At least six killed in Amish school shooting

Funerals for Amish school victims

Funerals for four of the five Amish girls killed in a schoolroom massacre on Monday have taken place in the US state of Pennsylvania.
Hundreds of mourners gathered as the four, aged seven to 12, were laid to rest in the small town of Nickel Mines.

Each girl was buried in a plain pine coffin. A fifth victim will be laid to rest on Friday.

The girls were gunned down by a local man, Charles Roberts, who then killed himself. Five more girls were injured.

Doctors treating the survivors have reportedly taken one girl off a life-support machine and allowed her to be taken home to die.

Roads into the village were closed off to maintain privacy during Thursday's funerals.

The first girl to be buried was Naomi Rose Ebersole, seven, who was carried to Nickel Mines' hill top cemetery at the head of 32 horse-drawn coaches.

Similar processions were later held for Marian Fisher, 13, and the Miller sisters, Lena, seven, and Mary Liz, eight.

The funeral of Anna Mae Stoltzfus, 12, is scheduled to take place on Friday.

The Anabaptist denomination eschews technology and preaches isolation from the modern world to varying degrees.

Amish burial customs call for simple wooden caskets - and a girl is typically laid to rest in a white dress, cape and white prayer-covering on her head, the victims' funeral director said.

Forgiveness

Donations have been coming in from around the world to help with medical expenses - Amish do not carry health insurance.

One insurance company has pledged $500,000 (£265,000).

But the Amish have also reached out to the family of Roberts, the 32-year-old milk-tanker driver who killed himself at the end of the shooting spree.

Amish leaders have helped set up a fund for the family at a local bank.

A Roberts family spokesman said an Amish neighbour had also comforted the family hours after the shooting - and extended forgiveness to them.

"I hope they stay around here and they'll have a lot of friends and a lot of support," said Daniel Esh, an Amish artist whose grand-nephews were inside the school at the start of the attack.

In a final phone call, Roberts told his wife he had molested two young members of his own family 20 years ago.

In suicide notes he also made references to another incident 20 years ago, and said he had been haunted by dreams of repeating his actions.

Roberts had entered the one-room school in the village of Paradise, armed with guns, knives and 600 rounds of ammunition.

He ordered the women and boys to leave, tied up the girls, barricaded the doors and shot his captives in the head.

Roberts' wife Marie and other family members have said he was a good and loving husband and father, and that prior to Monday's attack there had been no hint of what he was planning.

BBC NEWS | Americas | Funerals for Amish school victims
 
How the Amish shooting unfolded

A gunman killed five girls and wounded seven before shooting himself in an Amish school in the US state of Pennsylvania.
Monday's attack by 32-year-old truck driver Charles Carl Roberts took place in a one-room school in the village of Paradise near Nickel Mines in Lancaster County.

Pennsylvania state police commissioner Jeffrey Miller explained how events unfolded.

Roberts entered Georgetown School in Paradise and began addressing the pupils, showing them an automatic handgun. He was also armed with a shotgun.
In the classroom were 15 male pupils, 10-12 female pupils, one teacher and a number of assistants - older children and adults.

He told the boys to leave, along with a pregnant woman and three others with infants.

The teacher also managed to leave the classroom and called the police at 1036 local time (1436 GMT).

The gunman made the girls line up in front of the blackboard, where he tied their feet using wire or plastic cuffs.

He then barricaded the doors with large pieces of wood he had brought with him.

'Execution-style'

State troopers arrived at the scene at about 1045 and set up a cordon around the school.

The officers tried hailing the gunman on their car loudspeakers, but were unable to make contact.

At this time an emergency operator in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, received a call from someone who said they had been called by the gunman.

The gunman reportedly warned that if the police did not immediately pull back from the area he would open fire on the hostages.

This message was relayed to the officers at the scene, but they heard shots fired in rapid succession as it was going through.

Police stormed the building, breaking the windows to enter.

They found the gunman dead, along with the bodies of three girls.

"One of the children died in the arms of one of our troopers," Mr Miller said.

Eight girls were found injured, at least three of whom were shot in the head. One of them later died in hospital.

Mr Miller said the victims had been shot one by one, "execution style".

'Not coming home'

The gunman was a local milk tanker driver who often picked up milk from Amish farms in the area.

