TAFT, Calif.
(AP) - The 16-year-old boy had allegedly wounded the teenager he
claimed had bullied him, fired two more rounds at students fleeing their
first-period science class, then faced teacher Ryan Heber.
"I don't want to shoot you," he
told the popular teacher, who was trying to coax the teen into giving up
the shotgun he still held.
Recounting the suspect's words,
Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said the confrontation was enough
of a distraction to give 28 students time to escape their classroom
Thursday at a California high school.
The violence came just minutes
after administrators had announced new lockdown safety procedures
prompted by the Newtown, Conn., school slayings.
"Just 10 minutes before it
happened our teachers were giving us protocol because of what happened
in Connecticut," said student Oscar Nuno, who was across campus from the
science building at Taft Union High School when an announcer on the PA
system said the school was under lock down "and it was not a drill."
The teen victim, who classmates
said played football last year for the Taft Wildcats, was in critical
but stable condition at a Kern County hospital Thursday night. He was
expected to undergo surgery on Friday.
The suspect surrendered his
shotgun to Heber and campus supervisor Kim Lee Fields. His pockets were
stuffed with more ammunition, said Youngblood.
"This teacher and this counselor
stood there face-to-face not knowing if he was going to shoot them,"
Youngblood said. "They probably expected the worst and hoped for the
best, but they gave the students a chance to escape."
Heber's forehead had been grazed
by a stray pellet, but Youngblood said the teacher who had graduated
from the Taft school two decades ago was unaware he had been hit.
"He's the nicest teacher I know," Nuno said. "He loves his students and he always wants to help."
The shooting shocked residents of
this remote town of 9,400 that sits amid tumbleweeds and oil fields
about 120 miles northwest of Los Angeles.
"We know each other here," said
former mayor Dave Noerr. "We drive pickups and work hard and hunt and
fish. This is a grassroots town. This is the last place you'd think
something like this would happen."
The 16-year-old's name is on the
lips of everyone in town, but authorities aren't releasing it because
he's a juvenile. He had felt bullied by the victim for more than a year,
said Youngblood, who added that the claim was still being investigated.
Trish Montes described her neighbor as "a short guy" and "small" who was teased about his stature by many.
Montes said her son had worked at the school and tutored the boy last year.
"All I ever heard about him was
good things from my son," Montes said. "He wasn't Mr. Popularity, but he
was a smart kid. It's a shame. My kid said he was like a genius."
On Wednesday night the teen went
home and plotted revenge, Youngblood said. He found a gun that
authorities believe belonged to the suspect's older brother, and went to
bed that night plotting revenge against two students.
"He planned the event,"
Youngblood said. "Certainly he believed that the two people he targeted
had bullied him, in his mind. Whether that occurred or not we don't know
yet."
The suspect arrived after 9 a.m.,
and video surveillance cameras captured him looking nervous as he
entered through a side door, Youngblood said. He made his way to the
second floor of the school's science building, where Heber's class with
28 students inside was under way.
The suspect walked in a door
close to the front of the classroom and shot his classmate. When the
shots were fired, Heber tried to get the more than two dozen students
out a back door and engaged the shooter in conversation to distract him,
Youngblood said.
"The heroics of these two people
goes without saying. ... They could have just as easily ... tried to get
out of the classroom and left students, and they didn't," the sheriff
said. "They knew not to let him leave the classroom with that shotgun."
The teacher's father, David
Heber, told the Bakersfield Californian that he had heard rumors of a
school shooting but wasn't initially worried that his son's classroom
would have been involved.
"His students like him a whole
bunch," said Heber, 70. "He's not the kind of teacher a student would
try to hurt. He's definitely someone who could talk a kid down in an
emergency."
Youngblood said that the suspect
would be charged with attempted murder. The District Attorney will
decide whether he's charged as an adult, Youngblood said.
The Officials said a female
student was hospitalized with possible hearing damage because the
shotgun was fired close to her ear, and another girl suffered minor
injuries during the scramble to flee.
Wilhelmina Reum, whose daughter
Alexis Singleton is a fourth-grader at a nearby elementary school, got
word of the attack while she was about 35 miles away in Bakersfield and
immediately sped back to Taft.
"I just kept thinking this can't be happening in my little town," she told The Associated Press.
Officials said there's usually an armed officer on campus, but the person wasn't there because he was snowed in.
The school will be closed Friday
as investigators continue to search the building. Authorities are
"searching every backpack, every book," Youngblood said, to make sure
the suspect acted alone.
The attack there came less than a
month after a gunman massacred 20 children and six women at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., then killed himself.
That shooting prompted President
Barack Obama to promise new efforts to curb gun violence. Vice President
Joe Biden, who was placed in charge of the initiative, said he would
deliver new policy proposals to the president by next week.