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America
New school shootings in US: social issues once again come
to the fore
By Kate Randall
22 January 2002
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Until two school shooting incidents last week, a relatively
extended period of time had gone byat least by American
standardswithout any reported deaths from violence perpetrated
by students on school grounds. The last shooting to make national
headlines occurred March 30, when a 17-year-old expelled student
fatally shot a tenth grader in the parking lot of Lew Wallace
High School in Gary, Indiana.
But last Wednesday, January 16, came the report that a failing
student had shot to death three people at the Appalachian School
of Law in Grundy, Virginia. Then on Friday, a young male student
shot and killed his former girlfriend before killing himself at
Broward Community College near Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Earlier
last week, on Tuesday, a student opened fire in a hallway at Martin
Luther King Jr. High School in New York City, wounding two students;
the apparent motive, a dispute about a girl.
Such violent incidents, tragically, are hardly a new phenomenon
in America. The first multiple school shooting took place in March
1998 in Jonesboro, Arkansas, when two children, only 11 and 13
years old, fired at schoolmates and teachers, killing five and
wounding fifteen. The most widely publicized incident took place
at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado in April 1999,
when twelve students and one teacher were gunned down by two other
students, who then turned the guns on themselves. There have also
been numerous cases of shootings at workplaces, in neighborhoods
and other public places.
The circumstances that apparently form the background to last
weeks episodes are all too familiarpoor grades, failed
romances, serious personal or psychological problems. A characteristic
shared by most of those responsible for such desperate actions
is a deep sense of alienation and isolation. That young people
in such numbers see no way out must have social significance.
The latest wave of shootings further gives the lie to the argument
that everything changed on September 11. There is
a profound continuity of events both at home and abroad. The conditions
in America that, in the final analysis, drive people to extreme
and anti-social actions have not gone away; indeed the economic
and social difficulties have intensified in the past several months.
Beneath the surface of an America United in the
war on terrorism, as it is portrayed in the media, simmer unresolved
tensions, fueled by a deepening economic downturn. While the public
is fed a daily diet in the print and broadcast media of patriotism
and war-mongering, growing numbers of the population face deteriorating
living conditions. Families are turned upside-down when hopes
for new careers are dashed, jobs are lost or retirement savings
are wiped out. Seeing these as purely individual problems, certain
desperate individuals strike out violently.
More details are sure to be revealed about the circumstances
leading up to last weeks killings in Grundy, Virginia. But
from what is known so far, Peter Odighizuwa appears to be such
a severely disturbed individual who saw no way out of his dilemma.
A 43-year-old naturalized citizen from Nigeria, Peter O,
as he was known in Grundy, came to the small Virginian mining
town from Chicago with his wife and four sons two years ago. Although
he had earned an undergraduate degree in his native country, in
Chicago he worked as a cab driver. After visiting the web site
of the Appalachian School of Law (ASL) online, he decided to move
his family to Grundy in hopes of becoming a lawyer.
The Odighizuwas struggled to make ends meet in their new town.
Peters wife, Abieyuwa, worked at the local hospital, but
the family was forced to rely on charity from townspeople and
Mrs. Odighizuwas co-workers for food, clothing and other
necessities. The family reportedly moved from apartment to apartment,
unable to keep up with rent payments. One of the shooting victims,
L. Anthony Sutin, a dean at the law school, helped Odighizuwa
get a car and a loan, according to school colleagues.
Dean Sutin gave Odighizuwa another chance when he flunked out
in his first year at ASL. But when he received a notice of dismissal
after failing again this year, Odighizuwa became increasingly
distraught. Last Wednesday he arrived at the campus to protest
his dismissal and demanded to see his grades. After a discussion
about his academic standing with Professor Dale Reuben, he walked
down the hall to Sutins office and opened fired at close
range with a semiautomatic handgun, killing the dean. He then
fatally shot Professor Thomas F. Blackwell. He continued on to
the schools lounge where he again opened fire, randomly
hitting 33-year-old student Angela Denise Dales, who died later
at the hospital. A group of students finally tackled and subdued
him, as he kept repeating I have nowhere to go. I have nowhere
to go.
Odighizuwa apparently has serious psychological problems. As
he was led into court for his arraignment last Thursday he told
reporters: I was sick, I was sick. I need help. Hiding
his face behind his arrest warrant paper, he told the judge: I
was supposed to see my doctor. He was supposed to help me out....
I dont have my medication. Prosecutors charged him
with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted
murder and six charges for use of a firearm in a felony. He faces
the death penalty if convicted.
Odighizuwa has been described by fellow students and Grundy
residents as moody and abrasive, and although they were shocked
by the shootings, many were not surprised that he was the assailant.
One student commented: He was somebody who would snap on
you. He had an abrasive attitude. I thought he was going to hurt
a student. A retired doctor who arrived on the scene said:
Everybody knows this guy. He is a walking time bomb.
Odighizuwa is also facing charges for allegedly hitting his wife,
who left him three months ago, taking the couples four children
with her.
The murders have shaken residents of this remote coal town
of 1,100 in southwest Virginia. When the Appalachian School of
Law opened five years ago, many thought it might breathe life
into the depressed community. Coal production has steadily dropped
off in the area over the past several decades, and the new school
meant an influx of students into the area and sorely needed jobs.
But with the new school population came new problems, which exploded
tragically onto the scene last week.
The recent wave of school shootings, along with other developments
such as the Enron scandal, demonstrates that irrepressible social
issues in the US are once again making themselves felt. Indeed
they never went away. While reporting on such events has been
somewhat downplayed by the media, taking a back seat to the war
in Afghanistan and the war on terrorism, incidents
of school violence in the US since the terror attacks have included
the following:
* On November 12, a 17-year old student in Caro, Michigan,
a small farming town about 75 miles north of Detroit, smuggled
guns into his high school, took two hostages and then killed himself.
* A 15-year-old student at Bostons English High School
was spotted with a pistol tucked in his waistband on January 3
by a teacher. The boy ran from the building and was followed by
the teacher and a school police officer to a subway station, where
police arrested him.
* On January 11 at a high school in Raymond, Mississippi, a
town 25 miles southwest of Jackson, a 17-year-old suspended student
returned to school and held the principal and assistant principal
at gunpoint for about three hours. He released the hostages unharmed
after talking with police negotiators.
* In Massachusetts, an alleged plot by five students to carry
out a mass shooting at New Bedford High School was foiled when
other students came forward with knowledge of the plan. The five
teenagers, some of whom say the plot was a hoax, face criminal
charges of conspiracy to commit murder, conspiracy to commit assault
and battery with a dangerous weapon, and possession of ammunition.
See Also:
The Columbine High
School massacre: American Pastoral ... American Berserk
[27 April 1999]
Social
Breakdown: Violence in the US
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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