Gunman who shot 2 kindergartners at a California school wrote about
attack targeting children
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[December 06, 2024]
By TERRY CHEA and STEFANIE DAZIO
OROVILLE, Calif. (AP) — A gunman who critically wounded two
kindergartners at a tiny religious school in Northern California was
mentally ill and believed by targeting children he was carrying out
“counter-measures” in response to America’s involvement in Middle East
violence, a sheriff said Thursday.
Glenn Litton used a “ruse” of pretending to enroll a fictitious grandson
to gain entry to the Feather River School of Seventh-Day Adventists in
Oroville, Butte County Sheriff Kory L. Honea said during a news
conference.
Litton used a handgun to shoot two kindergarten boys, ages 5 and 6, who
remained in critical condition Thursday, the sheriff said. Litton then
used the weapon — a so-called ghost gun, which is difficult for
investigators to trace — to kill himself just yards (meters) from the
school's playground.
While Honea said Litton, 56, also had a lengthy criminal history —
mostly theft and identity theft — authorities said they did not find any
violent crimes on his record.
Honea said the man is believed to have targeted the Feather River School
in Wednesday’s attack, though it's unclear why. Litton had attended a
school of Seventh-Day Adventists in another town as a child, the sheriff
said, and he possibly had a relative who attended Feather River as a
young child.
But in Litton's writings, the sheriff said, the suspect wrote about
taking “counter-measures” against the school in response to America’s
involvement in violence in the Middle East.
“That’s a motivation that was in his mind. How it was that he conflated
what’s going on in Palestine and Yemen with the Seventh-Day Adventist
Church, I can’t speculate. I’m not sure that we’ll ever know that,”
Honea said.
He said Litton had similarly scheduled an appointment at another
Seventh-Day Adventist school, set for Thursday.
The Seventh-Day Adventist Church is a Christian denomination in which
members consider the Bible their only creed and believe that the second
coming of Christ is near. The shooting occurred shortly after 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the private K-8 school with fewer than three dozen students
in Oroville, on the edge of the tiny community of Palermo, about 65
miles (105 kilometers) north of Sacramento.
Law enforcement officials have documented Litton's history of mental
illness back to when he was a teenager, though Honea said investigators
have not found a concrete diagnosis.
In recent years, Litton searched online for guns and explosives and
wrote notes to himself to plan a non-specific mass incident, though
Butte County District Attorney Michael L. Ramsey said they were “just
ruminations." Litton was a convicted felon and therefore could not
legally possess a firearm.
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Sheriff's deputies walks past a playground outside Feather River
Adventist School after a shooting Thursday, Dec. 5, 2024, in
Oroville, Calif. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)
The sheriff said the 6-year-old suffered two gunshot wounds that
caused internal injuries, while the 5-year-old was shot once.
“The fact that they are currently still with us is a miracle,” Honea
said of the children, adding they will likely face additional
surgeries and “have a very long road ahead of them, in terms of
recovery.”
Honea said the gunman was dropped off by an Uber driver for the fake
meeting with a school administrator.
Following the shooting, the gunman's body was found near the slide
and other playground equipment on school grounds, which abut
ranchland where cattle graze. A handgun was found nearby, Honea
said.
The school was closed Thursday but sheriff’s deputies walked around
the campus behind shuttered gates and staff members carried
classroom items out to their cars.
Shawn Webber, an Oroville city councilmember, said the region was
reeling.
“When you see this on the news or nationally and it’s like, those
things don’t happen here. Well, yesterday it happened here,” he said
Thursday. “It just absolutely violated the peace of our community.”
A candlelight vigil is planned for Friday.
It was the the latest among dozens of school shootings around the
U.S. in recent years, including especially deadly ones in Newtown,
Connecticut, Parkland, Florida, and Uvalde, Texas. The shootings
have set off fervent gun control debates and frayed the nerves of
parents whose children have grown accustomed to doing active shooter
drills in their classrooms.
But the shootings have done little to move the needle on national
gun laws. Firearms were the leading cause of death among children in
2020 and 2021, according to KFF, a nonprofit that researches health
care issues.
“We know that the close-knit Feather River community will be
grieving for a long time, as will the rest of our conference,” said
Laurie Trujillo, a spokesperson for the Northern California
Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.
___
Dazio reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press journalists Kathy
McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire, Hallie Golden in Seattle and
Christopher Weber in Los Angeles contributed.
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