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Old 10-26-2011, 08:31 PM   #1
dselectronics

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Default school shooting in NC
Two found with gun at site of Cumberland school shooting








FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — Two days after a Cape Fear High School student was shot at school, Cumberland County deputies arrested two Fayetteville men Wednesday morning after finding a handgun in a car on the school's campus.


Deputies became suspicious after noticing a multi-colored Honda hatchback in the school's rear parking lot, and a search of the car turned up the gun in the glovebox, authorities said.


Canaan Maliek Wynder, 19, of Cedar Creek Road, and Tristen Gibbs, 18, of 126 Bladen Circle, were charged with possession of a firearm on school property. Both are graduates of Cape Fear High, and Wynder told deputies that he was dropping his girlfriend off at school.


The campus wasn't locked down, and no one was in danger because of the incident, authorities said.


Wynder and Gibbs were in the custody of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, authorities said.


On Monday, Catilyn Abercrombie, 15, was shot in the neck as she stood in a breezeway outside the school cafeteria.


She underwent surgery Monday night, but her condition worsened Tuesday. She was placed on a ventilator to help her breathe, and at last check, she was listed in critical condition but has been moved from Cape Fear Valley Medical Center to an undisclosed location.


Two other Cape Fear High students were arrested Monday night and charged in the shooting.


A 15-year-old is charged with attempted first-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. He was in custody in the Cumberland County Juvenile Detention Center. He will face a juvenile court hearing sometime in the next week, but no decision has been made on whether to try him as an adult.


Ta'Von McLaurin, 18, of 1408 Rhone St. in Fayetteville, is charged with felonious aiding and abetting. He made his first court appearance Tuesday afternoon and is being held in the Cumberland County Detention Center under a $280,000 secured bond.


Authorities have said that they don't think Abercrombie was the intended target, but investigators haven't yet determined the motive for the shooting.



School security video showed two students carrying a .22-caliber rifle into Cape Fear High, authorities said. The students were either in the hallway with the door open or outside the breezeway where Abercrombie was walking.






Although Daisy, the manufacturer of the rifle, also makes pellet guns, authorities said the weapon investigators found at the school was a traditional rifle.


Security at Cape Fear High was beefed up Tuesday and Wednesday to calm jittery parents and students. All students were required to pass through metal detectors to get into school.


About one-third of the students at Cape Fear High and about 10 percent of the students at nearby Mac Williams Middle School were out of class Tuesday as fearful parents kept them at home.


Cape Fear High reported 28 violent acts at school during the 2009-10 school year, the most recent year for which statistics are available. The rate of two violent acts per 100 students is average for Cumberland County schools.


I'm really glad I'm able to homeschool.
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Old 10-26-2011, 08:50 PM   #2
Oberjej

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damn....28 reports of violent acts in a year? .....wonder what the school demographics are?
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Old 10-26-2011, 09:01 PM   #3
viagsjicguara

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damn....28 reports of violent acts in a year? .....wonder what the school demographics are?
Can blacks get a black eye?
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Old 10-26-2011, 09:43 PM   #4
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Why would the two perps be in custody of BATF?
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Old 10-26-2011, 09:47 PM   #5
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Cape Fear High.............................living up to its name
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Old 10-26-2011, 10:24 PM   #6
dselectronics

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Why would the two perps be in custody of BATF?
The shooting occurred two days ago. Apparently yesterday they found someone else on school grounds with guns (unrelated to the shooting). The article is reporting mostly on that. I just thought it was alarming to see that acts of violence statistic. I couldn't imagine sending my kids to a school like that, yet Wake county still wants to bus kids to balance the socioeconomic "status". We are not a part of it anymore, yet we still pay taxes.
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Old 10-26-2011, 10:29 PM   #7
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FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — The condition of the 15-year-old Cape Fear High School student who was wounded Monday in a shooting at school deteriorated Tuesday, authorities said.


Catilyn Abercrombie was in critical condition pending surgery at Cape Fear Valley Medical Center, said Debbie Tanna, spokeswoman for the Cumberland County Sheriff's Office. She has had trouble breathing and has been placed on a ventilator, Tanna said.


Abercrombie underwent surgery Monday night to remove a bullet from her neck and had been stabilized earlier Tuesday. She was nodding her head and blinking to respond to questions.


She was wounded Monday afternoon as she stood in a breezeway outside the school cafeteria.


A Cumberland County deputy who works at the school reported the shooting, telling a 911 dispatcher "she's barely breathing" as he examined her injuries.
The shooting marks Abercrombie's second brush with death. In March 2005, a car in which she was riding was hit by a drunk driver, killing her babysitter, but she suffered only minor injuries.
Fellow students charged

Two other Cape Fear High students were arrested Monday night and charged in the shooting.


A 15-year-old is charged with attempted first-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. He was in custody in the Cumberland County Juvenile Detention Center. He will face a juvenile court hearing sometime in the next week, but it was unclear Tuesday whether he might be tried as an adult.
"We'll wait till the investigation is complete before we make that decision on that young man," Cumberland County District Attorney Billy West said.




