sheriff’s office alerted local schools to monitor the teen, but there was no probable cause for an arrest or additional action, the FBI said.

Hosey said the state Division of Family and Children Services also had prior contact with the teen and will investigate whether that is related to the shooting. Local news outlets reported that police searched the teen’s home in Bethlehem, Georgia, east of the high school, on Wednesday.

“All those students who had to watch their teachers and classmates die, who had to walk out of school limping and looking traumatized,” Sayarath said, “that is the result of not taking control.”

Authorities are still investigating how the teen obtained the weapon used in the shooting and how he brought it into the school of about 1,900 students in Barrow County, a rapidly urbanizing area on the edge of Atlanta’s sprawling metropolis.

Disturbing trend

It was the last under dozens of school shootings in the US in recent years, including notably deadly ones in Newtown, Connecticut, Park landscapeFlorida, and UvaldeTexas. The classroom killings have stoked heated debates about gun control and rattled the nerves of parents whose children grow up with classroom active shooter drills. But they have done little to improve the nation’s gun laws.

As of Wednesday, 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.

On Wednesday night, hundreds gathered at Jug Tavern Park in downtown Winder for a vigil. Volunteers handed out candles, as well as water, pizza and tissues. Some knelt as a Methodist minister led the crowd in prayer after a Barrow County commissioner read a Jewish prayer of condolence.

Christopher Vasquez, 15, said he attended the vigil because he needed grounding and a safe space.

He was practicing with the band when the lockdown was announced. He said it felt like a normal practice as students lined up to hide in the band closet.

“When we heard banging on the door and the SWAT team came to take us out, I knew it was serious,” he said. “I just started shaking and crying.”

He finally calmed down once he got to the football stadium. “I just prayed that everyone I love was safe,” he said.

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