Bodycam footage shows Nashville police searching Christian school for gunman
Evelyn Dieckhaus, nine, one of the victims of Monday’s horrific Nashville school shooting, was killed while leading her classmates to safety in response to a fire alarm seemingly tripped by the attacker, her family believes.
Her aunt, Kelly Dorrance, wrote in a private Instagram post since provided to a media outlet: “She was trying to lead her classmates to safety and possibly didn’t hear the shouts to come back in the room. Things children should never worry about.”
Evelyn’s funeral is set to take place on Friday as the Tennessee city comes together to mourn its dead.
Services for substitute teacher Cynthia Peak, 61, and Hallie Scruggs, nine, will be held on Saturday. Nine-year-old William Kinney’s funeral will take place on Sunday, while services for Mike Hill, 61, the school’s custodian, will be held on Tuesday and the funeral for head of school Katherine Koonce, 60, will take place on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, police have released the chilling 911 calls they received from inside the Covenant School as the shooter – since identified by law enforcement as Audrey Hale, 28, a former student of the private Christian elementary school – broke into the building and opened fire.
A manifesto written by the suspect is soon expected to released by officers investigating the deadly attack.
Students across Nashville plan Monday walkout protest
The walkout is scheduled for Monday 3 April with a march to the State Capitol organised by the March For Our Lives group.
“Precisely one week after the shooting at The Covenant School, youth from colleges and schools throughout Nashville will walk out of their classrooms and into the streets with the clear message: Stop fighting culture wars and start regulating weapons of war,” a statement from the group said.
Graeme Massie31 March 2023 18:27
Democrat and Republican in Capitol shouting match over gun safety
Two opposing US congressmen drew crowds of onlookers as they engaged in a blazing argument this week over gun control in the wake of the Nashville school shooting.
New York Democrat Jamaal Bowman, himself a former teacher, had been giving a furious speech to reporters in a corridor outside the House of Representatives, accusing the Republicans of inaction.
“They’re cowards. They’re all cowards! They won’t do anything to save the lives of our children,” yelled Mr Bowman, a former school principal.
Kentucky GOP representative Thomas Massie then tried to butt in, prompting a shouting match between the two men.
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 18:00
Some staff members at Nashville school were armed, 911 call reveals
A woman who called 911 while hiding under a desk during Monday’s shooting told the dispatcher that one or two staff members on site were carrying guns, The Tennessean reported on Thursday, a detail not previously known.
The revelation came as officials released two dozen 911 calls and recordings of emergency dispatches from the attack.
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 17:30
What we know about the victims of the Nashville school shooting
As the first funerals from Monday’s atrocity begin to take place, here is everything we know about those who lost their lives.
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 17:00
Despite school shooting, Tennessee’s gun laws likely to remain lax
As Nashville residents reel from the fatal grade school shooting that left six dead, a federal judge has quietly cleared the way to drop the minimum age for Tennesseans to carry handguns publicly without a permit to 18 — just two years after a new law set the age at 21.
The move marked yet another relaxation of gun laws in ruby-red Tennessee, where Republican leaders have steadily chipped away at firearms regulations and lambasted those who have warned that doing so comes at a cost.
After school shooting, Tenn. gun laws likely to remain lax
A federal judge quietly cleared the way to drop the minimum age to 18 for Tennesseans to carry handguns in public without a permit the same day Nashville residents were reeling from a fatal grade school shooting that left six dead, including three children
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 16:30
Nashville shooting timeline: How the Tennessee massacre unfolded
Here’s a timely recap, should you need it.
America suffered its latest outbreak of deadly gun violence on Monday morning when a shooter broke into The Covenant School in the Green Hills suburb of Nashville, Tennessee, and shot dead six people, including three children aged nine.
Police arrived quickly at the scene and shot dead the suspect, later named as Audrey Hale, 28, a former student at the private Christian elementary school.
The three child victims were identified as students Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs and William Kinney.
Head teacher Katherine Koonce, 60, substitute teacher Cynthia Peak and custodian Mike Hill, both 61, were also killed.
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 16:00
Parkland dad calls for national education strike after Nashville
The father of a Parkland shooting victim who was violently arrested at US Capitol has called for a national education strike in response to the Nashville shooting.
Manuel Oliver, whose 17-year-old son Joaquin was one of 17 people fatally shot at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in 2018, has called for “extreme measures” to prevent further gun violence in the US.
“I want to go in a more challenging, disruptive direction. I think we have been very polite,” he told ABC News this week.
“My tolerance after losing my son has been handled in the best possible way, but this is like too much.
“I keep looking at this inaction from our representatives, and only action when someone like me – and there are thousands like me – decide to disrupt and to raise our voices over our loved ones, then they do something, then they arrest me, other than that they won’t do anything.
“So, we have to take extreme measures, for this. We are calling for a national education strike at all levels of education, and I hope that we can achieve these kind of movements out there sooner rather than later.”
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 15:30
‘We must reject the transphobic narrative around Nashville’
For Indy Voices, Skylar Baker-Jordan offers an impassioned answer to attempts by the right to co-opt The Covenant School massacre as part of its vile war against the LGBT+ community.
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 15:00
After school shooting, some trans Tennesseans face backlash
When Nashville police announced that the shooter who killed three children and three adults at a school this week was transgender, trans Tennesseans braced themselves for renewed vitriol in a state that has recently proposed a raft of anti-trans laws.
Soon enough, some prominent Republicans, including JD Vance, a senator from Ohio, and representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, suggested in social media posts that the shooter’s gender identity may have been a factor in the murders.
Police later said they did not know the shooter’s gender identity.
Even before the shooting, many transgender Tennesseans felt villainised by their state’s efforts to regulate the lives of gay and trans people, and were increasingly fearful for their safety.
“This isn’t a trans issue, this is a gun issue,” said Mykul Coscia, a drag king at Nashville’s Play Dance Bar, an LGTBQ nightclub. “But they’re gonna make it a trans issue.”
Tennessee’s Republican-controlled legislature recently banned gender-affirming medical care, such as puberty blockers and hormone therapy, for anyone under 18, despite US medical associations saying such treatment can save lives.
It also restricted drag shows in public in an ambiguously worded law taking effect this weekend that includes “male or female impersonators” in the same X-rated category as strippers. As that bill progressed, armed neo-Nazis and other far-right groups protested outside drag shows in the state.
The Tennessee bills are part of a broader anti-trans push by Republicans in conservative states who argue they are protecting children.
Coscia has a seven-year-old daughter going to a Nashville-area school and said he was never worried about doctors or drag queens harming children. But he does live in fear of school shootings, which have become commonplace in the US, where guns are easily obtained.
Last year, the Supreme Court declared for the first time that the US Constitution protects an individual’s right to carry a handgun in public for self-defence.
Even as a gun owner himself, he wants lawmakers to make it harder to get hold of guns and to ban the kind of semi-automatic rifle used in many school shootings, including Monday’s at the Covenant School.
The vast majority of mass shootings in the US are committed by non-trans men, according to Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a non-profit group advocating for stricter gun regulation.
Grayson Collins, a trans man raising a three-year-old daughter with his wife in a Nashville suburb, said the gender identity of a mass shooter was irrelevant.
“It’s evil,” he said. “I could care less who they are or what they are. You still took someone’s life and that’s horrible.”
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 14:30
Chilling police call Audrey Hale’s friend made sounding alarm before Nashville shooting is released
Audio from a phone call made by Averianna Patton – the friend of Audrey Hale who received that string of alarming Instagram messages just prior to the shootings – in which she tries to report her concerns about the latter’s social media posts has been published for the first time.
Joe Sommerlad31 March 2023 14:00