Tag: school shooting

  • School Shooting in Oregon

    School Shooting in Oregon

    Teen Arrested After Roseburg School Shooting:

    An administrator inside Roseburg High School this morning is confirming that there was a shooting at the school and one person is down.
    Roseburg Police Sergeant Aaron Dunbar says it is unknown at this time if the person hurt is a student or staff member.

    Dunbar says the gunman appears to be a student.

    The administrator says the school is in lockdown. The shooting occurred at 7:45 a.m. at the school.

    One victim is being treated for an unknown injury at Mercy Medical Center.

    Dunbar says the gunman fled the scene but was cornered by police near the school.

    After a short standoff the suspect held a gun to his head but was taken into custody with no further incident.

    A nearby elementary school was also placed in lockdown as
    a precaution.

    More on this as it develops.

    TOF to L.

  • Ken Bartley’s dad indicted

    Ken Bartley’s dad indicted

    LaFollette mayor charged with gambling:

    How’s this for an interesting story? Kenny Michael Bartley, the father of Campbell County High School shooter Kenneth Bartley Jr., was indicted in an illegal gambling scheme along with the mayor of LaFollette, Tenn. I guess the criminal apple doesn’t fall too far from the tree.

  • Bartley Hearing Postponed

    Bartley Hearing Postponed

    Court appearance for school shooting suspect postponed:

    The hearing for Kenny Bartley, the Campbell County, Tenn. teen charged with shooting three school administrators and killing one, which could have determined if he would be tried as an adult or not, has been postponed.

    According to the article, the hearing was postponed because Bartley’s psychological profile was not complete. The new hearing will begin March 30th.

  • Red Lake families meet with U.S. Attorney

    Red Lake families meet with U.S. Attorney

    Prosecutor: Dozens knew school shooter’s plans:

    Family members of the victims of the Red Lake shooting met with U.S. Attorney Tom Heffelfinger today, and some interesting things came to light…

    Nearly 40 people knew that 16-year-old Jeff Weise had planned some sort of violence at Red Lake High School before he went on a rampage, according to family members who met with U.S. Attorney Tom Heffelfinger on Monday.

    Heffelfinger met behind closed doors with those who lost loved ones in the March 21 shooting, when Weise killed nine people before killing himself.

    “It’s horrid. I just got a headache,” said Barbara Brun, who lost her son, Derrick, a security guard, in the shooting. “I wasn’t this angry before I came. I haven’t been this angry since March 21st.”

    Brun said Heffelfinger told those gathered at a hotel here that 39 people knew Weise planned a shooting at the high school, and of those, four or five had direct knowledge. Brun said that Heffelfinger told the group Weise had been talking about the shooting since 2003.

    “Why didn’t someone take him seriously?” she asked.

    39 people knew, and not one person said anything. And some people say that as a society, we’re overreacting to perceived threats of school violence. I’d rather there be an overreaction and save lives than there be no reaction with scores dead.

  • Bartley hearing tomorrow

    Bartley hearing tomorrow

    Bartley transfer hearing on Tuesday:

    Kenny Bartley, the teen accused of shooting three administrators and killing one at Campbell County High School, will be in court tomorrow, which could determine if he will be tried as an adult or not.

    “Under Tennessee law there are certain crimes where a juvenile can be transferred, or placed in the adult justice system. Obviously, homicide or attempted murder would be one of those. A juvenile judge has to look at certain criteria such as the seriousness of the offense.”

    Does it get much more serious than murder? If he is tried as a juvenile, then there will be no justice for the victims.

  • The Actual Victim II

    The Actual Victim II

    Fighting Power Helps Red Lake Shooting Victim:

    I’ve done entries before about Steven Cobenais. He is one of the surviving victims of the Red Lake shootings. Gunman Jeff Weise asked Steven Cobenais if he believed in God. When Cobenais said yes, Weise shot him in the face. Steven Cobenais ended up losing an eye and having a severe brain injury.

    Last summer, Cobenais suffered a major seizure. For a while, he wore a helmet to protect him from falls. He is back at Red Lake High School now, where he struggles with short-term memory loss.

