Murder Rampage at Virginia Tech: Gunman Kills 33, Then He Shoots Himself; Deadliest School Massacre in U.S. History; Why Did Campus Cops Take Two Hours? Families, Students, Nation in Mourning; We Send Thoughts and Prayers
BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) — On a university campus of 2,600 acres, with more than 25,000 students, ironclad security is not a practical goal. Even so, tough questions swiftly surfaced as to how effectively Virginia Tech authorities responded to Monday’s horrific massacre.
Why were campus police so sure the threat was a “domestic dispute” contained in one dormitory, when most of the killings occurred two hours later in a classroom building?
Why were they interviewing a “person of interest” off campus in regard to the first shootings at the very time the classroom killings were unfolding?
Why was there a lag of more than two hours after the first shootings before an alarm was e-mailed campuswide — around the time the second, more deadly burst of carnage occurred? And more generally, some security experts wondered, was the school’s crisis planning and emergency communications system up to the task?
Clearly, something went terribly wrong.
Bombarded with security questions at afternoon and evening news conferences, Virginia Tech President Charles Steger said authorities believed the shooting at the West Ambler Johnston dorm, first reported about 7:15 a.m., was a domestic dispute and thought the gunman had fled the campus after killing two people.
“We had no reason to suspect any other incident was going to occur,” he said.
The dormitory was locked down immediately after the shooting, Steger said, and a phone bank was activated to alert the resident advisers there so they could go door-to-door warning the 900 students in the dorm. Security guards surrounded the dorm, he said, and others began a sweep across campus.
Asked why he didn’t order a lockdown of the entire campus, Steger noted that thousands of nonresident students were arriving for 8 a.m. classes, fanning out across the sprawling campus from their parking spots.
“Where do you lock them down?” Steger asked.
He said security on campus will be tightened now, but offered no details.
“We obviously can’t have an armed guard in front of every classroom every day of the year,” he said.
Overall, Steger defended the university’s response, saying: “You can only make a decision based on the information you know at that moment in time. You don’t have hours to reflect on it.”
Virginia Tech Police Chief Wendell Flinchum said there no surveillance cameras in place that recorded the gunman entering Norris Hall, the classroom building where 31 people were killed. Among the dead was the gunman, who killed himself before police could break through a chained door and reach the second-floor room where the massacre occurred.
Some students were upset that the gunman was able to strike a second time, saying the first notification they got of the shootings came in an e-mail at 9:26 a.m. The e-mail mentioned a “shooting incident” at West Ambler Johnston, said police were investigating, and asked students to be cautious and contact police about anything suspicious.
Student Maurice Hiller said he went to a 9 a.m. class two buildings away from the engineering building, and no warnings were coming over the outdoor public address system on campus at the time.
“I was troubled with the fact that two hours elapsed from the first shooting,” said Brant Martel, 23, a junior. “I just feel they were a little slow on their response.”
But Edmund Henneke, an associate dean of engineering who was in the building where the second round of shootings occurred, said criticism of the authorities’ response was unfair.
“We have a huge campus,” he said. “You have to close down a small town and you can’t close down every way in or out.”
Security experts not connected with Virginia Tech said their immediate questions focused on whether the university had adopted and practiced a plan to handle such dire crises, and whether its system of emergency communications was state-of-the-art.
“The key is to have a solid communications component in place to deal with notifying students, parents, faculty, staff and the media what’s going on,” said Kenneth Trump of National School and Safety Services in Cleveland.
“The most critical element that falls apart in any type of emergency, especially at educational institutions, is often communications,” he said.
University officials acknowledged that crisis communication is a challenge on such a large campus. They said they have been working on creating an alert system that would send text messages to staff and student cell phones, but the system is not yet ready.
Michael Dorn of Safe Havens International in Macon, Ga., which has advised many universities on security measures, said campus emergency plans can be ineffective unless staff and students are trained on how to cooperate.
“They can make the difference between one or two people being victimized and larger numbers,” Dorn said. “But it’s a lot harder to do that in higher education that in a K-12 school. A lot of higher ed officials don’t have the basic things in place that our K-12 schools have.”
It was second time in less than a year that the Virginia Tech campus was closed because of a shooting.
Last August, the opening day of classes was canceled and the campus closed when an escaped jail inmate allegedly killed a hospital guard off campus and fled to the Tech area. A sheriff’s deputy involved in the manhunt was killed on a trail just off campus. The accused gunman, William Morva, faces capital murder charges.
As for other crime on campus, Virginia Tech reported just eight arrests for illegal weapons possession from 2003-05, according to statistics posted by the U.S. Department of Education. Flinchum said weapons are not allowed on campus.Counseling assistance for students is available at West Ambler Johnston and McComas halls until 9 p.m. tonight. Students are encouraged to utilize these services.
Counseling for faculty and staff is available in the Bowman Room on the fourth floor of Jamerson Athletic Center, accessible from Jamerson or the Merryman Athletic Facility.
