The Apalachee High School shooting victims are well-known to us


When the Shooting at Apalachee High School killed two teachers and two students: Mason Schermerhorn, Christian Angulo, and Richard Aspinwall

The shooting at Apalachee High School in Winder, Ga., on Wednesday killed two teachers and two students, becoming the deadliest episode of school violence in the state’s history. At least nine others were injured.

The authorities identified the dead students as two 14-year-olds, Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo. The educators killed were identified as Richard Aspinwall and Christina Irimie, officials said. Spellings of the names were not confirmed by the authorities.

Chris Hosey, director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, said that dead people are heroes in his book. “Those that are in the hospital recovering right now are heroes in my book.”

Friends of the family of Mason Schermerhorn said that he loved playing video games, visiting Disney World, and spending time with his family. He had recently started at the school.

Doug Kilburn, a friend who has known the woman for more than a decade, said that Schermerhorn enjoyed life. “He always had an upbeat attitude about everything.”

When Mr. Briscoe heard about the shooting at the high school he called the mother to make sure everything was okay. She told him thatMason was gone.

The 14-year-old student who shot and killed a teacher at the school will be charged with murder, officials said. As they were barricaded in classrooms, the students heard gunfire.

The school golf coach and a math special education teacher were injured in the shooting. Katie Phenix, his daughter, said in a Facebook post on Wednesday that he was shot in the foot and hip, shattering his hip bone.

The online threat was investigated by law enforcement hours after the shooting. But the report from the sheriff’s office reveals more about how the authorities were able to trace the post to the teenager, and why — after interviewing the boy and his father — they did not take further action, other than a warning to his middle school.

The New York Times obtained a report from the Jackson County sheriff’s office, which states that investigators were unable to link threats made to the teen who was arrested after a shooting at his high school. He’s accused of murdering five people, two students and two teachers.

The investigators found that the username on the Discord account had been written in Russian. The investigator said that the name of the shooter at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut was spelled out in the Russian letters, and that it was the name of the man who committed the crime.

In interviews with investigators, both Mr. Gray and his father, Colin Gray, said that they did not speak Russian, and the boy denied that he had been the author of the threats. He said that he deleted his previous accounts because he was afraid someone would use them for harm, and he had been hacked several times.

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