A father of three, he had worked his night shift as usual on Sunday night, finishing at 0300 on Monday.

His wife said he had seemed perfectly normal as he walked his children to the school bus at 0845, as he did every day.

However, when his wife returned to the family home around mid-morning she discovered suicide notes that he had written to each of his children.

At 1100 she received a call from Roberts in which he said he was "not coming home" and that the police were with him, just prior to the shootings.

The authorities are examining suicide notes and believe Roberts' actions came in revenge for an event 20 years ago. They have given no further details.

They are also looking at whether the death of an infant daughter in 1997 may have played a role in the attack.

BBC NEWS | Americas | How the Amish shooting unfolded
 
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Mourning Amish lay girls to rest

HORSE-drawn buggies clip-clopped past roadblocks as Amish families gathered to bury four of the five young girls slaughtered inside their tiny rural schoolhouse.

All roads leading into the village of Nickel Mines, where crazed killer Charles Carl Roberts IV took hostage and shot 10 schoolgirls, were blocked off for the funerals.

The Amish families prayed at three homes before burying Naomi Rose Ebersole, seven; Marian Fisher, 13; and sisters Mary Liz Miller, eight, and Lena Miller, seven.

The funeral for a fifth girl, Anna Mae Stoltzfus, 12, will take place tomorrow.

Five of their friends caught in the schoolhouse attack were today trying to recover from their wounds.

Four of them were still in hospital.

Amish culture, which rejects much of modern life, calls for simple wooden caskets, narrow at the head and feet and wider in the middle.

An Amish girl is typically laid to rest in a white dress, a cape, and a white head-dress.

One Amish bishop has called the killings "our 9/11".

The attack began Monday morning, when Charles Carl Roberts IV, a 32-year-old milk truck driver, took over the one-room school, sent the adults and boys out and shot the remaining girls before turning the gun on himself.

Cops said Roberts, who brought KY jelly and plastic restraints with him, might have been planning to sexually assault the Amish girls.

But no evidence has been found that he did so.

The Sun Online - News: Mourning Amish lay girls to rest
 
Amish bury their girls

AMISH families streamed down closed roads in a mournful parade of horse-drawn buggies to bury schoolgirl victims of the Pennsylvania shootings which wracked their peaceable community.

As four of the five young girls killed on Monday were laid to rest, tales of selfless heroism emerged of one victim who reportedly asked killer Charles Roberts to "shoot me first," to save her classmates.

And the grief looked set to deepen, as US media reports said one critically wounded schoolgirl had been taken off life support in hospital and brought back to her spartan Pennsylvania home to die.

The reclusive Amish sect, which disdains trappings of the modern world, turned in on itself, as hundreds of mourners gathered at simple funeral rites for each child.

Each girl was to be buried in a plain pine coffin, using no metal in accordance with the Amish belief that all human remains should return to dust.

The dead were dressed by female relatives in plain white dresses, and laid out at home in open caskets as mourners arrived to pay respects, said Rita Rhodes, a local midwife who delivered two of the victims.

Those laid to rest today were Marian Fisher, 13, Naomi Rose Ebersole, 7, Mary Liz Miller, 8, and her sister, Lena, 7, who all died in the simple one-room schoolhouse before Roberts turned the gun on himself.

Police sealed off roads leading into the small town of Nickel Mines. There was also a no-fly zone to stop media helicopters buzzing overhead.

As the services went ahead, US ABC News reported a stunning tale of bravery from the oldest victim, Fisher, who reportedly stepped forward and told Roberts to gun her down in a bid to save her classmates.

"Shoot me first," Fisher said, ABC reported, quoting Rhodes.

Fisher's younger sister Barbie, who survived, then reportedly said: "Shoot me second."

"There was a tremendous amount of calm and courage in that schoolroom," said Rhodes.

The funeral for Ebersole was first and was followed by a cortege to the hilltop Georgetown Amish cemetery for a simple burial.

A large black carriage carried the coffin and was followed by Amish families in 32 horse-draw buggies and two big open carriages.

A sign in front of one house on the route said "Our thoughts and prayers to all the families".

The other ceremonies were to follow and the funeral of Anna Mae Stoltzfus, 12, was planned for tomorrow.

Officials at the Penn State Children's Hospital in Hershey refused to comment on the reports that a sixth victim had been taken home to die, citing a family request for confidentiality.

