Second-grade teacher called 911 over Wisconsin school shooting

Reuters A woman holds a tissue to her face while praying for the victims and survivors of a US school shootingReuters
People gathered at a nearby church on Monday to pray for victims and survivors

Police in the US state of Wisconsin said the emergency call they received over Monday's school shooting came from a second-grade teacher, not a student as they had previously stated.

A teenage pupil and a teacher were shot dead and six others injured at a Christian private school by a 15-year-old girl, named by authorities as Natalie Rupnow. The attacker, who attended the school, was also found dead with a handgun.

Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes apologised for mistakenly saying the 911 call came from a child, who would have been no older than seven or eight years old, attributing the error to a misreading of police log.

Mr Barnes said the motive for the deadly shooting appeared to be "a combination of factors".

The victims have not yet been named, and nor has the child who raised the alarm.

Chief Barnes said two students were facing life-threatening injuries. Four others were taken to hospital and two of them later released.

The attacker, who also used the first name Samantha, is believed to have died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. No officers fired shots.

She attended the school before launching Monday's attack, Chief Barnes said. The shooting was confined to a study hall with students in mixed grades.

Asked about some text posted online that is purported to have been authored by Rupnow, Chief Barnes said: "We haven't been able to verify that it's authentic. We're certainly aware that it's been posted and the person who posted it alleged to have a connection." Information has been shared with the FBI, he added.

Rupnow's family has been co-operating with the investigation. Local media reported that a property north of Madison was raided on Monday.

Authorities have also asked to hear from witnesses, and a number of those present during the assault at Abundant Life Christian School have spoken to local media.

Nora Gottschalk, aged eight, told CNN affiliate WISC that she was getting ready for lunch when the shots rang out. She saw a teacher who was injured screaming for help. "I was really scared and I was really sad," she said.

Adler Jean-Charles, who is in sixth grade, said he heard two gunshots when he was in English class. "Some people started crying and then we just waited until the police came," he told WISC.

Bethany Highman, who attended the school and now has a daughter who is a pupil, told another CNN affiliate, WMTV: "I pray with my kids every morning that this won't happen, and it's the world we live in."

Watch: Wisconsin parent recounts 'traumatic experience' of rushing to school

The school's director of relations said pupils' training for a mass shooting would have been "very fresh" after sessions were held earlier this year.

President Joe Biden said the shooting was "shocking and unconscionable", and called on lawmakers to act immediately on legislation that could prevent more gun violence.

Mass shootings are common in the US, including at schools. According to news organisation EducationWeek, 38 of them have caused deaths or injuries this year. There were a total of 69 victims - including 16 deaths - before Monday's attack.

But school shootings by female attackers are rare.

The school, which has around 400 students from kindergarten to high-school age, remains closed during the investigation.

Bar chart showing the number of mass shooting incidents that have happened in the US since 2014, with the lowest figure being in 2014 at 272 incidents, then being between 330-420 for the next five years before jumping to above 600 in 2020 and every full year since. The number for 2024 as of 15 December is 488. The data is from www.gunviolencearchive.org