A gunman who opened fire at a Georgia elementary school on Tuesday was armed with an AK-47 "and a number of other weapons," police said.
The shooter barricaded
himself in the school's front office with employees before eventually
surrendering to police, DeKalb County Police Chief Cedric Alexander told
reporters.
No one was injured, authorities said.
Suspected shooter Michael
Brandon Hill, 20, faces charges including aggravated assault on a
police officer, terroristic threats and possession of a firearm by a
convicted felon, police spokeswoman Mekka Parish said.
The shooter fired
approximately six shots from inside the school toward officers as they
approached outside, Alexander said, and police returned fire.
Police said it is unclear
whether the suspect had any connection with the school, the Ronald E.
McNair Discovery Learning Academy, which is about seven miles east of
downtown Atlanta. Investigators believe the gunman entered the school
behind someone, Alexander said.
As the standoff unfolded, a caller told CNN affiliate WSB's assignment desk that she was in the school office with a gunman.
The man had a message he
wanted the woman to share with the local television station, assignment
editor Lacey LeCroy said, describing the conversation during WSB's
newscast Tuesday evening.
"She said he told her to tell me he was not afraid to die," LeCroy said.
The gunman also threatened to harm police, the woman said, according to LeCroy.
Later, LeCroy heard
gunshots crack over the television station's phone line. The woman in
the school office wasn't sure who had fired, LeCroy said.
Investigators initially
suspected there could be explosives in a vehicle the shooter parked
outside the school, but police found no explosives inside, Parish said.
Teachers and
administrators had guided the students out to a lawn outside the
school's gym, where they remained while investigators combed the school
to make sure no other threat remained. Concerns about explosives forced
SWAT teams to cut a hole in a fence by the school and evacuate students
through the yard of a neighboring home, Alexander said. On a nearby
street, school buses waited to take them to safety.
"This was a very unusual situation where we had to get the kids away from any possible explosives," Alexander said.
Students were reunited
with their parents at a nearby shopping center Tuesday afternoon. The
children smiled and waved and parents cheered as each school bus arrived
with students aboard.
"Everybody's safe," DeKalb County Schools Superintendent Michael Thurmond said.
"This thing came out for
the best," said Dale Holmes, DeKalb County's assistant police chief.
"Thank God no one was hurt -- not even the suspect."l
culled from www.cnn.com
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