This
time, it was Cleveland. A 14-year-old suspended high school student
entered Cleveland's Success Tech Academy, a gun in each hand, and
opened fire, wounding four. Later, we learn the shooter's past included
violent confrontations, mental problems and at least one previous
suspension. A month earlier, he told a friend he intended to shoot up
the school. But no one apparently took his behavior seriously enough to
notify authorities.
Meanwhile, a high school teacher in Oregon, with a permit to carry a
concealed weapon plus training, sought permission to carry her firearm
to school. In fear of her former husband, against whom she filed and
received two restraining orders, she wanted the ability to protect
herself if he showed up. Furthermore, she argued that even without the
fear of her ex-husband, the Second Amendment and Oregon state law allow
her to carry her firearm to work. Her school district, however,
prevents her from carrying a firearm to school.
This raises a question. Do shooters consider schools "gun-free
zones"? Do they consider it unlikely that any authority figure —
whether teachers or, in some cases, security guards — poses an armed
threat? But in some school shooting cases, guns helped to end shooting
sprees and minimize loss of life and injury.
In Edinboro, Pa., a 14-year-old middle-school student opened fire at
a school graduation dance held at a local restaurant. The shooter
killed one teacher and wounded two students and another teacher. The
armed teenager was apprehended by the restaurant owner, who grabbed his
own shotgun from his office. Staring into the shotgun, the teen dropped
his gun and surrendered.
In Pearl, Miss., a 16-year-old sophomore entered Pearl High with a
hunting rifle under his overcoat. He opened fire, killing two students
and wounding seven. Assistant Principal Joel Myrick, ran to his truck
and retrieved the .45 automatic he kept there. Running back, he spotted
the shooter in the parking lot. Ordering the teen to stop, the vice
principal put his gun to the shooter's neck and held him until police
arrived.
At Appalachian Law School, in Grundy, Va., a disgruntled student on
the verge of his second suspension entered a school building and shot
and killed the dean and a professor. He then shot four students,
killing one. Hearing the shots, two students, Michael Gross and Tracy
Bridges, ran to their cars to retrieve their guns. With guns aimed at
the shooter, Mr. Bridges ordered him to drop his weapon. When the
shooter turned and saw Mr. Bridges' gun, he laid down his weapon and
put his hands in the air. (My pro-Second Amendment documentary,
"Michael and Me," goes into detail about this incident, as well as
others.)
Professor and economist John Lott checked 280 separate news stories
in the week after the Appalachian Law School shooting, and only found
four that mentioned the students who stopped the shooter had guns. The
Washington Post, for example, said the students "helped subdue" the
killer. Newsday wrote the shooter was "restrained by students." The
Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch, however, wrote that the shooter "was
wrestled to the ground by fellow students, one of whom aimed his own
revolver at [the killer]." Four months later, the Times-Dispatch
detailed the students' actions, including the second student's use of a
gun.
What do felons think about an armed citizenry? A survey of convicted
felons by the National Institute of Justice found 74 percent of the
felons agreed that, "One reason burglars avoid houses when people are
home is that they fear being shot during the crime." The survey also
asked these felons whether they had abandoned at least one crime
because they feared the intended victim might be armed. Thirty-nine
percent said they abandoned at least one crime; 8 percent had abandoned
such a crime "many" times; 34 percent admitted being "scared off, shot
at, wounded, or captured by an armed victim"; and nearly 70 percent
knew a "colleague" who had abandoned a crime or been scared off, shot
at, wounded or captured by a victim packing heat.
This time, it was Cleveland. A 14-year-old suspended high school
student entered Cleveland's Success Tech Academy, a gun in each hand,
and opened fire, wounding four. Later, we learn the shooter's past
included violent confrontations, mental problems and at least one
previous suspension. A month earlier, he told a friend he intended to
shoot up the school. But no one apparently took his behavior seriously
enough to notify authorities.
About
the Author: Larry Elder is a nationally syndicated columnist, radio talk-show host and author.
Posted on
Saturday, June 28, 2008
by Larry Elder