Ta'Von McLaurin, 18, of 1408 Rhone St. in Fayetteville, is charged with felonious aiding and abetting. He made his first court appearance Tuesday afternoon and is being held in the Cumberland County Detention Center under a $280,000 secured bond.


Cumberland County Sheriff Earl "Moose" Butler said investigators don't think Abercrombie was the intended target, but no motive had been established.
"Why did they shoot? I don't know," he said.


A neighbor of McLaurin's, who declined to give her name, said she was "shocked" to hear of his arrest. She described him as a quiet, mannerly young man who lives with his mother, younger brother and younger sister and said she never knew him to be involved in any trouble.


A man who attended McLaurin's court hearing and is believed to be a relative said the teen has "good character."


"This is his first run-in with the law," said the man, who declined to give his name.
Butler said school security video showing two students carrying a .22-caliber rifle into Cape Fear High led to the arrests of McLaurin and the 15-year-old. The suspects were either in the hallway with the door open or outside the breezeway where Abercrombie was walking, he said.


Although Daisy, the manufacturer of the rifle, also makes pellet guns, Tanna said the weapon investigators found at the school was a traditional rifle.
Schools on edge, parents divided

Cape Fear High and nearby Mac Williams Middle School were on normal schedules Tuesday, and extra deputies were posted at the schools to help students and parents feel confident about their safety.

Both schools were locked down Monday afternoon as deputies combed the area for evidence in the shooting.


"I understand the fear, I understand the emotion, but I would encourage parents to send their kids back to school," Cumberland County Schools Superintendent Frank Till said Tuesday morning. "We have extra security. I believe the school is safe, and it will get them back to normal. Sometimes, getting back to normal after a trauma like this is the most important thing."


About one-third of the students at Cape Fear High and about 10 percent of Mac Williams Middle students were out of class Tuesday, Till said.


"The kids were edgy and scared to go back into that school, and I know how they feel. I was scared to come back," school bus driver Susie Melvin said after transporting only 17 of the usual 47 students on her route.


"(Students are) just kind of like down. Everybody's sad to lose a great person. Everybody's hoping she's OK," student Kristen Jackson said.


Mark Butsch said he planned to keep his two children home until he was convinced they would be safe at school.


"I decided not to send them to school today because of the threat of more violence," Butsch said.


Ken Johnson was among the parents who sent their children back to school Tuesday. He said he was confident that school leaders are doing everything they can to keep students safe.


"It sends the wrong message if I would have kept them from coming to school," Johnson said.





Cape Fear High reported 28 violent acts at school during the 2009-10 school year, the most recent year for which statistics are available. The rate of two violent acts per 100 students is average for Cumberland County schools.
Butsch and other parents said they believe the shooting is connected to a fight on campus last week, but investigators said they haven't found any connection.
"It's been building up to this for a while. My kids have come home and told me about it where there's been gang fights, flashing gang signs, calling each other out at school," Butsch said. "I think that girl was an innocent bystander."
Till said he doesn't think Cape Fear High has a gang problem.


"Are there some students who belong to gangs? Probably, there are some," he said. "Are they keeping their activity off campus? I believe they're probably keeping their activity off campus in general."


Likewise, investigators say there is no evidence of any gang connection to the shooting.


"As of right now, we don't have any reason to believe there was gang activity in the school that would have led to the shooting that happened," Tanna said.
While the high school has metal detectors, Butler said he didn't know if they were used on a daily basis. School officials did use the metal detectors Tuesday morning and said they would use them again Wednesday.


Till said the gun would not have been detected because the student was not in class.


"Even if we had metal detectors (Monday), the way the gun was hidden and not going into a building, we would have not detected it," he said. "The student had not been in class, so it wasn’t like this student was sitting in class with the rifle tucked in his pants."
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Old 10-26-2011, 10:54 PM   #8
wooclosmercob

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The shooting occurred two days ago. Apparently yesterday they found someone else on school grounds with guns (unrelated to the shooting). The article is reporting mostly on that. I just thought it was alarming to see that acts of violence statistic. I couldn't imagine sending my kids to a school like that, yet Wake county still wants to bus kids to balance the socioeconomic "status". We are not a part of it anymore, yet we still pay taxes.
What jurisdiction would the BATF have? Is there a federal law making skoolz gun free zones? I thought is only at the state level. Could it be due to the fact that almost all skoolz receive federal aid?

I know the whole federal territory discussion, but I have noticed in the past few months, feds are called in on just about everything except traffic violations.
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Old 10-27-2011, 12:17 AM   #9
dselectronics

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What jurisdiction would the BATF have? Is there a federal law making skoolz gun free zones? I thought is only at the state level. Could it be due to the fact that almost all skoolz receive federal aid?

I know the whole federal territory discussion, but I have noticed in the past few months, feds are called in on just about everything except traffic violations.
Good point. I don't really have an answer but you're right. It really doesn't make sense.
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