(CNN) -- A student opening fire with a
handgun he took from his parents. Screaming students running for cover. A
teacher, trying to help, shot dead. Two students wounded. The terror lasted
just a few brutal minutes.
As
authorities investigated, details were still trickling out hours after a deadly
shooting Monday at a Nevada middle school.
One official
described the scene at Sparks Middle School with one word: chaos.
Students
described to CNN how they ran into the school screaming and crying when they
realized the pops they heard were gunshots just before the morning bell
welcomed them back from fall break.
The shooter
took a handgun from his parents, a federal law enforcement source who was
briefed on the situation told CNN's Evan Perez.
The gunman
eventually shot and killed himself with the semiautomatic gun, Sparks Deputy
Chief Tom Miller said Monday evening at a news conference.
"It's
too early to say whether he was targeting specific people or just going on an
indiscriminate shooting spree," said Tom Robinson, deputy chief of the
Reno Police Department.
Teacher
loved his kids, brother says
Mike
Landsberry, a popular math teacher at the school, was killed in the shooting,
Sparks Mayor Geno Martini told CNN.
In addition
to his work as a teacher, Landsberry also had served in the Marines and served
several tours in Afghanistan as a member of the Nevada Air National Guard, his
brother, Reggie, told CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360."
"He was
the kind of person that if someone needed help he would be there," Reggie
Landsberry said. "He loved teaching. He loved the kids. He loved coaching
them. ... He was just a good all-around individual."
Reggie
Landsberry said his brother was probably trying to "talk the kid down and
protect whoever he could. That sounds like Mike."
One student
told "Pier Morgan Live" that she knew the student who shot Landsberry
and wounded two 12-year-old schoolmates.
"He was
really a nice kid," Amaya Newton told CNN. "He would make you smile
when you were having bad day."
He even
offered to buy other students something to cheer them up, Newton said.
Newton said
she thought the two students who were wounded were friends of the shooter.
She and her
mother, Tabatha, said they thought the shooter had been bullied in the past.
Student
Faith Robinson said she was standing to the side of one of the school buildings
where she heard shots and saw Landsberry killed. She told CNN that she ran into
the school and was separated from her friends.
"I
start getting really worried and then I was trying to get a hold of my
Mom," she said.
Terra Robinson
was just a few minutes away when she got her daughter's distressing call.
By the time
she got to the school there was a sea of flashing lights and panicked parents,
she said.
The
superintendent of Washoe County Schools said there were many heroes.
"Including
our children who, even though school hadn't started, when the teachers came
out, they listened to them and they went into their classrooms
immediately," Pedro Martinez said.
Witness:
Teacher tried to get student to put gun down
Student
Thomas Wing said he was walking out of the cafeteria after eating breakfast
when he saw a gun.
He told CNN
affiliate KOLO that Landsberry was trying to get the student to put the weapon
down. After a gunshot, Thomas started running back toward the cafeteria. He
heard another shot.
"I was
thinking, oh my gosh, am I going to get out of this? Am I going to die?"
he told KOLO. "My heart was pounding faster than I could run."
An emergency
dispatch calls released by the Sparks police department indicate Landsberry was
shot on the school playground.
One wounded
student was shot in the stomach, and the other injured student was shot in the
shoulder, Washoe County School District Police Chief Mike Mieras said. The two
12-year-old boys were both in stable condition Monday night, Miller said.
Does your child's school have a
security plan?
Authorities
said that first responders were at the school just three minutes after the initial
911 calls.
"I
think we were well-prepared. Everybody responded appropriately. I think our
first responders did a heckuva job, but it's a sad day for the city of
Sparks," Mayor Martini told CNN.
Shooting
began early Monday morning
City
officials said authorities received emergency calls from students and staff at
the school about 7:15 a.m. about an active shooter on campus.
Guns, guards and posses: Schools try
new security strategies
Authorities
said students were taken to a nearby high school to meet their parents. School
was canceled for the week at Sparks Middle School and for the day at nearby
Agnes Risley Elementary, officials said.
"I was
deeply saddened to learn of the horrific shooting at Sparks Middle School this
morning," Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval said in a statement. "My
administration is receiving regular updates and the Nevada Highway Patrol is
assisting at the scene. Kathleen and I extend our thoughts and prayers to the
victims and those affected by these tragic events."
The shooting
is one of several this year at a U.S. middle or high school. Last week a
student at a high school in Austin, Texas, killed himself in front of other
students. In August, a student at a high school in Winston-Salem, North
Carolina, shot and wounded another student in the neck.
Another
shooting occurred at an Atlanta middle school in January, the same month a
California high school student wounded two people, one seriously.
The Nevada
shooting also comes almost a year after a gunman killed 26 people at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, igniting nationwide debate over gun
violence and school safety.
The mother
of a student killed in December's shooting in Newtown said Monday's shooting
was reminder of the need to find solutions to keep students safe.
"The
unthinkable has happened yet again, this time in Sparks, Nevada," Nicole
Hockley said in a statement. "Our thoughts and prayers are with the
victims, their families, and the children of Sparks Middle School, who today
came face to face with violence that no child should ever experience. It's
moments like this that demand that we unite as parents to find common sense
solutions that keep our children -- all children -- safe, and prevent these
tragedies from happening again and again."

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