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More than 30 dead at Virginia Tech
Worst shooting incident in US history
By David Walsh
17 April 2007
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In a tragic episode Monday morning, the worst shooting incident
in American history, a gunman shot and killed at least 32 students
and faculty and wounded dozens of others on the campus of Virginia
Tech university in Blacksburg, Virginia. In the end, the gunman
turned the gun on himself.
It is too early to draw any specific conclusions about the
incident, the identity of the killer has not even been established.
One can only express horror at the event and sympathy for the
victims and their families. Thousands of lives have been changed
permanently and the peaceful university town will never be the
same again.
The shooting at Virginia Tech surpasses the death toll at Columbine
High School in Littleton, Colorado in April 1999 and at the University
of Texas in 1966, when ex-Marine Charles Whitman opened fire from
the top of a clock tower. Another atrocity has been committed,
another new American record has been set.
Once again, global television audiences have watched scenes
of bloodied young people being carried out of US school buildings,
while others run or stumble, distraught, dazed. A videotape captures
the dreadful sound of a weapon being fired carefully and with
calculation.
There are already certain disturbing questions. According to
news reports, the first shootings took place at a coed dormitory
shortly after 7 am Monday morning. Two individuals, one male and
one female, were shot and killed at West Ambler Johnston Hall,
a residence that houses nearly 900 students. Police arrived on
the scene and began to investigate. They decided, officials explained
at a press conference, that the incident was isolated and contained.
Why was such a conclusion drawn?
There appears to have been no systematic effort to warn students
that a gunman might still be loose on the campus. Students were
allowed to go about their business on campus, unalerted to the
danger. An email, blandly reporting that a shooting incident
had occurred and urging the university community ... to
be cautious, was not sent out until 9:26 am, only minutes
before the second, far deadlier killing spree erupted.
The gunman proceeded to shoot and kill some 30 students and
faculty in Norris Hall, a sprawling engineering and science building
a half-mile from the dormitory. Some of the injured jumped out
of windows to escape the rampage.
Student Jason Piatt told CNN, Im pretty outraged
that someone died in a shooting in a dorm at 7 oclock in
the morning and the first e-mail about it had no mention of locking
down the campus, no mention of canceling classes.
MSNBC interviewed Derek ODell, another Virginia Tech
student, who said the gunman was in his 20s and wearing a black
leather jacket. ODell was inside a classroom in Norris Hall
when the gunman entered and started firing. ODell was shot
in the arm. He came into the room and started shooting,
the student explained. He let off a full round. I was one
of 10 to 15 people in our classroom to get shot. He didnt
say anything, he just started shooting. The gunman left
and students rushed to barricade the room, but the man returned
and fired his weapon some more.
Tiffany Otey reported that she and 18 other students were taking
a test when the gunfire broke out. The group of students locked
themselves in a professors office. She described continuous
gunfire, as many as 50 shots, and the chaos
in the building as students ran, screaming.
The BBCs web site received numerous reports from students
at Virginia Tech, providing their reactions and accounts.
Bethany Zimmerman writes, Students are now coming back
to the dorms. I have a friend who is in the building behind Norris
and is surrounded by students and faculty who were in Norris.
One girl expressed how she saw many bloody bodies. We are being
advised to stay in the dorm, but information from the University
is slow, although the news coverage has been the best source of
information. Why werent we warned after the FIRST shooting?
One of my friends, recounts Brandon, was
in one of the classrooms where the shooting occurred, and the
scene he described was utter chaos. It sounded like a scene from
a movie, something that you watch but never expect to happen to
you, or to anyone that you know.
Jamal Albarghouti, a Palestinian civil engineering graduate
student, captured some of the most troubling video of the scene,
on his cell phone camera. On the footage one can see police around
Norris Hall and hear the slow, popping sounds of gunfire. Albarghouti,
originally from the West Bank, told CNN that he had been in cities
where violence had erupted, including in the Occupied Territories
and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where a terrorist bombing took place.
He never expected such an incident on the campus of Virginia Tech.
Blacksburg is one of the nicest towns Ive ever been
to. You cant imagine, everyone is so sad, so shocked.
The Virginia Tech campus, located some 240 miles southwest
of Washington, DC, was locked down on the first day of school
last August during a manhunt for an escaped inmate who killed
a hospital guard and a sheriffs deputy. In recent weeks,
there have been two bomb threats. Authorities have no idea yet
whether the threats and Mondays shootings are related.
It should be noted that Virginia Tech has close historical
connections to the US military. According to an article in the
Richmond Times-Dispatch in May 2005, the university has
become the nations top producer of Navy and Marine
Corps officers among universities and colleges with the exception
of the US Naval Academy. From 2000 to 2005, Virginia Tech
produced nearly 220 naval and marine officers.
The Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets is one of only six senior
military colleges outside the federal military academies. The
university is one of only two in the country that maintains a
full time Corps of Cadets within a large university. According
to the latters web site, Since 1872, the Corps of
Cadets has produced outstanding leaders for the Commonwealth and
the Nation. Seven of our alumni have earned the Medal of Honor,
a number exceeded only by West Point and Annapolis. Over 100 of
our graduates have been promoted to General and Flag Officer rank.
Following the massacre in Blacksburg, George W. Bush issued
an empty statement, declaring that Schools should be places
of safety and sanctuary and learning. When that sanctuary is violated,
the impact is felt in every American classroom and every American
community. Today, our nation grieves with those who have lost
loved ones at Virginia Tech. We hold the victims in our hearts,
we lift them up in our prayers, and we ask a loving God to comfort
those who are suffering today. This is from a man who loses
no sleep over bombs dropped on Iraqi or Afghan schools.
A former FBI agent, interviewed on one of the cable television
talk shows, asserted that such incidents were Part of the
risk of having a free and open society.... These are rare and
unusual events. Not so rare or unusual. Workplace, high
school and campus shootings are an all-too prominent feature of
modern American life.
Whatever the immediate circumstances prove to be, clearly,
this incident, like Columbine and the other tragedies, is an expression
of deeper social tendencies, of a profoundly dysfunctional society.
See Also:
Minnesota: Ten killed
in deadliest school shooting since Columbine massacre
[23 March 2005]
New school shootings
in US: social issues once again come to the fore
[22 January 2002]
The Columbine High
School massacre: American Pastoral ... American Berserk
[27 April 1999]
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