Four other girls aged between six and 13 remain hospitalised in critical or serious condition.

Roberts, who was armed with a handgun, shotgun and other weapons, lined the girls up against a blackboard and shot them "execution-style".

Police believe the 32-year-old father of three had planned to sexually assault the girls.

The father of several survivors of the Amish school killings meanwhile told how girls questioned the gunman as to why he was carrying out the attack before he opened fire.

Leroy Zook told the New York Times: "And he told them why: He's angry at God, he's just bitter. He told them that they're supposed to pray for him that he wouldn't do this."

Zook's 20-year-old daughter Emma Mae, a teacher, was among those who, along with her mother, escaped the school and called police, the Times said.

Another of Zook's daughters, two of his daughters-in-law and two grandchildren also escaped unharmed, the daily said.

Zook told the Times he had shaken hands with the father-in-law of Roberts since the siege.

"I think it's helping him to meet people, too, and see that there's no grudge," he told the Times. "How could you hold a grudge against the wife, the family?"

Roberts barged into the school on Monday, separated boys and girls and barred the doors with wooden planks before carrying out the killings.

Amish bury their girls | Herald Sun
 
Amish seek to forgive killer

SHOCKED by the murder of school children in their close-knit community, the Amish of Pennsylvania are trying to find the strength to forgive.

Wellwishers gathered yesterday at churches in towns just outside the Amish community to offer prayers and support after a gunman this week killed five Amish schoolgirls at their school before shooting himself dead.
The tragic roll-call of the dead includes Naomi Rose Eversole, 7, Anna Mae Stoltzfus, 12, Marian Fisher, 13, Mary Liz Miller, 8, and her sister Lina Miller, 7. Three girls, aged eight, 10 and 12, had surgery for gunshot wounds and remained in critical condition.

Another two survivors, aged six and 13, are listed as critical and serious respectively.

Amish families in horse-drawn buggies lined up as they headed to the home of Anna Stoltzfus, 12, one of gunman Charles Roberts' victims.

"They come to comfort them, bring them stuff, meals, stay with them," said Naomi Esh, 75.

"It's just so sad, there's nothing you can do about it. You just have to forgive the person who did this, you can't get angry about it."

"We are in shock," said one young man in his traditional Amish outfit -- straw hat, light shirt and black trousers.

The Amish "don't show feelings as much", said another, who also declined to give his name.

In towns just outside Nickel Mines, people gathered at churches to express their solidarity with their peace-loving Amish neighbours.

"They are beautiful, sweet people," said Ingrid Toler, an elderly non-Amish woman, at the end of a religious service in nearby Lancaster.

"We've got to do something to make our children safe."

A large religious ceremony was held at the Worship Centre in the town of Leolia, near Lancaster, which attracted a crowd of more than 1200 people of all Christian denominations.

As the community mourned yesterday, more details emerged about the horrendous act. Roberts, 32, a milk truck driver, planned to molest the girls first, and confessed in a phone call to his wife to sexually preying on young relatives 20 years ago, police said.

The suicidal killer was haunted by his abusive past, "angry with God", hated himself over the death of an infant daughter and dreamed of molesting again, State Police Commissioner Jeffrey Miller said.

Items taken by Roberts to the schoolhouse indicated his intent to molest the girls before killing them, Mr Miller said.

However, there was no indication he carried out the first part of his plan.

Amish seek to forgive killer | Herald Sun
 
Governor halts attempt to picket Amish funerals

A KANSAS church group that planned to demonstrate at the funerals of five Amish girls killed in an attack on their one-room schoolhouse has dropped the picket plans, after Pennsylvania's Governor offered the Amish police protection.

Members of the Westboro Baptist Church issued a statement saying a representative would appear on a nationally syndicated radio talk show instead of picketing the funerals.

Governor Ed Rendell said he appealed to the group, based in Topeka, Kansas, to allow the Amish to conduct their funerals in privacy.

Members of the church group routinely picket military funerals, saying that American servicemen and women are dying overseas because God is displeased that the United States tolerates homosexuals.

In a statement on its website, the church blamed Mr Rendell for the deaths of the Amish children because of comments he made about the Westboro group on national television several months ago.

"They're insane," Mr Rendell responded when asked about the group's statement.