The university will remain closed Tuesday. Essential personnel are to report for work. Classes are canceled.
A public gathering will be held Tuesday at Cassell Coliseum at 2 p.m.
All students are urged to contact their parents as soon as possible to let them know individuals are safe.
Students, faculty, and staff who have any information related to the incidents are encouraged to go to the Blacksburg Police Department to make statements, or call 540-231-TIPP (8477), or 231-6411.
April 19th, 2007 at 11:11 pm
Hi Art, you did a great job reporting the facts without resorting to making a celebrity, a martyr, out of a disturbed individual for the sake of notoriety. You also ask some very important questions about the security on our campuses.
As they did with the Columbine Killings, once again many in the media have taken it upon themselves to deem this tragedy worthy of an almost constant bombardment upon our senses. I feel overloaded and thus I find myself wondering what a mentally ill person who is clearly delusional thinks when they see all of this played out in living color within the vacuum of their minds as they sit in front of their televisions. I ask myself if we shouldn’t avoid, at all costs, sharing any film, pictures and writings that these killers provide. I ask myself why we feel we have a “right” to this information when the sensationalism will only serve to encourage others with the same mindset as these cold and calculating murderers.
I ask myself what role, if any, the antidepressants had on this young man and the choices he made. I ask myself if the “bad attitude” that Cho used towards everyone he came into contact with wasn’t a form of manipulation so popular with the youth of today. I ask myself if the “abuse excuse” and the psychobabble that we have latched on to over the past forty years has helped our society or harmed it. I ask myself whatever happened to the belief that some people are just evil. I ask myself if our search for answers in cases like this, shouldn’t lie with a psychological autopsy done by a FBI criminologist rather than a media autopsy.
I ask myself if we shouldn’t downplay the public pathology of these killers and concentrate on the victims families.
I ask myself why so much media attention goes out to a killer and yet so little goes out to the heros in our world. Hero’s like Liviu Librescu who gave his life so that the students could live. Hero’s like the US soldiers who put their lives on the line for us everyday.
A tragedy of this sort brings up so many questions that we may never have answers for that I think we should go after the answers that bring healing so that we might prevent this from happening quite so often in the future. And Art I ask myself one last question… how is it that we blame the media when we are the ones who subscribe to it.
April 20th, 2007 at 8:06 pm
What ‘evil’ gave birth to this monster?
I am not blaming the mother here, she needed help, all of us need help, and time to heal.
Art please take his picture down.
April 20th, 2007 at 9:07 pm
This is truly sad.
My symphathy & prayers go out to the familes, friends & loved ones.
Our world as we once knew it, is a thing of the past.
God Help Us All.
Donna M.
April 20th, 2007 at 10:09 pm
DEAR ART HARRIS,
I WISH I HAD A CURE FOR THE DISEASE.
DO WE EVEN KNOW THE CAUSE; IS IT HEREDITARY, OR ENVIRONMENT?
April 23rd, 2007 at 12:10 am
Art, you are a great reporter… this story is disturbing!!! it could happen to any of us. Please, I beg you, take this kid’s picture down. It’s tragic! Regards,J
April 23rd, 2007 at 1:06 pm
I had posted a racially and violence tinged poem by Nikki Giovanni as the first post to this article - it was posted and removed - wondered why.
April 26th, 2007 at 3:21 am
They did not anticipate this evil, is anyone here ready?
May 23rd, 2007 at 1:00 am
Thanks for taking the kid’s picture down.
You sir, are a gentleman.
June 3rd, 2007 at 9:22 am
Dani MarieBernadette says,
“…how is it that we blame the media when we are the ones who subscribe to it.”
I say,
This is a statement and more than a comment, without question.
We are forced to buy the bundle, not just the channel we choose, so we decide when to listen and what to watch.
However, our options are limited by the information available.
July 23rd, 2007 at 10:50 pm
Darn it, I try so hard, to understand this kind of madness.
Then, I always end up looking at the ‘parents.’
August 4th, 2007 at 5:29 am
I wonder if this ‘kid’ ever did crack.
I wonder if he had a few intimate friends…that turned him on.
I wonder about his peers and parents, both.
I know he was sensitive to pain and weakness…and I wonder still…who feels the most guilty.
I know friends mean well…and sometimes they don’t.
August 22nd, 2007 at 1:44 pm
Dear Art,
Dani inspires me and enlightens me.
I don’t watch TV anymore, NOT TRUE…I’m still watching IT…the CRT..the evolution of TV…the empire is mostly evil entertainment.
Except for your site of course?
Well, I did come here, after all, to learn The Truth that I already knew.
Too, much freedom of press? Too, much freedom of speech???
Or, just plain lack of moral responsibility???
Take care, of you and yours, and I’ll do likewise.
Love Always,
Freida
P.S. Still think you would make a wonderful President!
Too, bad no really ‘good’ person would want that job, IMO.