SANTA FE, TEX.: A 17-year-old student armed with a shotgun and a pistol went on a rampage Friday morning at his school here outside Houston, killing 10 people - mostly students - before surrendering to the officers who confronted him, officials said. Ten others were wounded, including a school resource officer who was left in critical condition.
Santa Fe High School was the latest scene of carnage in what has become a national epidemic of mass shootings. For the second time in the past three months, the victims were children and their teachers. It happened during first period.
Isabelle Laymance, 15, was in art class, drawing geometric shapes, when she heard gunshots. She froze for a moment, then she ran to a back door leading to a patio, but it was locked. She and seven other students barricaded themselves in a supply closet that connected two art classrooms. She lay on the floor and called police, then called her mother, whispering "I love you" while holding a friend's hand. They shushed each other, hoping to avoid detection.
The trenchcoat-clad gunman - whom police identified as student Dimitrios Pagourtzis - came into the first art classroom and began shooting. He knew that students were hiding in the supply closet, Laymance said.
"He said 'Surprise,' and then he started shooting, and he killed one or two people. And he shot a girl in the leg. In the closet. He shot through the window," she said. "We blocked the doors with ceramic makers, and he kept on trying to get in, and he kept on shooting inside the closet."
Laymance called police three times over the course of 30 terrifying minutes. A dispatcher told her to be quiet and assured her that help was on the way, she said.
The gunman kept shooting, swearing and yelling. He shot a police officer who approached, then engaged other officers in discussion, offering to surrender.
"He kept saying, 'If I come out, don't shoot me.' They didn't shoot him, they just put him in handcuffs," she said.
Pagourtzis, whom students described as a quiet loner, was held Friday without bond at the Galveston County jail, charged with capital murder and aggravated assault on a peace officer. It was unclear what motivated the attack, as authorities said it came without any obvious warning.
Pagourtzis made his first court appearance Friday evening, a little more than 10 hours after the massacre. He spoke quietly, saying "Yes, sir" when asked if he wanted a court-appointed attorney. After the brief hearing, he was led away.
The two guns used in the shooting belong to Pagourtzis' father, according to Gov. Greg Abbott, R, who said it was unclear if the father knew that his son had taken them. Unlike many other mass shootings carried out with high-powered rifles like the AR-15, this one, authorities said, involved relatively common weapons.
Police said they also found explosive devices inside the school and at locations off campus.
Authorities said they were scrutinizing two other potential suspects in the shooting. Sheriff Ed Gonzalez of neighboring Harris County said officials questioned another student, described as "a person of interest." Abbott said police also hoped to speak with a third person who he said could have "certain information," though he did not elaborate.
Three officers responded to the attack, officials said. The first to confront the shooter was school safety officer John Barnes, a retired Houston police officer who, according to a former Houston colleague, Capt. Jim Dale, joined the Santa Fe Independent School District police force because he wanted a less stressful job.
Barnes was shot in both arms, Dale said. A second Santa Fe ISD officer arrived, pulled Barnes to safety and applied a tourniquet. A third officer, a state trooper, also engaged the gunman, according to a state police official.
Officials have not yet provided a timeline showing how long it took to respond to the active-shooter emergency calls, nor have they disclosed many details about their interactions with the shooter.
Barnes was taken by helicopter to the trauma center at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, where he was in danger of "bleeding out" when he arrived, chief medical officer Gulshan Sharma told reporters. Dale, the Houston police captain, said that many officers descended upon the hospital to show their support and that the family was in good spirits after hearing from doctors that Barnes' injuries are probably not fatal.
Santa Fe High School, home of the Indians, had won a statewide award for its safety program. As an ominous precursor to Friday's shooting, the school had experienced a false alarm about an active shooter in February, an event that attracted a massive emergency response and the chaotic arrival of fearful parents.
Many of the 1,400 students staged a walkout April 20 as part of a nationwide protest against school shootings, part of a grass-roots movement among young Americans in the wake of the February massacre of 17 students and staffers at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. One sign carried by Santa Fe students during their April protest: "#NeverAgain."
Four Fridays later, their school was attacked.
Gage Slaughter, 17, said he was sitting in his AP history class when the shooting started. When he heard the gunshots, he thought - as is so often the case in mass shootings - that it was just firecrackers. Someone pulled a fire alarm, he said, and everyone went outside. Then a coach and some teachers told the students to start running.
"There were people who were starting to cry," he said. "I didn't know what was going on until I was down the road a little ways and I heard one of the teachers saying it was a school shooter."