15.1.13

NEWTOWN SHOOTING

NEWTOWN SHOOTING

On December 14, 2012, Adam Lanza, age 20, fatally shot twenty children and six adult staff members and wounded two at Sandy Hook Elementary School in the village of Sandy Hook in the town of Newtown, Connecticut. Before driving to the school, Lanza had shot and killed his mother, Nancy Lanza, at their Newtown home. After killing students and staff members, Lanza committed suicide by shooting himself in the head as first responders arrived.

The massacre was the second-deadliest school shooting in United States history, after the 2007 Virginia Tech massacre.

This is a picture of the shooter, Lanza :

Here we have an article which will describe us what really happened there:

At 9.30am on a crisp and sun-filled Friday morning, seven employees of Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut, gathered for a weekly meeting. At that minute, the outside doors of the school had been locked, as part of a new security system that had just been introduced to "ensure student safety".
The staff meeting, that included the principal Dawn Hochsprung, her vice-principal and the school psychologist, began. There was plenty to talk about, judging from Hochsprung's Twitter feed. Fourth-graders were in final rehearsals for their winter concert; teachers were introducing a range of education apps for classroom iPads; there were new non-fiction books to be chosen.

Then five minutes into the discussions a loud "pop, pop, pop" noise was heard in the hallway right outside the meeting room. The two principals immediately stood up and rushed out into the hall to find out what was happening, accompanied by the psychologist.
According to one of the other participants in that meeting, who talked to CNN.com, only the vice-principal came back, bleeding from a gunshot wound in her foot. The principal and psychologist were later seen lying in the bloody hallway.

Within seconds, 911 calls flooded into the police dispatchers in Newtown, a serene New England community of about 25,000 located 60 miles north-east of New York City. A masked gunman was inside, the police were told, brandishing a semi-automatic rifle and a pistol targeted at some of the school's 600 four- to 10-year-olds.
The community instantly went into the kind of emergency response now familiar from similar tragedies that have become etched in America's national memory: Columbine, Virginia Tech, Tucson, Aurora, the list grows. But this kind of thing was never meant to happen here, not in sleepy Newtown.

Sandy Hook school was put into lockdown, as were all other schools in the region, and Swat teams rushed to the scene. Initial reports suggested two gunmen might have been involved, and armed police were sent to scour through the woods at the back of the school, though the idea of a second gunman faded as the day progressed.

Inside the school, the masked gunman, reportedly wearing a bullet-proof vest and dressed in black, was busily at work. One witness said they heard "at least a hundred rounds" being fired from the weapons he wielded, including Glock and Sig Sauer handguns recovered later at the scene.

Amid the carnage that was enfolding, there was yelling in the corridors as children ran in all directions. Brenda Lebinski, the mother of an eight-year-old girl at the school, said that when the shooting started her daughter's teacher marshalled all her class into a closet.
A nine-year-old boy told local reporters how he had been in the school gym when the horror began. "We heard lots of bangs, and we thought it was the custodian knocking things down," the boy said. "We heard screaming, then the police came in and said 'Is he here?'

"The teachers yelled at us, 'Get into the closet,' and we sat in there for a little while. Then the police knocked on the door and said, 'We're evacuating, we're evacuating, this way, this way.'"
Another girl, aged eight, hid with her teacher in a bathroom. The teacher tried to comfort the child by telling her the noise was nothing to worry about; that it was just the sound of builders hammering.

Alexis Wasik described the fear that engulfed her in terms that only an eight-year-old could. "It was really frightening. Some people felt they had a stomach ache," she said.

When Swat teams arrived at the school by 9.45am they entered the building and began an "active shooter search", checking every door and every crack of the school in the race against the clock to stop the gunman and contain the body count.

Police began ushering pupils out of the school, long lines of children snaking into the daylight, their brightly coloured jeans and T-shirts looking far too cheery for the circumstances. They were taken to the voluntary fire station adjacent to the school, where hundreds of anxious parents began to arrive, having been by alerted by automatic robocall. They filed into the fire house, some to experience the ecstatic relief of reunion, others to have their lives forever shattered in a moment by the worst news a parent can be told.

Within the hour, it was announced that the gunman was dead, his corpse left inside the school awaiting forensic investigations. The public was no longer in danger, said Lt Paul Vance of the state police. But though the gunman's business was over, the pain and the terror he left behind had only just begun to be felt across America. A dawning awareness rippled out from Sandy Hook elementary that a catastrophe of unimaginable brutality and on an historic scale had taken place there.

At first it was thought just the gunman had died, then details emerged that there had been injuries, then reports of a couple of adults had died, then the first heartrending mention of children who had perished, then the chilling citing of statistics that in turn rose in spluttering bursts to a numbing 27 dead including 20 children.


If you want to know more about the people who were killed you can find more information here: 

5 comentarios:

  1. You really make it appear so easy together with your presentation but I in finding this matter to be actually something that I believe I'd never understand. It kind of feels too complex and very huge for me. I'm looking ahead to
    your next submit, I'll try to get the hold of it!
    Here is my web blog online slots for real money

    ResponderEliminar
  2. I would like to thank you for the efforts you have put in writing this blog.
    I really hope to view the same high-grade content from you in the future as well.
    In fact, your creative writing abilities has inspired me to get my own blog now ;)

    Here is my web-site: legit ways to make extra money

    ResponderEliminar
  3. For the reason that the admin of this site is working, no question very quickly it will be well-known, due
    to its feature contents.

    Here is my blog; online casino australia

    ResponderEliminar
  4. CRISTINA MULEY 1ºBACH D8 de mayo de 2013, 21:11

    I think shooting is becoming too common in United States. Inocent people are dying and being killed with no reasons. My opinion is that the government should banned the use of weapons in districts eith schools because in the end these are the most common shootings. Although I think weapons should be banned, i know that it's to hard to make all the states of America agree with the ban.

    ResponderEliminar
  5. Hello, I want to subscribe for this web site to obtain newest updates, therefore where can
    i do it please help out.

    My blog ... free online slot machines

    ResponderEliminar