Student shot dead at Knoxville high school after police say he fired on
them
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[April 13, 2021]
By Dan Whitcomb
(Reuters) -Police shot and killed a
Knoxville, Tennessee, high school student on Monday after they said he
opened fire on them in a campus bathroom, wounding an officer.
The gunfire, which erupted at about 3:15 p.m. at Austin-East Magnet High
School on the east side of Knoxville, marked the latest in a rash of
shootings in the United States since mid-March.
The wounded police officer was struck by a round in the upper leg and
was in serious condition following surgery at the University of
Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville police officials said. He was
expected to survive.
"He is conscious and in good spirits. ... He's going to be OK. I thanked
him for putting his life on the line to protect students and staff at
the school. He said he'd rather be hurt than anybody else," Mayor Indya
Kincannon told CBS News.
Knoxville police said they responded to Austin-East after getting
reports of a gunman at the school and found the suspect in a bathroom.
"As officers entered the space, the suspect reportedly fired shots,
striking an officer. The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene and
has since been identified as a student at Austin-East," David Rausch,
director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, told an evening news
conference.
Knoxville Police Chief Eve Thomas, speaking at the same news conference,
called the incident "chilling." Police had initially reported multiple
gunshot victims in the attack.
PARENTS RUSH TO SCENE
Austin-East was locked down following the gunfire and parents who rushed
to the scene were directed to pick up their children at a rear entrance.
Police later established a reunification site for students and their
parents at a baseball field.
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Police attend a shooting at Austin-East Magnet High School in
Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S. April 12, 2021. Brianna Paciorka/News
Sentinel/USA Today Network via REUTERS
A mother who had been separated from her daughter was waiting near
the school and told reporters she was greatly relieved to receive a
text message from the girl that she was safe.
Agents from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives were assisting in the investigation, the bureau's
Nashville office said on Twitter.
The Austin-East community has been shaken by gun violence this year.
Four other students at the school were killed in recent months in
shootings in the city, according to media reports.
In shootings across the United States since mid-March, a man opened
fire last week at a Texas cabinet-making plant where he worked,
killing one person and wounding six before he was arrested,
authorities said.
Eight people were slain at Atlanta-area spas, 10 people at a
supermarket in Boulder, Colorado, and four people, including a
9-year-old boy, at a real estate office in the Southern California
city of Orange.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Rich McKay in Atlanta, Peter Szekely in New York and Daniel Trotta
in Vista, California; Editing by Matthew Lewis and Peter Cooney)
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