Law
enforcement officers deploy outside Arapahoe High School, where a
student opened fire Friday. A student was critically wounded; the gunman
apparently killed himself. (RJ Sangosti, The Post)
CENTENNIAL
— The girl burst into Ms. Bradley's classroom in hyperventilating
panic. Blood soaked her shirt. Two sharp bangs preceded her entrance.
"Help me! Help me!" the girl cried. "There's a shooter."
Another
gunman visited terror upon another Colorado school Friday, when an
18-year-old senior at Arapahoe High School opened fire with a shotgun
inside his school and wounded a fellow student. The 15-year-old girl
collapsed into the arms of a friend, who then ran into Bradley's
classroom for help. The 15-year-old was in critical condition Friday
night after undergoing surgery.
Two other students were treated and released at the hospital for non-gunshot-related injuries.
Meredith
Strecker comforts her daughter Madisen after they were reunited Friday
afternoon outside Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church in Centennial.
Madisen is a freshman at Arapahoe High School, where a student opened
fire, critically wounding a fellow student before apparently killing
himself. (Joe Amon, The Denver Post)
Within
minutes after the first shot, the school's resource officer had chased a
trail of smoke and noise to a room where he found the body of the
shooter. Authorities identified the gunman as Karl Pierson, a member of
the school's debate team who recently had some type of confrontation
with a teacher. Pierson apparently killed himself.
Authorities
believe Pierson, whom fellow students described as bright and whose
family attended Bible study meetings, acted alone. Local and federal
investigators were at Pierson's home in Highlands Ranch on Friday night,
along with a bomb squad. Detectives were also searching Pierson's car
and at his father's Denver home.
Arapahoe County Sheriff Grayson
Robinson said investigators are considering whether revenge against the
teacher motivated Pierson, who Robinson said specifically asked where to
find the teacher as he walked into the school brazenly carrying the
shotgun. But Robinson just as quickly said that no matter what the
motive was, it could not bring sense to an event that again made
students cower in their classrooms and parents desperate just to see
their children.
Gov. John Hickenlooper said Friday was another
"all-too-familiar sequence of gunshots" at a Colorado school. Off to the
side after a news conference, he put it more directly: "This has got to
stop."
The school, which has roughly 2,100 students, is at the
corner of South University Boulevard and Dry Creek Road in Centennial.
It is about 8 miles east of Columbine High School, where two students
killed 12 students and one teacher in 1999. The school is about 15 miles
southwest of the Aurora movie theater where a gunman shot 70 people,
killing 12, in July 2012.
The first report of Friday's shooting came at 12:33 p.m.
A
police officer stops a student looking for her parents as she stands
near the football field outside Arapahoe High School on Friday
afternoon. A gunman who shot a student in the head was found dead from
an apparent self-inflicted gunshot. (John Leyba, The Denver Post)
Robinson
said the shooter made no attempt to hide the shotgun as he approached
Arapahoe High's west doors. Robinson said Pierson, once inside, asked
where he could find a specific teacher, whom students described as a
librarian at the school who also coached the speech and debate team.
Robinson would not identify the teacher.
Alerted to the situation,
the teacher quickly left the school, something Robinson praised as "the
most important tactical decision that could be made."
"He took himself away from the school in an effort to try to encourage the student to move with him," Robinson said.
Pierson, though, remained in the school, where he shot the 15-year-old girl when she came across his path.
Students and parents leave Arapahoe High School in Centennial after a gunman opened fire at the school on Friday. (RJ Sang osti, The Denver Post)
Dozens
of sheriff's deputies and SWAT teams converged on the school, but the
school's resource officer was already in pursuit of the shooter.
According to police scanner recordings, the deputy ran to the library,
where he saw smoke, and then into the athletic hall. There he found the
wounded girl.
"I have a student in the athletic hall," he said into his police radio. "She is bleeding pretty bad."
An
ambulance arrived within minutes to take the girl to Littleton
Adventist Hospital, where she underwent surgery Friday afternoon.
Inside
Andrea Bradley's yoga class, Arapahoe High senior Courtney Leypoldt
said she heard two bangs before the 15-year-old girl's friend burst into
the room. Bradley reacted quickly, Leypoldt said, and ushered students
into a deep closet. One-by-one, Bradley counted the heads of her
students as they walked inside, Leypoldt said.
Then she closed the door, and the sound of students sobbing in terror filled the space.
"We
heard footsteps running across the floor on top of us," Leypoldt said.
"Then another 'bang, bang,' and we just held on to each other and
cried."
Around the school, similar scenes played out, the result
of emergency training that both students and teachers were
all-too-familiar with. All of the students at Arapahoe High on Friday
had started kindergarten after the Columbine High School shootings. A
law enforcement official said Arapahoe had just recently practiced an
active-shooter drill.
Seniors Carl Schmidt and Brendon Mendelson
were in yoga class when the shooting began. Their teacher hurried them
promptly away from the door and into a closet.
"You always had the sense that nothing bad would happen to you," Schmidt said.
Student
Justin Morrall said students had been trained to move to the corners of
classrooms where they would not be visible. Morrall said he heard
screams when the shots were fired, but his classroom fell silent.
"Then we went into the drill positions," Morrall said.
Likewise,
Robinson and Hickenlooper praised the quick actions of law enforcement
officers, who entered the school immediately in hopes of confronting the
shooter.
"I believe their quick response and action saved lives,"
Robinson said. "I believe the shooter took his life because he knew he
had been found."
The orderliness, though, belied the terror in the classrooms.
"We
were all just sitting there staying quiet and praying," said
15-year-old Jessica Girard, who was in math class when she heard three
loud bangs.
Outside the locked classroom door, Jessica heard someone walk by, saying, "It hurts. It hurts. Make it stop."
"I
was thinking I was going to die and I was never going to see my family
again, and I was praying that they knew how much I loved them," Jessica
said.
As students left the school after the shooting, many held
their hands in the air or on their heads, and police officers patted
them down. They were taken by bus to Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran
Church or Euclid Middle School. Parents dashed to the school to find
their kids.
Earlier in the day, Chris Foster's daughter, Devan,
sent him a text message saying, "I love you. There is a shooting."
Foster made his way to the school, where he found Devan walking in a
crowd. He waded in and hugged her.
Julie Kellogg was driving by
Arapahoe High School when she saw police rush to the campus. Kellogg
said she frantically began calling and texting her children at the
school but did not hear back.
"I would have never expected my
reaction to be what it was," Kellogg said. "I immediately went into
panic, broke down. I didn't know what to think and I didn't even know
what happened, but it I knew it was bad."
Several hundred parents
gathered at Shepherd of the Hills Church — stretching tall, leaning this
way and that, crying, praying, trying to find their children.
And at the corner of University and Dry Creek, Christina Long stood in tears, staring at the school.
"This doesn't happen at this high school," she said. "My baby is in there."
Long said she didn't want to text her 16-year-old son, Dylan, a junior at Arapahoe.
"He'll call me when he's safe," she reasoned. "I'm going to let him hide."
But
a few minutes later, she received a phone call and broke down in tears.
She leaned over, and she simply said, "Oh, Baby. OK. OK. He's OK."
Then she sprinted across the street.