In June, Mr Rendell signed legislation to restrict Westboro Baptist Church's picketing by making it a crime to demonstrate within 150 metres of a funeral or memorial service in Pennsylvania.

State police will provide security at the Amish funerals to keep reporters, the public and any potential demonstrators at a "respectful distance" from mourners, said Kate Philips, the Governor's press secretary.

Meanwhile, two relatives of the man who shot dead the Amish school girls deny he molested them 20 years ago, as he claimed in a phone call to his wife.

Charles Roberts revealed to his family — in notes he left behind and in a phone call from inside the West Nickel Mines Amish School in Pennsylvania — that he was tormented by memories of molesting two young relatives 20 years ago and had had dreams of doing it again.

Investigators spoke to the two women, who would have been four or five at the time, and they said there was no such abuse.

"Both of them have no recollection of being sexually assaulted by Roberts," state police Trooper Linette Quinn said.

"They were absolutely sure they had no contact with Roberts."

Roberts stormed the school and shot 10 girls before turning the gun on himself earlier this week.

Investigators said Roberts, who brought lubricating jelly and plastic restraints with him, may have been planning to sexually assault the Amish girls.

Governor halts attempt to picket Amish funerals - World - theage.com.au
 
Amish killer's relatives deny he molested them

NICKEL MINES, Pennsylvania: Two relatives of the man who killed five girls at an Amish school have denied his claim that he molested them 20 years ago.
Charles Roberts revealed to his family in notes he left behind and a phone call from inside the West Nickel Mines Amish School on Monday that he was tormented by memories of molesting two young relatives when he was about 12. He also spoke of having dreams about doing it again.

Investigators spoke to the two women, who would have been four or five at the time, and they said there was no such abuse.

"Both have no recollection of being sexually assaulted by Roberts," state police Trooper Linette Quinn said. "They were absolutely sure they had no contact with Roberts."

The surprising development came as a teacher who escaped the massacre and the coroner who examined the victims gave the first accounts of the shooting.

Emma Mae Zook had just brought the 26 Amish schoolchildren in from morning recess and was teaching them German and spelling when Roberts appeared at the classroom door holding a clevis, a U-shaped piece of metal with holes at each end.

He asked a bizarre question - had anyone seen a clevis on the roadway? - before walking back to his pick-up truck and returning with a gun.

"He stood very close to me to talk and didn't look in my face to talk," Ms Zook, 20, told the local Intelligencer Journal. Her mother and other members of her family were also inside the schoolhouse. As soon as they saw the gun, Ms Zook and her mother ran out of a side door to a farm, where they called the police.

Roberts, who had arrived at the schoolhouse with sexual lubricant and restraints, told a young boy to go after the women and bring them back or he would start shooting everyone. When the boy left, Emma Fisher, 9, escaped with him - a split-second decision that probably saved her life. Her sister Marian, 13, will be buried today at noon; her other sister, Barbie, 11, is among the five still gravely injured in hospital.

Roberts, who killed himself after the shooting frenzy, ordered everyone to the back of the room, by the blackboard. The women tried to comfort the children.

"You ladies can leave; those with the children," he said. Ms Zook's sister-in-law, Sarah, 23, had her two-year-old daughter and newborn son with her. Her sister, Lydia Mae, 21, is eight months pregnant. They left along with Ms Zook's sister, Emma Mae, 16. They waited in the playground. A few minutes later all the boys began filing out. As they began running to the farm, they could hear pounding. It was the gunman nailing barricades across the doors.

Police believe Roberts intended to sexually assault the girls but he panicked at the rapid arrival of police and began shooting the girls, many in the back of the head. Janice Ballenger, the deputy coroner of Lancaster County, examined the body of Naomi Rose Ebersol, 7, who died in the arms of a state trooper. Ms Ballenger found almost 20 bullet wounds on the girl. "She was a seven-year-old angel," Ms Ballenger told the local newspaper.

She pronounced Naomi Rose Ebersol, Anna Mae Stoltzfus, 12, and Roberts dead at the scene.

The schoolhouse was decorated with smiley-face stickers and a sign that read "Visitors Brighten People's Days".

"There wasn't a desk or chair in the room that wasn't covered in blood or broken glass," Ms Ballenger said.

