Thursday 10 April 2014

A 16 Years Old Boy Who Stabbed 21 Students In Suburban Pittsburgh High School

A police officer guards the entrance Heritage Elementary School (Source: AP)
The Police are still trying to determine why a 16-year-old boy stabbed 21 students and a security guard in the crowded halls of his suburban Pittsburgh high school before an assistant principal tackled him. At least five students were critically wounded in the attack yesterday, including a boy whose liver was pierced by a knife thrust that narrowly missed his heart and aorta, doctors said. Others also suffered deep abdominal puncture wounds.

The rampage which came after decades in which US schools geared much of their emergency planning toward mass shootings, not stabbings set off a screaming stampede, left blood on the floor and walls, and brought teachers rushing to help the victims. The suspect, Alex Hribal, was taken into custody and treated for a minor hand wound, then was brought into court in shackles and a hospital gown and charged with four counts of attempted homicide and 21 counts of aggravated assault. He was jailed without bail, and authorities said he would be prosecuted as an adult.

As for what set off the attack, Murrysville Police Chief Thomas Seefeld said investigators were looking into reports of a threatening phone call between the suspect and another student the night before. Seefeld didn't specify whether the suspect received or made the call. The FBI joined the investigation and went to the boy's house, where authorities said they planned to confiscate and search his computer. At the brief hearing, District Attorney John Peck said that after he was seized, Hribal made comments suggesting he wanted to die.

Attorney Patrick Thomassey said he believes police are just as puzzled as Hribal's family about why the teenager pulled two knives from a kitchen drawer yesterday, went to the school and "started stabbing students." He had no history of mental illness and his family didn't see any sign that he was capable of violence. In a case like this, it's pretty obvious to me that there must be something inside this young man that nobody knew about, Mr Thomassey said. The attack unfolded in the morning just minutes before the start of classes at 1,200-student Franklin Regional High School, in an upper-middle-class area 24 kilometres east of Pittsburgh.

It was over in about five minutes, during which the boy ran wildly down about 60 metres of hallway, slashing away with knives about 10 inches long, police said. Assistant Principal Sam King finally tackled the boy and disarmed him, and a police officer who is regularly assigned to the school handcuffed him.

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