    During his recovery, his father, Llewellyn Thunder, spent weeks at his son’s bedside and lost his job because of it. During that time, their home was vandalized and robbed, leaving it uninhabitable. Now they live in subsidized housing that is only guaranteed through next month.

    And again I say, how can anyone in their right mind call Jeff Weise a victim?

    The Thunders said they were grateful to people who contributed to a community fund set up in their son’s name.

    Donations are accepted at the Steven Cobenais Fund, Deerwood Bank, P.O. Box 1278, Bemidji, MN 56601.

  • Campbell County Victims Update II

    Campbell County Victims Update II

    School shooting victim was burglary victim on the same day:

    Back in November, I posted an entry about Campbell County High shooting survivor Jim Pierce and how his house was robbed on the day he was shot by Ken Bartley. An ATV, a rifle, an air compressor, and several tools were stolen. Yesterday the ATV was found, but no arrests have been made.

    The article also states that Ken Bartley is due back in court at the end of the month, and that Pierce and Principal Gary Seale went back to work last week.

  • More on Jourdain sentencing

    More on Jourdain sentencing

    Jourdain sentenced in Red Lake shooting:

    Just some more information on the sentencing of alleged Red Lake co-conspirator Louis Jourdain in addition to the previously posted sentence

    The teenager will be on probation until he is 21, and during that period, a federal judge will have discretion to send him to other facilities as a condition of probation, the paper reported.

    Jourdain pleaded guilty to making threatening interstate communications.

  • Victims’ families unhappy with Jourdain sentence

    Victims’ families unhappy with Jourdain sentence

    Families criticize teen’s penalty:

    Louis Jourdain’s sentence hasn’t been made officially public, but according to the article, he will spend less than one year in a private treatment center for children. Jourdain pleaded guilty to making threatening interstate communications in connection with the Red Lake shootings. And the families of the victims are none too happy about it…

    “It doesn’t seem like enough,” said Rose Rosebear, whose 15-year-old granddaughter Chanelle Rosebear was among those killed. “He got the easy way out, I guess.”

    Adding to the frustration, though, is that many in the community do not know Louis Jourdain’s actual role — if any — in the events leading up to the March 21 shootings. And they may never know.

    Jourdain’s juvenile status in the proceedings means court records are sealed.

    Victims’ families say they are frustrated. They are left to speculate about whether Jourdain, who was Weise’s cousin and rumored to have exchanged e-mails and text messages with him regularly, thought Weise might kill his grandfather and take his gun to wreak havoc in the halls of Red Lake High.

    One of the bullets Weise fired struck then-freshman Cody Thunder in the hip. Cody survived but has not gone back to school. A bullet remains lodged somewhere in the teen’s body, says his grandfather, Al Thunder. The lack of detail about Jourdain’s trial and involvement, he said, grates on him.

    “We’re the people that got hurt. Not him,” Al Thunder said. “Now, it seems like he’s the one getting the best deal.”

    Francis “Chunky” Brun still chokes up when he talks about his 28-year-old son, Derrick. Derrick Brun worked as a security guard at the school and was the first person Weise encountered when he stormed the school. Brun, who was lauded for trying to stop Weise, was shot to death.

    Seeing justice done helps ease the minds of those who’ve lost a loved one, Francis Brun said. But there are many who suspect the penalty doled out to Louis Jourdain does not fit whatever role the teen might have played, he said.

    “I can’t prejudge the boy,” he said. “I know he’s going to have to live with this thing, and it’s going to haunt him the rest of his life, just like it’s caused so much grief and sorrow for my family and all family members of people who were killed.”

  • Louis Jourdain Sentenced

    Louis Jourdain Sentenced

    Red Lake Teen Sentenced for Threats:

    A tribal chairman’s teenage son, once accused of conspiring with a 16-year-old friend who killed nine people on the Red Lake Indian Reservation, was sentenced behind closed doors Friday on a lesser charge of sending threatening messages.

    The sentence for Louis Jourdain, 17, wasn’t revealed, and his father, Floyd Jourdain Jr., said he would not disclose it.

    “The judge’s ruling will reflect what I’ve said all along … my son is a good kid,” the elder Jourdain said.

    Attorneys left the court without commenting.

    I’ll let you know if the sentence itself ever becomes known.