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Ohio School Shooting: 5 Students Shot, 1 Dies At Chardon High School, Suspect In Custody

THOMAS J. SHEERAN   02/27/12 11:04 PM ET  AP

CHARDON, Ohio — A teenager opened fire in the cafeteria at a suburban Cleveland high school Monday, killing one student and wounding four others before he was chased from the building by a teacher and captured a short distance away, authorities said.

A student who saw the attack up close said it appeared that the gunman targeted a group of students sitting together and that the one who was killed was gunned down while trying to duck under the cafeteria table.

FBI officials would not comment on a motive. And Police Chief Tim McKenna said authorities "have a lot of homework to do yet" in their investigation of the shooting, which sent students screaming through the halls at the start of the school day at 1,100-student Chardon High.

An education official said the suspected shooter is a Lake Academy student, not a student at Chardon High. Brian Bontempo declined to answer any questions about the student. Bontempo is the superintendent of the Lake County Educational Service Center, which operates the academy.

The alternative school in Willoughby serves 7th through 12th grades. Students may have been referred to the school because of academic or behavioral problems.

The suspect's name has not been released because he is a juvenile. The FBI said he was arrested near his car a half-mile from Chardon.

Teachers locked down their classrooms as they had been trained to do during drills, and students took cover as they waited for the all-clear in this town of 5,100 people 30 miles from Cleveland. One teacher was said to have dragged a wounded student into his classroom for protection. Another chased the gunman out of the building, police said.

Fifteen-year-old Danny Komertz, who witnessed the shooting, said the gunman was known as an outcast who had apparently been bullied. But other students disputed that.

"Even though he was quiet, he still had friends," said Tyler Lillash, 16. "He was not bullied."

Long before official word came of the attack, parents learned of the bloodshed from students via text message and cellphone and thronged the streets around the school, anxiously awaiting word on their children.

Two of the wounded were listed in critical condition, and another was in serious condition.

"I looked up and this kid was pointing a gun about 10 feet away from me to a group of four kids sitting at a table," Komertz said. He said the gunman fired two shots quickly, and students scrambled for safety. One of them was "trying to get underneath the table, trying to hide, protecting his face."

The slain student, Daniel Parmertor, was an aspiring computer repairman who was waiting in the cafeteria for the bus for his daily 15-minute ride to a vocational school. His teacher at the Auburn Career School had no idea why Parmertor, "a very good young man, very quiet," had been targeted, said Auburn superintendent Maggie Lynch.

Officers investigating the shooting blocked off a road in a heavily wooded area several miles from the school. Federal agents patrolled the muddy driveway leading to several spacious homes and ponds, while other officers walked a snowy hillside. A police dog was brought in. It wasn't clear what they were looking for.

Teacher Joe Ricci had just begun class when he heard shots and slammed the door to his classroom, yelling, "Lockdown!" to students, according to Karli Sensibello, a student whose sister was in Ricci's classroom.

A few minutes later, Ricci heard a student moaning outside, opened the door and pulled in student Nick Walczak who had been shot several times, Sensibello said in an email. Ricci comforted Walczak and let him use his cellphone to call his girlfriend and parents, Sensibello said. She said her sister was too upset to talk.

Heather Ziska, 17, said she was in the cafeteria when she saw a boy she recognized as a fellow student come into the cafeteria and start shooting. She said she and several others immediately ran outside, while other friends ran into a middle school and others locked themselves in a teachers' lounge.

"Everybody just started running," said 17-year-old Megan Hennessy, who was in class when she heard loud noises. "Everyone was running and screaming down the hallway."

Rebecca Moser, 17, had just settled into her chemistry class when the school went into lockdown. The class of about 25 students ducked behind the lab tables at the back of the classroom, uncertain whether it was a drill.

Text messages started flying inside and outside the school, spreading information about what was happening and what friends and family were hearing outside the building.

"We all have cellphones, so people were constantly giving people updates – about what was going on, who the victims were, how they were doing," Moser said.

The school had no metal detectors, but current and past students said it had frequent security drills in case of a shooting.

Anxious parents of high school students were told to go to an elementary school to pick up their children.

Joe Bergant, Chardon school superintendent, said school was canceled Tuesday and grief counselors would be available to students and families.

"If you haven't hugged or kissed your kid in the last couple of days, take that time," he said.

___

AP writers Dan Sewell in Cincinnati and Julie Carr Smyth and Andrew Welsh-Huggins in Columbus contributed to this report.