The five dead girls were returned to their homes yesterday. Marian Fisher, like the others, was dressed head to toe in white. Her sister who escaped, Emma, was encouraged to touch her dead sibling. Four of the five girls were to be buried overnight after two-hour services in each home.

Roberts's family has received enormous comfort from Amish people. One Amish man visited the home of Roberts's parents and held his father in his arms, saying: "We will forgive you."

Amish killer's relatives deny he molested them | The World | The Australian
 
Amish gather for first funerals

HUNDREDS of Amish mourners arrived on foot and in horse-drawn carriages to take part in the funerals of four of the five girls shot dead in their class.

In the three days since truck driver Charles Roberts lined up 10 girls and shot them before killing himself, leaders of the pacifist community have emphasised forgiveness.

But grief took over for the simple ceremonies for Naomi Rose Ebersole, seven; Marian Fisher, 13; Mary Liz Miller, eight, and her seven-year-old sister, Lena.

Police sealed off roads leading into the small Pennsylvania town of Nickel Mines. There was also a no-fly zone around the town to stop media helicopters buzzing overhead.

They let only the horse-drawn carriages and the trickle of mourners on foot in to attend the services in the family homes where each of the girls was to be laid out in a plain white dress.

The funeral for Naomi was first and was followed by a cortege to the hilltop Georgetown Amish cemetery for a simple burial.

Bernadette Lauer, spokeswoman for Pennsylvania emergency services, said there would be about 50-80 buggies in the procession. “We hope that everyone is respectful to the Amish privacy and mindful of the horses.”

A sign in front of a house on Georgetown Road said “Our thoughts and prayers to all the families”.

Four other girls aged between six and 13 remain in hospital in critical or serious condition.

Roberts, who was armed with a handgun, shotgun and other weapons, lined the girls up against a blackboard and shot them “execution-style”.

Police believe the 32-year-old father of three had planned to sexually assault the girls.

Amish gather for first funerals | The Daily Telegraph
 
Staunch beliefs help Amish to farewell loved ones

BART, Pennsylvania: All day they trudged across the dusty farm fields - white-bearded Amish patriarchs, women in black dresses and white bonnets, strapping young men with cropped hair and tanned arms.

They came in their metal-wheeled black buggies, drawn by lathered horses that built clouds of grey dust on the gravel byways, sombre but dutiful people on timeless missions of grief.

Across the meadows and back roads of the village of Nickel Mines, clusters of the black-clad mourners could be seen on Wednesday outside the homes where the bodies of the five Amish children murdered on Monday lay. They gathered to pay respect, offer hope and have one last encounter with the departed that is an Amish tradition.

"Go ahead and touch her," a family friend said a mother told the sister of one of the dead. "She's cold now, but she's in heaven."

Three days after Charles Roberts walked into a nearby one-room school building, and shackled and shot 10 Amish schoolgirls before killing himself, the close-knit community began gathering for rituals honouring the dead. Five of the girls died.

But the Amish are exhibiting a stoic determination to carry on. Teaching has resumed at other Amish schools in Lancaster county. Many returned to work and chores the day after the shooting, and said that while they were shocked by the massacre, they believed it was somehow part of God's plan.

Many Amish are also weathering the tragedy because of their strong belief in the afterlife. They are confident the dead girls are in heaven now and are happy. "They have no more suffering on this Earth," one woman said.

A deputy coroner investigating the murders described a scene of carnage, with blood and glass on every desk inside the school.

"There was not one desk, not one chair, in the whole schoolroom that was not splattered with either blood or glass. There were bullet holes everywhere, everywhere," said the Lancaster county deputy coroner, Janice Ballenger.

Yesterday four of the girls - Naomi Rose Ebersol, 7, Marian Fisher, 13, and two sisters, Mary Liz Miller, 8, and Lina Miller, 7 - were to be borne in handmade wooden coffins from their homes to the cemetery. The fifth, Anna Mae Stoltzfus, 12, is due to be buried today.

Pennsylvania police announced that the two female relatives whose abuse Roberts said tormented him had no recollection of being attacked.

Police said the relatives, whom they did not identify, would have been about four or five at the time. Police did not say whether they believed the attacks never happened, but they had sounded sceptical of the story since it was revealed on Tuesday.

Staunch beliefs help Amish to farewell loved ones - World - smh.com.au
 
You know, as a father of an 8 year old girl and a 5 year old girl, this whole thing just disgusts me.

