Gunshots
rattled a peaceful, packed Florida State University library early
Thursday, with three students getting hurt as hundreds more huddled
between bookshelves before police encountered and killed the gunman
outside.
“There
has been a shooting in the library, stay where you are,” said a man
speaking over the loudspeaker, as captured in a cell phone video posted
online. “We will be coming to each floor and clearing it, and taking
care of anybody.”
One
of the injured students is in critical condition and another is stable
at Tallahassee Memorial hospital, the hospital said. The third victim,
who was grazed by a bullet, was treated and released at the scene.
Officers
from the Florida State and Tallahassee police departments responded
within 3 to 5 minutes of the first reports of gunfire, according to
Mayor-elect Andrew Gillum.
Once there, they found the shooter outside Strozier Library and asked him to drop his handgun.
“The
suspect did not comply with the commands, and actually shot at one of
the officers,” Tallahassee police spokesman David Northway said. “They
returned fire, and the subject was killed.”
The
school canceled all classes and exams Thursday in the wake of the
shooting, offering counseling services to those directly and indirectly
affected.
Meanwhile,
investigators are surveying the scene and interviewing witnesses —
trying to determine exactly what happened and for what reason, something
that Tallahassee Police Chief Michael DeLeo acknowledged they don’t
know yet.
“Obviously everyone wants to know why,” DeLeo said. “That’s the hard answer we’re going to continue to investigate.”
Final
exams don’t start until December but, still, 300 to 400 students filled
Strozier Library around 12:30 a.m. Thursday — cramming, reading and
writing.
Then
came the gunshots, following quickly by texts sent out to students
warning them to take refuge and stay away from windows. There were
warnings inside the library as well, where students huddled anxiously.
“If
you know somebody who has a gun or you know somebody who has been shot,
call 911,” said the man over the library loudspeaker.
Kelly
Kalich was on the library’s third floor — studying, coincidentally, why
school shootings happen — when someone ran up the stairs and yelled
out, “There’s a gunman, there’s a gunman.”
She didn’t run automatically, but eventually grabbed her phone and did get out.
“Nothing
goes through your head besides astonishment,” Kalich said. “Your jaw
drops because … when you’re in a large place like that, that’s always
your biggest fear.”
Students
took action by shoving tables and bookshelves against doors to
barricade themselves. They also reached out to loved ones in tweets and
texts, including Samantha Sillick, who messaged her father, “There’s a
man with a gun in the library. I love you.”
Perry Kostidakis, a sports editor for the campus newspaper, told CNN the library was surrounded for a time.
“The
entire campus is empty; I’ve seen one or two people come up and look at
the scene. Everyone who is in a campus building is under lockdown right
now. Policemen are still surrounding the library.”
Graduate
student Alex Lauren said students were escorted from the library to the
first floor of a nearby building, where they continued hearing
gunshots. They were told to wait for a bus to take them away from campus
as armed police stood nearby.
“It
was very scary … I’m more heartbroken more than anything else,” she
said. “It’s sad, my heart goes out to the people affected.”
Afterward, DeLeo assured the public that the shooting “is an isolated incident and one person acting alone.”
“There is no indication of any threats to the university, the students or our community at this time,” the police chief said.
Homicide
investigators, meanwhile, took over the scene around the library. Five
officers from Florida State and Tallahassee police were placed on
administrative leave, as is standard procedure in officer-involved
shootings.
As
bad as the shooting was, there was also some feeling that it could have
been much worse — especially if police didn’t respond as quickly as
they did.
“If
there is any positive that we can take from this occurrence, it’s that
the victim count was not greater,” Gillum said. “Today, we are all FSU.”
Meanwhile,
the ripple effect was felt all around Florida State, a research
university with about 40,000 students spread out in various campuses in
the Sunshine State’s capital.
Mary
Coburn, the university’s vice president for student affairs, said the
decision to cancel classes came after “we learned the scope of the
situation.”
“It became evident that there was a lot of impact on the students, and that seemed the wise thing to do,” Coburn told reporters.
Campus
buildings, including Strozier Library, should reopen by Friday, and all
events scheduled through this weekend will proceed, according to FSU
President John Thrasher.
There
will be many, though, who will still be recovering physically and
psychologically — and not just the students who were wounded or in the
library.
As Kalich said, “Yes, the students (who) were in the library were affected. But 40,000 students lost their sense of security.”
No comments:
Post a Comment