Six years after US mass shooting, demolition starts on Parkland school
building
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[June 15, 2024]
By Gabriella Borter and Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - More than six years after a gunman massacred 17 people at
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in one of the
worst U.S. school shootings, crews began tearing down the abandoned
building on Friday.
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Court deputies exit vans that transported jurors to Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School, to view the "1200 building," the crime scene where
the 2018 shootings took place in Parkland, Florida, U.S. August 4, 2022.
Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun Sentinel/Pool via REUTERS/ File Photo |
The three-story school about 30 miles (48 km) northwest of Fort
Lauderdale has stood as an empty reminder of the attack on Feb.
14, 2018, with bullet holes and bloodstains still visible. Video
from an ABC affiliate on Friday morning showed construction
vehicles starting to rip into one corner of the structure as
dozens of onlookers watched.
The gunman, who was 19 at the time of the shooting and a former
student at the school, murdered 17 students and staff and
injured 17 others with a semi-automatic rifle. He was sentenced
to life in prison but spared the death penalty in 2022.
The school was preserved largely untouched as evidence, first
for the gunman's trial and later for the trial of the school
resource officer who was on duty the day of the shooting. He
faced charges for not rushing to confront the shooter after the
attack began.
A jury acquitted the officer in June 2023.
Since the shooting, the building has loomed eerily over the rest
of the campus behind a chain-link fence, seen by successive
years of students as they walked to their classes.
Vice President Kamala Harris walked the halls of the building in
March on a visit to remember the victims and push for states to
strengthen laws on seizing firearms from high-risk people.
Some of the survivors of the 2018 massacre organized March For
Our Lives, a youth-led movement for tighter gun regulations in
the United States, which has the highest rate of private gun
ownership in the world and where mass shootings have become
recurrent.
The Broward County School District said demolition would take
several weeks and involve dismantling the structure in pieces.
It was delayed a day after inclement weather on Thursday.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter and Joseph Ax; Editing by Rod
Nickel)
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