JOPLIN, Mo. - The 13-year-old
boy who fired a single shot from an assault rifle inside a middle school was
charged as a juvenile Tuesday in the bloodless shooting.
The boy, who entered Joplin Memorial Middle School wearing a mask, was
charged with first-degree assault, armed criminal action and making terrorist
threats. Officials of the Jasper County juvenile office said they were talking
with a prosecutor about possibly charging the boy as an adult.
Members of the Springfield Fire
Department Bomb Squad and Joplin Police Department leave the home of a
13-year-old who allegedly took a gun to Memorial Middle School after
searching it on Monday, Oct. 9, 2006, in Joplin, Mo.
[AP] |
The student fired one shot into the ceiling of a school entryway Monday after
confronting administrators and students, police said. Nobody was injured and he
left after his gun jammed.
Another hearing is set for Wednesday, the juvenile office said. If convicted
as a juvenile, the boy's sentence could range from in-home detention to
incarceration lasting no longer than his 18th birthday.
Nearly all students returned to classes at the school Tuesday, officials
said. Police officers and patrol cars were stationed near the school but largely
out of sight to avoid frightening the sixth- through eighth-grade students,
police Sgt. Curt Farmer said.
The boy's name was not released because of his age. The incident was the
latest in a recent wave of school violence, including three deadly shootings in
one week.
The student's backpack contained military manuals, instructions on assembling
an improvised explosive device and detailed drawings of the school, which has
750 students. The rifle belonged to his parents, who told police they kept it in
a gun safe.
Lt. Geoff Jones said the boy's motives were unclear. School officials said
the student had no major disciplinary problems.
Superintendent Jim Simpson said police told him the boy had a fascination
with the Columbine High School shooting in which 15 people were killed in 1999
near Littleton, Colo. Police declined to comment.
The student was wearing a trench coat, like the student gunmen at Columbine
and had a mask or hood fashioned out of a white T-shirt with two holes cut out
for his eyes.
Joplin's schools do not have metal detectors. One full-time safety officer
and several drug enforcement officers move between the schools, but none was at
the middle school when the shooting happened.
Joplin, which has about 40,900 residents, is in southwest Missouri. It is
about 10 miles from the small town of Riverton, Kan., where five high school
students were arrested in April and accused of plotting a school
rampage.