A woman waited to hear about her sister, a teacher, on Friday after a mass shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. |
The gunman, who was believed to be in his 20s, walked into a classroom
where his mother was a teacher. He shot and killed her and then shot 18
students in the classroom. He also shot seven other adults, and then
killed himself inside the school. Various news outlets identified the
shooter as Ryan Lanza. The shooting ranks among the worst in recent
United States history.
A 9-year-old student said he was in the gym when the shooting erupted.
“We were in the gym, and I heard really loud bangs,'’ said the boy, as
he stood shivering and weeping outside the school with his father’s arms
draped around him. “We thought that someone was knocking something
over. And we heard yelling, and we heard gunshots. We heard lots of
gunshots. We heard someone say, ‘Put your hands up.’ I heard, ‘Don’t
shoot.’ We had to go into the closet in the gym. Then someone came and
told us to run down the hallway. There were police at every door. There
were lots of people crying and screaming.'’
Another student at the school told an NBC affiliate in Connecticut: “I
was in the gym and I heard like seven loud booms, and the gym teachers
told us to go in the corner and we huddled. We all heard these booming
noises, and we started crying. So the gym teachers told us to go into
the office where no one could find us. Then a police officer told us to
run outside.”
State police said the Newtown police called them shortly after 9:30
a.m., according to Lt. J. Paul Vance of the Connecticut State Police.
“On- and off-duty troopers responded to the school, and with Newtown
police immediately upon arrival entered the school and began an active
shooter search,” Lieutenant Vance said.
Meredith Artley, the managing editor of CNN.com, said that someone who
works at the school told her the shooting happened in the hallway. “She
described it as a ‘Pop, pop, pop,'” Ms. Artley said.
“She said three people went out into the hall and only one person came
back, the vice principal, she said, who was shot in the leg or the foot,
who came crawling back. She cowered under the table and called 911. She
never saw the shooting. There must have been a hundred rounds.”
President Obama was briefed on the shooting at 10:30 a.m., the White House said.
Danbury Hospital said it was treating three patients from the shooting scene, according to its Facebook page. The hospital, which is not far from the elementary school, said it was on lockdown.
At the hospital, stunned-looking personnel in white coats looked shaken
as they gathered in small groups talking about the shooting. In a corner
near the gift shop, one woman comforted a weeping colleague.
In the coffee shop, a few customers finished their sandwiches at the
lunch counter and the cashier wiped tears from her eyes as she rang up
customers.
In a mostly empty fifth-floor waiting room, three women watched local
coverage of the tragedy, shaking their heads at each new horrifying
detail.
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy arrived at the scene of the shooting on Friday afternoon.
The school, located among wooded hills and suburban tracts in Fairfield
County, 12 miles east of Danbury, serves kindergarten through fourth
grade. The school has about 700 students.
“It’s just a little country school,'’ said Robert Place, 65, as he stood
near the scene. “The look is very ‘50s or ‘60s. One floor. It’s always
had a good reputation. People come to Newtown for the schools.'’
The school’s principal, Dawn Hochsprung, was reportedly one of those
shot. But at the home of her daughter Cristina Hassinger, in Oakville,
Conn., the family was still awaiting any news of her fate.
“We’re looking for any hope,” said Ryan Hassinger, the son-in-law of the
principal. “If she’s in the hospital, any chance is better.”
He said that his wife, Cristina, 28, and “her sister are there now,”
with Connecticut state troopers, and that he and other relatives were
awaiting word on any news.
“I looked on Twitter and it says that she is passed,” said Mr. Hassinger. But, he added, the family was “just waiting.”
A photograph published by a local newspaper, The Newtown Bee, showed a line of children being escorted out of the school with some of the children crying.
In front of a senior center next door to the school, a 20-year-old woman
was with her 4-year-old sister, who was in the school at the time of
the shooting. The older woman came to pick up her younger sister along
with their mother. The girl had her arms and legs wrapped around her
older sister.
When a reporter asked the woman what the little girl knew of what had
happened, the woman said, “Absolutely nothing, and we don’t plan to tell
her anything.”
1 comment:
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