Saturday, January 6, 2024 – The shooting yesterday, Jan. 4, at Perry High School, Iowa, left one student dead and five others injured.
The shooter has been identified as a 17-year-old student of
the school.
The teen opened fire at the high school before classes
resumed on the first day after the winter break, killing a sixth-grader and
wounding five others as students barricaded in offices, ducked into classrooms
and fled in panic.
The suspect died of what investigators believe is a
self-inflicted gunshot wound, an Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation
official said. Authorities said one of the five people wounded was an
administrator, later identified by his alma mater as Perry High School
Principal Dan Marburger.
Authorities identified the shooter as Dylan Butler, 17, and
provided no information about a possible motive.
Two friends and their mother who spoke with The Associated
Press said Butler was a quiet person who had been bullied for years.
Authorities said Butler had a pump-action shotgun and a
small-caliber handgun. Mitch Mortvedt, the state investigation division’s
assistant director, said during a news conference that authorities also found a
“pretty rudimentary” improvised explosive device and rendered it safe.
The suspect’s motive is being investigated and authorities
are looking into “a number of social media posts” he made around the time of
the shooting, Mortvedt added.
A law enforcement official briefed on the investigation said
federal and state investigators are interviewing Butler’s friends and analyzing
Butler’s social media profiles, including posts on TikTok and Reddit.
Shortly before Thursday’s shooting, Butler posted a photo on
TikTok inside the bathroom of Perry High School, the official said. The photo
was captioned “now we wait” and the song “Stray Bullet” by the German band
KMFDM accompanied it. Investigators have also found other photos Butler posted
posing with firearms, according to the official, who was not authorized to
publicly discuss details of the investigation and spoke to AP on condition of
anonymity.
Sisters Yesenia Roeder and Khamya Hall, both 17, said
alongside their mother, Alita, that Butler was bullied relentlessly since
elementary school, but it escalated recently when his younger sister started
getting picked on, too. His parents brought it up to the school, they said, and
that was the “last straw” for Butler.
“He was hurting. He got tired. He got tired of the bullying.
He got tired of the harassment,” Yesenia Roeder Hall, 17, said. “Was it a smart
idea to shoot up the school? No. God, no.”
Perry High School senior Ava Augustus said she was awaiting
a counselor in a school office when she heard three shots. Unable to flee
through a small window, she and others barricaded the door and were ready to
throw things if necessary.
“And then we hear ‘He’s down. You can go out,’” Augustus
said through tears. ”And I run and you can just see glass everywhere, blood on
the floor. I get to my car and they’re taking a girl out of the auditorium who
had been shot in her leg.”
Three gunshot victims were being treated at Iowa Methodist
Medical Center in Des Moines, a spokesperson said. Others were taken to a
second hospital, a spokesperson for MercyOne Des Moines Medical Center
confirmed.
Mortvedt said one person was in critical condition but the
injuries didn’t appear to be life-threatening, and the others were stable.
Hundreds of people gathered for a candlelight prayer vigil
Thursday evening at a park where hours earlier, students had been brought to
reunite with their families after the shooting. Bundled up against freezing
temperatures, they listened to pastors from many faiths and heard a message of
hope in both English and Spanish.
A post on the high school’s Facebook page said it would be
closed Friday and counseling services would be available for students, faculty
and others in the community.
“This senseless tragedy has shaken our entire state to its
core,” Gov. Kim Reynolds said.
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