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CHARDON, Ohio — A teenager opened fire in the cafeteria at a suburban Cleveland high school Monday, killing one student and wounding four others before he was chased from the building by a teach...
CHARDON, Ohio — A teenager opened fire in the cafeteria at a suburban Cleveland high school Monday, killing one student and wounding four others before he was chased from the building by a teach...
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02:48 PM on 02/29/2012
.Out of 300 million people a few are able to do so much damage to so many.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ConservativebyNature
Molon Labe ! !
03:21 PM on 03/01/2012
Yes, criminals are evil.
02:19 PM on 02/29/2012
(Sarcasm alert!) TJ Lane, meet Jared Loughner. TJ, aren't guns a great solution for mental problems?
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SkeeBee
Offending InFoxtrination Sufferers With Facts.
06:43 PM on 02/29/2012
Tasteless alert more like..... You are undermining your point, which I think is for gun control (?) by making light of the murder and maiming of your fellow citizens.
07:17 PM on 02/29/2012
SkeeBee, irony is a rhetorical device wherein the literal meaning is the opposite of the intended meaning.
08:45 AM on 03/04/2012
"You can't claim gun control doesn't work when, for practical purposes, we've never had it. And still don't." -- M in S.P.

What specific measures do you advocate that would constitute "having" gun control, while eliminating school shootings and producing a reduction in violent crime?
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
05:34 PM on 02/28/2012
This is so sad. Please wake up America. The handwriting is on the wall. It is praying time.
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Dimensio
I just don't know what went wrong!
08:43 PM on 02/28/2012
The current time, as of the authoring of this message, is 2043 Eastern Standard Time.
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SkeeBee
Offending InFoxtrination Sufferers With Facts.
06:43 PM on 02/29/2012
What? Huh?
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09:55 PM on 02/28/2012
We live in the society the church created.
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KMAJ
Iraq war Veteran
04:36 PM on 03/03/2012
Actually, it is an undeniable fact that only sinners murder people.
04:42 PM on 02/28/2012
The only thing that prevented me from going through with my plan to shoot up my school in 1995 was my choice not to go through with it. I was caught, punished and let off the hook only to resume plotting. But in the end only my choices determined the outcome of my life.

-Calence Emerson, author of "Transcending Columbine: The Education of an Almost-School-Shooter" (Available FREE online, just Google it)
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SkeeBee
Offending InFoxtrination Sufferers With Facts.
06:45 PM on 02/29/2012
What if you lived in a culture where getting a gun was easier than picking up a Slayer album at WalMart.... Might your planning have gone as far, or as close to reality, if the reality of the situation was that guns were more regulated and you had a MUCH harder, and lengthier period of, time before getting one?
08:32 PM on 02/29/2012
Nope because my senior year in high school I ended up getting 7 guns that literally landed in my lap when my dad passed away, I had a rifle, a shotgun and 5 handguns and enough ammo to do serious damage, plus about 10 gallons of black powder. I also had friends with guns during the time of my plan, and it was too easy to plan a day to steal them. Glass cabinets with locks, and even metal is too easy to break into. The availability of guns is not relevant when 99% of all school shooters steal them from their neighbors, friends parents and other people who keep them safely locked way, disassembled and unloaded. All you have to do is assemble it. Piece of cake.

Cho was one of the only few shooters who ever used their own weapon that they purchased. Gun laws go both ways - we can argue til we are blue in the face but kids steal the guns from law abiding, unknowing parents. There are friends of mine whose parents never knew we even were at their house. Go there at lunchtime when no one is home and there are no "rules" - suddenly a house full of respectable law abiding gun collectors/hunters turns into a stockpile of weapons for an angry teenager, all without the parent's knowledge. It's not the guns or the gun owners, it's the kid's choice that is the cause.
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David Carson
08:49 PM on 02/29/2012
Skee--it is obvious that you have no idea the procedure to legally purchase a firearm--you should try it sometime
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Andres64
Religion is a sectually transmitted disease.
03:15 PM on 02/28/2012
More liberal gun laws would have prevented this.
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09:56 PM on 02/28/2012
Doubtful.If a person even a child wants a gun one can be had.
11:06 PM on 02/28/2012
????

Gun laws don't prevent things like this. Liberal ones... seem to be the opposite of what most people are advocating on this site. Most people are calling for tougher gun laws on this site.

