CAZENOVIA, Wis. - A teenager brought two guns to his rural school and shot
the principal to death Friday after a struggle with adults and other students,
authorities said.
The 15-year-old was taken into custody and charged with first-degree
intentional homicide, the district attorney said. No one else was hurt.
Klang is seen in a photo, at right,
on the wall at the school Friday, Sept. 29, 2006, in Cazenovia, Wis. A
teenager brought two guns to his rural school and shot Klang to death
Friday after a struggle with adults and other students, authorities said.
[AP] |
It was not clear why the student opened fire or if Weston Schools Principal
John Klang was the intended target, Sheriff Randy Stammen said.
Witnesses said the student walked in with a shotgun before classes began. A
custodian, teachers and students wrestled with him, but he broke through, took
out a handgun and shot Klang three times, Stammen said.
The custodian said the teen was a special-education student who told him he
was there to kill someone, but did not say who.
"He was calm, but he was on a mission," said Dave Thompson, 43, who also has
two children at the school.
Sophomore Shelly Rupp, 16, described the boy as a freshman with few friends
and said he was "just weird in the head."
"He always used to kid around about bringing things to school and hurting
kids," she said at a gas station nearby where students and townspeople gathered.
Thompson said the student first pointed a shotgun in a teacher's face.
Thompson grabbed away the gun, but the student then appeared to be reaching for
another gun, so Thompson and the teacher took cover. Thompson then ran into a
kitchen to call 911.
Junior Timmy Donovan said the student "pulled a .22 pistol out of his pants,
and then started shooting the principal. And at that point, I guess the
principal ran and tackled him to the ground."
Klang, 49, was shot in the head, chest and leg, authorities said. He died
hours later at a hospital in Madison.
The student, identified as Eric Hainstock, could get life in prison if
convicted, District Attorney Patricia Barrett said. Wisconsin does not have the
death penalty.
Children from pre-kindergarten to 12th grade attend the small school near
Cazenovia, a community of about 300 people about 60 miles northwest of Madison.
The shooting took place two days after a gunman took six students hostage in
a Colorado high school and killed one of them before committing suicide.
Laurie Rhea, 42, said the principal spent last weekend at the gas station
washing cars for a homecoming fundraiser.
"All the kids just loved him," she said.
The shooting happened as the school was preparing for homecoming weekend. The
homecoming parade, football game and dance were canceled or
postponed.