high school student armed with two handguns shot himself Monday after
police stormed a classroom where he held 23 students and a teacher
hostage.
Five hostages were allowed to leave the
police stationed outside the classroom heard three shots and burst into
the room to find the suspect at the head of the class, where he shot
himself. The remaining students and the teacher then left the classroom
safely,
“The game plan all along was to have the
hostage-taker leave the room without any injuries,” Skorik said. “It
was only after the three gunshots that officers became concerned with
the safety of students and breached the door.”
The suspect was taken to
Skorik said his condition and the location of his wound were not
available. Police have not been able to determine a motive, he said.
“The suspect fired one shot,” injuring himself, Skorik said.
“We have no idea as far as motivations at this point,” he said.
A 911 call reporting the situation was received shortly before
The hostage-taker refused to talk with police, who were in contact with the female teacher throughout the incident, Skorik said.
Skorik said that two guns — a .22-caliber
semiautomatic and a 9 mm semiautomatic — were recovered from the
classroom and that spent cartridges found at the scene indicated that
both weapons were fired.
Students in the classroom told investigators that shots also had been fired before police arrived, Skorik said.
The identity of the armed student was not released, but Skorik confirmed that he was part of the class that he took hostage.
Indications are the crisis began well before authorities were notified.
Kitkowski’s daughter and other students enrolled in
the class the following period were turned away at the door to the
classroom by the teacher, who told them to go to the school’s library.
“She (the teacher) looked a little nervous, but nobody thought anything of it,” Kitkowski said .
His daughter returned to the classroom after school to retrieve some homework but found the door locked, he said.
It wasn’t until she got outside and saw police and
firefighters arriving that she found out about the situation in the
classroom, Kitkowski said.
———
(c) 2010, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Visit JSOnline, the
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.