The 28-year-old who shot useless six individuals at an elementary faculty in Nashville purchased and hid a number of weapons in the household house, regardless of proof of psychological well being points, police stated Tuesday.
Two nine-year-old women, a nine-year-old boy, two lecturers and a faculty custodian died in the Monday assault, which immediately revived the bitter public debate over gun rights in the United States.
Nashville police chief John Drake instructed reporters that Audrey Hale, 28, had been receiving remedy for an “emotional dysfunction,” and that the shooter’s parents believed their child — who lived at home with them — had bought and later resold a single gun.
But Hale was heavily armed with two assault rifles and a handgun upon entering the Covenant School, a small Christian academy for about 200 students that the shooter attended as a pupil.
Active shooter Audrey Elizabeth Hale drove to Covenant Church/School in her Honda Fit this morning, parked, and shot her way into the building. She was armed with 2 assault-type guns and a 9 millimeter pistol. pic.twitter.com/mIk2pDmCwQ— Metro Nashville PD (@MNPDNashville) March 28, 2023
The shooter, identified by police as a female who had used male pronouns on social media, had prepared detailed maps of the school and also left a written manifesto that suggested attacks at other locations were planned.
“Audrey bought seven firearms from five different local gun stores here legally,” Drake stated. “Three of these weapons had been used yesterday doing this horrific tragedy.
“She was beneath docs’ look after an emotional dysfunction… Her mother and father felt that she mustn’t personal weapons. They had been beneath the impression that she bought the one weapon that she did personal.
“As it turned out, she had been hiding a number of weapons inside the home.”
Drake added that pupils and staff were not targeted individually and there was no known motive despite the manifesto being found.
Video of police response
In chilling security camera video, Hale is seen shooting through glass doors to enter the school before stalking the empty halls as emergency alarm lights flash.
MNPD Officers Rex Engelbert, a 4-year veteran, and Michael Collazo, a 9-year veteran, were part of a team of first responders to the Covenant campus Mon morning. They fired on the active shooter, who was killed. This is their body camera footage. https://t.co/17qsZM6bNp pic.twitter.com/g4b0nMTFRD— Metro Nashville PD (@MNPDNashville) March 28, 2023
Hale, wearing a black military-style vest, camouflage pants and red baseball cap, moved through the building, opening fire on children and staff.
Officers were on the scene within about 15 minutes of the first emergency call Monday morning.
Bodycam footage showed police making their way through classrooms filled with small desks and paper craftwork.
Multiple gunshots are heard as officers close in on a sun-filled atrium upstairs, where the assailant was shot dead.
A former schoolmate at the conservative school, Averianna Patton, told CNN of a message that Hale sent on Instagram the morning of the shooting.
“One day this will make more sense,” Hale wrote. “I’ve left behind greater than sufficient proof behind. But one thing dangerous is about to occur.”
Patton said she called police to alert them at about the time the attack started.
In the search for a motive, Drake told NBC News that “there’s some belief that there was some resentment for having to go to that school.”
One of the younger kids killed was Hallie Scruggs, the daughter of the church’s pastor, Chad Scruggs.
“We are heartbroken. She was such a present,” Chad Scruggs said in a statement to local media.
Gun rights
Asked whether Hale’s gender identity may have been a factor, police said they were investigating all leads.
As the country digested another mass shooting, mourners left flowers and stuffed toys at a growing makeshift memorial outside the school. Some kneeled in prayer.
Chad Baker, 44, said he felt “horrified and very sad.”
“I carry a gun with me most days, however I don’t want an assault rifle,” he told AFP. “I don’t think it should be as easy to buy flowers as it is a gun.”
There had been greater than 24 million AR-15 type assault weapons in circulation in the United States by mid-2022, in line with the National Shooting Sports Foundation firearm commerce affiliation.
President Joe Biden warned that gun violence was “ripping the soul of this nation,” as he urged Congress to reinstate the national assault rifle ban, which existed from 1994 to 2004.
Efforts to ban the powerful weapons — often used in mass shootings — have run up against opposition from Republicans, who are staunch defenders of the constitutional right to bear arms.
The deadlock in Washington has come despite uproar over the recurrence of school massacres, including the one last year when a shooter in Uvalde, Texas, killed 19 students and two teachers.
Last year also marked 10 years since 26 people, including 20 children, were killed at Sandy Hook elementary school in Connecticut — deeply shocking the nation, yet failing to produce meaningful progress on gun control.
There have been 129 mass shootings — in which four or more people were shot or killed — in the United States so far this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive.
Read all of the Latest News right here
(This story has not been edited by News18 employees and is printed from a syndicated information company feed)