Good to buck the trend I guess.
12:40 AM on 03/01/2012
Gun laws in Oregon - I broke em all when I transported 7 guns to California in the trunk. Gun laws in CA - I broke em all when I had 7 guns in my room that I got from my dad after he passed away. Never bought a gun, never registered them either yet I got 7 so easily. Laws don't prevent anything. Only a person's CHOICE prevents them from an action. You choose to kill; you choose not to kill. Simple equation. It's called RESPONSIBILITY.
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mackbolan
Libertas inaestimabilis res est
03:08 PM on 02/28/2012
when are you guys going to call for a ban on all arms not just guns...if you don't think this would have been possible with a large knife just ask oj...or better yet ask his victims...
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ssnt
670 Economists(6 w/ Nobel Prize) like Mitt's plan
03:39 PM on 02/28/2012
Oh Lawd.
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David Carson
04:51 PM on 02/28/2012
mack made a valid point--too bad you are biased
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07:29 PM on 02/28/2012
Make that two "oh lawds " The mentality of the anti-gun establishment never ceases to amaze me.They have this notion, this idea of a utopian society, where everyone walks hand in hand, and nobody has thoughts of doing bad things. and no weapons exist, with which to do them. Of course, there still are baseball bats, tire irons, screwdrivers and assorted other implements which a person intent on doing bodily harm can utilize to do his deeds.They can't seem to get it through their skulls that it's not the weapon, but the individual wielding it that's the problem.
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07:16 PM on 02/28/2012
Approximately 80 million firearm-owning citizens chose not to commit such an act. Approximately 55 million of the other K-12 graders in this country chose not to commit such an act. Hardly makes a case for calling to ban all arms.
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01:59 PM on 02/28/2012
"Fifteen-year-old Danny Komertz, who witnessed the shooting, said the gunman was known as an outcast who had apparently been bullied. But other students disputed that.

"Even though he was quiet, he still had friends," said Tyler Lillash, 16. "He was not bullied.""

Ah, no. Having friends and being bullied have zip to do with each other, kid.
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10:02 PM on 02/28/2012
Thats just 2 different kids view of the smae kids. One could have known more of the kid then the others.
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SmallTownMarm
10:07 AM on 02/29/2012
I was a quiet kid and had a handful of friends, but I was not bullied....I don't understand your point. Your comment is frivolous.
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06:34 PM on 02/29/2012
My comment is "frivolous" because you don't understand it? OK...

My point was that this kid was denying the shooter was "bullied" because he had friends. I called BS because whether or not you have friends doesn't prove or disprove bullying.
01:58 PM on 02/28/2012
Here is a case where if proved guilty this youngster should receive the death penalty. I'm sorry. But 3 people have died from his actions. And for those of you who think that this won't help. It won't stop the totally crazies. But it just might make others think before losing their tempers. Also, the executions should be public. So let's see how the judgement goes first. Fair trial I can agree with. If found guilty then what will be the punishment?
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QuietProfessional
Recovering Jedi
12:59 PM on 02/28/2012
Events like this are exceedingly rare. Reacting to them by politicizing them, jumping to sweeping conclusions about "the state of society", or calling for a frenzy of legislation -- to satisfy one's need to "doing something" -- more often than not leads to unintended outcomes.

Hard cases lead to bad laws.
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01:36 PM on 02/28/2012
Best comment of the day.
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QuietProfessional
Recovering Jedi
02:01 PM on 02/28/2012
Thanks, Gray!
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Old Jarhead
F-4. The triumph of thrust over aerodynamics
03:31 PM on 02/28/2012
Agreed!
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Dimensio
I just don't know what went wrong!
03:58 PM on 02/28/2012
Are you certain that impulsively authored legislation, created based upon assumptions established prior to accumulation of all relevant data and without regard for detailed study to determine whether proposed measures will prevent future occurrences of a recent incident, is not the best course of action?
12:54 PM on 02/28/2012
It's not a gun issue. It's a morality issue. If people didn't buy guns, then then gun industry would go the way of the dinosaur. Immorality dictates bad behavior. The thief holds up a liquour store because he doesn't see his action as being immoral. Gangs don't see themselves as being immoral. Murderers don't see themselves as being immoral. People who use foul language don't see themselves as immoral. Everyone of us can and will justify our behavior and actions. Morality has been removed from society and replaced with "it's my right."
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scotch43
...you didn't see anything....
02:32 PM on 02/28/2012
it most certainly is a gun issue....it is not a morality issue....because the majority of people in society are not committing murders, belong to gangs, hold up liquour stores...and foul language isn't even in this class of crimes....most citizens are law abiding...I am very liberal but frustrated over these kind of situations...I believe this young man should go to jail FOREVER...and so should anyone who allowed him access to the gun he used...including elderly grandparents, parents or friends....the gun owners who haphazardly allowed access to the gun should also hold responsibility for this crime... please don't get me started on the issue of buying the gun on the street....and NO there should not be a public execution.....
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
02:56 PM on 02/28/2012
"it most certainly is a gun issue....it is not a morality issue"

As long as people think this way, these incidents will continue to happen.
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schotts
This We'll Defend
06:46 PM on 02/28/2012
Only gun ban apologists make it a gun issue.

The issue is why he did it and learning from it. History repeats itself if we allow it.