I cannot help but wonder what is going wrong with this world right now?! How in heaven's name could a man, with children of his own that he clearly loved (he said so in his phone call to his wife), walk into a school and murder children he doesn't even know? It makes you want to curse God. You say to yourself: "If you're a just God, and you hate evil, why do you not put something in the path of such a demonic man?" What possible good can there be from the death of innocent girls like this? Why God, why?!

You know what's worse? These idiots always kill themselves after they commit these terrible acts, and in so doing deprive the victim's families of ever feeling any sense of justice.

Still, as angry as it makes me, I guess I do find some comfort in the story of Job, and 2 Samuel 14:14. It's just that there are so many things wrong in the world right now, and it just seems like the universal church is showing so little light in such a dark world. It's disheartening sometimes.

I did find it moving that one of the victims families reached out to the murderer's wife and children. There is something morally and spiritually powerful in the Beattitudes and really all of Matthew 5. The Amish community certainly tries very hard to live up the calling. It's still amazing to see it so plain in practice though -- it catches your breath almost.

It's funny, on the one hand you're angry... at the man, at the incident, at the world, at God... and then, on the other hand, you see how the Amish community (and the victims families in particular) respond, and you see their example, and you think maybe there is still hope for the world. Maybe we can somehow resurrect this same ethos that the Amish share, and figure out a way to combat these terrible evils that are around us.
 
In a grave dug by hand, Amish to lay fifth girl to rest

GEORGETOWN, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Mourners prepared Friday to bury a fifth Amish girl who was gunned down in a schoolhouse classroom.

The funeral of 12-year-old Anna Mae Stoltzfus was scheduled a day after bearded men in black suits and women in dresses and bonnets attended funerals for the four other young girls killed in the Monday shooting.

Thursday was a day for the Amish to share their grief without the intrusion of outsiders.( Watch "shocked and sad" but forgiving Amish -- 2:46)

State troopers blocked off all roads into the Nickel Mines village and led horse-drawn buggies and black carriages holding the girls' hand-sawn wooden coffins to the cemetery on the crest of a hill.

"I just think at this point mostly these families want to be left alone in their grief and we ought to respect that," said Dr. D. Holmes Morton, who runs a clinic that serves Amish children.

Funerals were held for 13-year-old Marian Fisher, 7-year-old Naomi Rose Ebersol and sisters Mary Liz Miller, 8, and Lena Miller, 7.

The girls, in white dresses made by their families, were laid to rest in graves dug by hand. Amish custom calls for simple wooden coffins, narrow at the head and feet and wider in the middle.

Amish funerals are conducted in German and focus on God, not on commemorating the dead. There is no singing, but ministers read hymns and passages from the Bible and an Amish prayer book.

Funeral processions passed the home of Charles Carl Roberts IV, the 32-year-old milk truck driver who took the girls hostage, tied them up and shot them before killing himself.

Benjamin Nieto, 57, watched the processions from a friend's porch.

"They were just little people," he said of the victims. "They never got a chance to do anything."

The attack was so traumatic there is talk that the school house may soon be razed to erase the memories. But many Amish have embraced Roberts' relatives, who may receive money from a fund established to help victims and their families.

Roberts' wife, Marie, was invited to attend the funeral by the family of Marian Fisher; it was unclear whether she attended.

Media were blocked from the funerals and the burials, and airspace for 2 1/2 miles in all directions was closed to news helicopters.

Tragedies such as the massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado have become moments of national mourning, in large part because of satellite and TV technology. But the Amish shun the modern world and both its ills and conveniences.

Donors from around the world are pledging money to help the families of the dead and wounded. Amounts ranging from $1 to $500,000 have been received and could help defray mounting medical bills.

At the behest of Amish leaders, a fund has also been set up for the killer's widow and three children.

CNN.com - In a grave dug by hand, Amish to lay fifth girl to rest - Oct 6, 2006
 
Its amazing how there's been so many school shootings. Makes me worry when my kids start school. I can only hope that never happens when they do.
 
How sad story! No different other schools. My former school who boy shootings too at Ft. Gibson, Oklahoma in 1993. He was good christian and faith everything and it quickly changed sad! I never forgot too Colorado school shootings SAD!
 
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