Boy,14, opens fire on school playground

Anderson County sheriff's deputies and investigators gather outside Townville Elementary School after a shooting in Townville, South Carolina, on September 28, 2016. Picture: Nathan Gray

Anderson County sheriff's deputies and investigators gather outside Townville Elementary School after a shooting in Townville, South Carolina, on September 28, 2016. Picture: Nathan Gray

Published Sep 29, 2016

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Charleston, South Carolina - A 14-year-old South Carolina boy shot and killed his father, then drove to an elementary school where he wounded two children and a teacher with a handgun before being tackled by a firefighter who held him for police, authorities said on Wednesday.

The suspect, whose name has not been released, was accused by police of fatally shooting his 47-year-old father, Jeffrey DeWitt Osborne, then driving a pickup truck about three kilometres to Townville Elementary School, where he crashed into a fence surrounding the playground.

After the teenager began shooting, volunteer firefighter Jamie Brock pinned him down while staff led children to safety inside the building, Anderson County emergency services director Taylor Jones told a news conference.

Police arrived within seven minutes of a teacher calling 911 to take the suspect into custody at the school in Anderson County, near the Georgia state line about 160km north-east of Atlanta. The shooter never entered the building, said Chief Deputy Keith Smith.

US schools have taken added security precautions since 2012 when a gunman shot dead 20 children and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

Brock, a 30-year veteran of the Townville Volunteer Fire Department, was hailed on social media as a hero and credited with preventing another school massacre.

“(He) was there in the hot scene and risked his life to mitigate this incident,” Jones said. “He just used enough force to take him to the ground.”

One of the victims, six-year-old Jacob Hall, remained in critical condition, Greenville Health System spokeswoman Sandy Dees said.

The other boy who is also about six years old and a female teacher were treated and released, said Ross Norton, a spokesman for AnMed Health Medical Centre.

One male student was shot in the leg and the other boy was shot in the foot. The teacher was shot in the shoulder, authorities said. The shooter and victims were white.

Anderson County Sheriff's Office Captain Garland Major told reporters he did not know the relationship between the shooter and those wounded at the school. The suspect was home-schooled, authorities said.

Immediately after the shooting, armed officers guarded students as they were evacuated from the school and taken by bus to a nearby church, local media said. Television images showed police swarming the school, with some officers on the roof while others moved around the building.

Jamie Meredith, whose daughter is in kindergarten at Townville Elementary, told WYFF news that she panicked after getting word of the shooting. Her daughter is okay but described a scene of scared and crying children.

“I'm just scared,” Meredith said through tears as she was interviewed by WYFF. “I don't even want her to go to school now.”

About 280 students attend the school.

The incident was the latest in a series of shootings at US schools that have fuelled the debate about access to guns in America.

Earlier this month, a 14-year-old girl shot and wounded a fellow student at a rural Texas high school and then died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley is due to meet with law enforcement officials in the area this evening, Jones said.

REUTERS

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