10/9/06 Another School Shooting - No Injuries ... Student, 13, fires AK-47 in Missou

Student, 13, fires AK-47 in Missouri school

It had to be an AK. I had better step up my efforts to find a SKS fast.

Student, 13, fires AK-47 in Missouri school

JOPLIN, Missouri (AP) -- A 13-year-old student wearing a mask and a long, black trenchcoat fired an AK-47 into the ceiling at his school Monday morning after confronting a pair of students and administrators, telling them "please don't make me do this," officials said.

No one was injured, and the boy, who police said was following a well-thought out plan, was taken into custody.

The seventh-grader pointed the gun at the two students, Principal Steve Gilbreth and Assistant Superintendent Steve Doerr, telling them "not to make me do this," Superintendent Jim Simpson said.

He then fired the shot into the ceiling, breaking a water pipe, and said again "Please don't make me do this," Simpson said.

Doerr and Gilbreth persuaded the youth to leave the building, and he was confronted by two police officers who had their weapons drawn. The student dropped the rifle and was taken into custody, Simpson said.

"It was a very close call," he said.

Police Officer Curt Farmer said officers found a note in the student's backpack indicating that he had placed an explosive in the school, which has about 750 students. Students were moved to nearby Joplin Memorial Hall to be picked up by their parents.

The backpack also contained military manuals, instructions on assembling a bomb and detailed drawings of the school.

"This was quite well thought out," Farmer said. "He had been planning this for a long time."

Farmer said police believe they know where the student got the weapon but would not disclose those details. He said it was not uncommon for people in the area to own high-power firearms.

The student, whose name was not released, was wearing a T-shirt over his head with holes cut out for eyes, Farmer said.

The school was closed while police and Missouri State Highway Patrol officers searched the building with bomb-sniffing dogs.

Simpson said authorities did not know whether others were involved, and school officials said they could not discuss a motive and would not have access to the student's records until the search was completed.

Police searched a home in the area and officers were seen leaving the house carrying two rifles, The Joplin Globe reported. Police roped off a half-block area around the house and would not reveal specifics about the search.

The shooting happened about 7:45 a.m., 10 minutes before the start of classes.

"A lot of the kids were scared," said eighth-grader Deron Moore. "After they said on the intercom that there was someone with a gun, I kind of went into shock."

A woman who was dropping her son off at the school said she saw Gilbreth "waving crazily" and police cars pulling up behind her.

"Police were heading into the school with weapons drawn, and the principal was pointing to the east side of the school," Blake Spivak told The Joplin Globe.

Spivak, former advertising director for the newspaper, said she and her son, Cooper, stayed in the car while Gilbreth walked back into the school flanked by armed officers in protective jackets. She said an officer told her to get down or get her car away from the scene.

Joplin, which has about 40,900 residents, is in southwest Missouri, about 140 miles south of Kansas City. It is about 10 miles from the small town of Riverton, Kansas, where five high school students were arrested in April and accused of plotting a school rampage there.

Schools across the country have been on alert since three deadly school shootings in three states in the span of a week, and several schools have been locked down or closed entirely during the past two weeks because of threats.
 
UPDATE!!!!

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,218878,00.html

It has now been called a MAC90, amazing the newsies got it right.

Even more important though the kid fired only one shot beacuse....... THE RIFLE JAMMED!!!!!!

I am very glad the rifle jammed and no innocents were killed but what the hell were the admins doing following this kid and not pounding the tar out of him. Thank God the punk did not know how to clear the jam or we could be looking at another body count.
 
Maybe they ought to ban black trenchcoats. They seem to figure heavily into a lot of these incidents. Makes as much sense as banning anything else.

badbob
 
Nope, there's nothing to any of this. Nothing but coincidence... :rolleyes: Yeah, call me paranoid if you want but when events like this happen every time the Dems want to pass anti-gun legislation, or regain a measure of control so they can create and pass such legislation, coincidence seems a bit strained.
 
FDR once said: "In politics, nothing happens by accident. If it
happens, you can bet it was planned that way."


Those who believe that major world events result from planning are
laughed at for believing in the "conspiracy theory of history." Of
course, no one in this modern day and age really believes in the
conspiracy theory of history -- except those who have taken the time to
study the subject. When you think about it, there are really only two
theories of history. Either things happen by accident, neither planned
nor caused by anybody, or they happen because they are planned and
somebody causes them to happen.

In reality, it is the accidental theory of history preached in the
unhallowed Halls of Ivy which should be ridiculed. Otherwise, why does
every recent administration make the same mistakes as the previous
ones? Why do they repeat the errors of the past which produce
inflation, depressions and war? Why does our State Department "stumble"
from one Communist-aiding "blunder" to another? If you believe it is
all an accident or the result of mysterious and unexplainable tides of
history, you will be regarded as an "intellectual" who understands that
we live in a complex world. If you believe that something like 32,496
consecutive coincidences over the past forty years stretches the law of
averages a bit, you are a kook!

badbob
 
Great

Another school incident. As Bush meets with people about school violence, there have been theories to the effect of mandatory psychological testing for students and parents. Only time will tell on this one. They want to nip these problems in the bud. Minority report? My question is why he said please don't make do this twice. Most of them kill themselves so the authorities can't find out why. I think a psych might reveal more. Thankfully no one was hurt, and Kudos for the LEO's who didn't shoot him dead. Can you say metal detectors and whiffers?
 
badbob,
that's surely something to think about.

I guess I'm not high-and-mighty enough to ridicule you and the others with comments about tin-foil hats. :rolleyes:

It's really eye-opening when some here are given cause to reveal just how haughty they are.


-azurefly
 
As Bush meets with people about school violence

Luckily, Bush is solidly in the pro 2nd Amendment camp and won't mess around with our gun rights. Hang on, the Easter Bunny is at my front door.
 
Another school incident. As Bush meets with people about school violence, there have been theories to the effect of mandatory psychological testing for students and parents. Only time will tell on this one. They want to nip these problems in the bud. Minority report? My question is why he said please don't make do this twice. Most of them kill themselves so the authorities can't find out why. I think a psych might reveal more. Thankfully no one was hurt, and Kudos for the LEO's who didn't shoot him dead. Can you say metal detectors and whiffers?
http://www.mindfully.org/Health/2004/Mandatory-Psychological-Tests23nov04.htm

Congress Funds Mandatory Psychological Tests for Kids

Newsmax 23nov04



One of the nation's leading medical groups, the Association of American Physicians & Surgeons (AAPS), decried a move by the U.S. Senate to join with the House in funding a federal program AAPS says will lead to mandatory psychological testing of every child in America – without the consent of parents.

When the Senate considered an omnibus appropriations bill last week that included funding for grants to implement universal mental health screening for almost 60 million children, pregnant women and adults through schools and pre-schools, it approved $20 million of the $44 million sought, Kathryn Serkes, public affairs counsel for AAPS, told NewsMax.

This $20 million matches a like amount already approved by the House, Serkes advised

Whoops! Another damned coincidence.

badbob
 
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