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Police: University of Texas gunman was sophomore
AUSTIN, TX
The shooting began near a fountain in front of the UT Tower --
the site of one of the nation's deadliest shooting rampages more
than four decades ago, when a gunman ascended the clock tower and
fired down on dozens of people.
Within hours of Tuesday's gunfire, the school issued an
all-clear notice, but the university remained closed, and the area
around the library still was considered a crime scene.
"Our campus is safe," school President Bill Powers said.
Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo expected the school to be
"completely open and back to normal" by Wednesday morning.
Authorities identified the gunman as 19-year-old Colton Tooley,
a sophomore math major. Police declined to speculate on his motive.
Tooley's parents did not immediately respond to a message left
by The Associated Press. A man who said he was a relative of the
family and would identify himself only as Marcus came out of their
home late Tuesday and said Tooley's parents were distraught over
losing their child.
"I want you to understand how he lived. He was a very smart
guy, very intelligent, excellent student. He wouldn't or couldn't
hurt a fly," he said, reading from a prepared statement. "This is
a great shock to me and my family. There was nothing prior to this
day, nothing that would lead any of us to believe this could take
place."
Tooley's high school principal in Austin described him as an
excellent student who excelled in every subject.
"All of us in the Crockett High School community are shocked
and saddened by today's tragedy at the University of Texas," said
principal Craig Shapiro. Shapiro's prepared statement said Tooley,
a 2009 graduate, was remembered by teachers as being "brilliant,"
"meticulous," and "respectful."
Police investigators went in and out of his family's home in a
middle-class Austin neighborhood Tuesday afternoon carrying bags
and boxes. There was no immediate word on what was in the
containers. A neighbor said police arrived at the home about three
hours after the campus shooting.
The 50,000-student university had been on lockdown while
officers with bomb-sniffing dogs carried out a building-by-building
manhunt.
After the gunfire, authorities searched the campus for a
possible second shooter, but eventually concluded Tooley acted
alone. Confusion about the number of suspects arose because shots
were fired in multiple locations, and officers received varying
descriptions from witnesses, campus police Chief Robert Dahlstrom
said.
Before reaching the library, Tooley apparently walked for
several blocks wearing a mask and dark clothing and carrying an
automatic weapon, witnesses said.
Construction worker Ruben Cordoba said he was installing a fence
on the roof of a three-story building near the library when he
looked down and made eye contact with the suspect.
"I saw in his eyes he didn't care," Cordoba said.
The gunman continued down the street, firing three shots toward
a campus church, then changed direction and fired three more times
into the air, Cordoba said.
A garbage truck driver leaped out of his vehicle and ran away,
as did a woman carrying two babies, Cordoba.
"I'm not scared, but I was scared for the people around me,"
he said.
Randall Wilhite, an adjunct law professor, said he was driving
to class when he saw "students start scrambling behind
wastebaskets, trees and monuments," and then a young man carrying
an assault rifle sprinting along the street.
"He was running right in front of me ... and he shot what I
thought were three more shots ... not at me. In my direction, but
not at me," Wilhite said.
The professor said the gunman had the opportunity to shoot
several people, but did not.
Police said it was unclear whether Tooley was targeting anyone
with the AK-47.
Oscar Trevino, whose daughter works on campus, said she told him
she was walking to work near the library when she heard two shots
behind her. She started to run and fell down. She said she later
heard another shot.
"She's freaking out. I'm trying to calm her down. I've just
been telling her I love her and relax, everything's fine," Trevino
said.
Acevedo said officers were able to track the gunman's movements
with the help of students who "kept pointing in the right
direction."
The police chief said he believes Tooley ran into the library as
officers closed in on him, then shot himself in the head on the
sixth floor. Police did not fire any shots, Acevedo said.
Powers credited the school's crisis-management plan and social
networking for quickly warning students, faculty and staff. The
university's text messaging system reaches more than 43,000 people,
he said.
Laura Leskoven, a graduate student from Waco, said she was in a
media management class when she received a text message from the
university saying there was an armed person near the library. For
the next 3 1/2 hours, Leskoven and about 30 of her classmates sat in a
locked conference room trying to keep tab on events through
Twitter, blogs and text messages.
"We were kind of shocked," Leskoven said. "Our professor
said, 'Well, we need to get upstairs' because we were on the first
floor of the building."
Student Joshua Barajas said he usually is in the library in the
mornings but was delayed Tuesday when he made a rare stop for
coffee.
"These little mundane decisions could save your life. If I
hadn't stopped for coffee -- and I never stop for coffee because
it's $4 -- I could have been in that building," Barajas said.
"It's creepy. I don't even want to think about it."
On Aug. 1, 1966, Charles Whitman went to the 28th floor
observation deck at the UT clock tower in the middle of campus and
began shooting at people below. He killed 16 people and wounded
nearly three dozen before police killed him about 90 minutes after
the siege began.
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