The issue is also learning how to recognize disturbed people far in advance of a tragedy such as this and getting involved in their life. This teen obviously had a number of issues. He lacked attention, love and people listening to him.

It is not a gun issue.

If a person kills with a knife, does that become a knife issue? No.
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SylvreWolfe
03:02 PM on 02/28/2012
And exactly when did we become "immoral"? Fifty years ago? A hundred years ago? Before the Old West gunfights? Before it became illegal for a man to rape his wife? When exactly did this happen, because I am having a hard time remembering these "good ol' days" people are always talking about.
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SmallTownMarm
10:10 AM on 02/29/2012
T H A N K Y O U . We have gone BACKWARD as far as morality and common sense are concerned.
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jh2
flower powered
12:25 PM on 02/28/2012
We're the lucky ones to have survived this ordeal. Maybe that is all that is the take-away. In this society of guns and video games and finger pointing and bullies and bad parents and people who don't lock their guns and media sensationalism, somehow we made it through. Maybe the cost is that some of us don't and we are the lucky ones who happen to be at the right place at the right time to only read about these stories. As much as we try to plan for ways to prevent them from happening again, the truth is that we can't prevent anything, and that we teach what we can but it may not be understood and followed to perfection. This is the majority accepted society we live in, until we can shift the status quot. Or we can go the other way and have some freedoms taken away in an attempt to prevent extremely unlikely tragedies from happening. It all depends on the quality of life we are expecting and the value we put on our freedoms and the comfort level we have for risk avoidance. I for one feel in most cases that handguns don't contribute to the safety and democracy of the society. No guns here were used or available to deter the shooter once they had access to it, and I don't feel that people exhibit the necessary self control as to not reach for the easiest means to resolve an argument permanently.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
01:15 PM on 02/28/2012
" I for one feel in most cases that handguns don't contribute to the safety and democracy of the society. No guns here were used or available to deter the shooter once they had access to it, "

No one had access to firearms to deter the shooter. Firearms are not allowed in k-12 schools, not even by teachers or staff. Those under 18 years old cannot possess handguns.
01:48 PM on 02/28/2012
Yet millions of handguns in this country haven't been used in crimes, and only a small percentage have.

Funny...
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SkeeBee
Offending InFoxtrination Sufferers With Facts.
08:34 PM on 02/28/2012
But all those killed and maimed as a result of the distorted intent of the 2nd amendment, they're "Acceptable losses" for American to continue it's Gungasm of unfettered access to weapons of mass destruction?
I'm not trying to get through to you as you've made it PLENTY evident that some deaths and lifelong disabilities are a SMALL price to pay for Yer GUNS!
11:13 AM on 02/28/2012
My thoughts & prayers go out to all affected by the Chardon high school shooting.
10:56 AM on 02/28/2012
Bullying is the problem here. Again and again this will happen. Maybe worse. We react in various way to bullying or to a threat. I experienced bullying when I was in High School, l by people in power, eg: Police etc.if the playing field is in the forest of the Amazon or in desert of Afghanistan, I could have blown them to kingdom come by using a caliber 50 gun.
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MNO Poet
Read between the party lines
01:35 PM on 02/28/2012
I would have to agree. Guns will always be present, but if the school can cure the motivation for wanting to carry out these types of actions, the country's schools will be much safer.
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Mia Olson
We are all better off if we are all better off
04:46 PM on 02/28/2012
Wow. That's a lot of responsibility placed on the school - to "cure" the motivation. Teens brains are not fully developed and they lack impulse control. How about what happens in the home? How about a family allowing easy access to guns when there is a teenager in the house? Of course schools should be completely vigilante about creating a safe environment for their students, but they need the parents and the community to back them up. And it only takes one...
10:24 AM on 02/28/2012
To those who are blaming guns for the murders, what about those 4 airplanes that were used by those terrorists as weapons of death? Should we blame BOEING, or perhaps Detroit for all the "Hit and run" homicides or even all the yearly deaths from automobiles? Blame the boy for his premeditated action with disastrous consequences, not the gun which could have been locked up and he still somehow removed it. 2 children are dead, we need to find solutions to these yearly death rituals amongst teenagers looking to settle a score from bullying or otherwise.
12:30 PM on 02/28/2012
Planes have nothing to do with it. Gun manufacturers are off the hook due to a corrupted NRA backed law. Gun proliferation is the problem.
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Dimensio
I just don't know what went wrong!
01:14 PM on 02/28/2012
You are not a credible source of information, due to your established history of relying upon demonstrably false claims.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
01:17 PM on 02/28/2012
Firearm manufacturers have no control over what people do with their products and of the many frivolous court cases where someone tried to sue a manufacturer because of what someone else did with the firearm, none ever succeeded. 99.999% of firearms will never be used in a crime.