NATIONAL CONCERNED OFFICERS ORGANIZATION

  ON GANG ACTIVITIES INC.

879 West Park Avenue, Cobblestone Village #161, 

Ocean Township, New Jersey 07712

(732) 460-0804 Office   (732) 460-0804 Fax detected

or

816 N. Delsea Drive, Doubletree Center PMB# 324

Glassboro, New Jersey 08028

(586) 881-1330 Office     (732) 881-1330 Fax Detected

    CF9294733-22

Welcome, You are the Hit Counter   visitor to our site as of this date.

  The task at hand is to continue to focus on prevention, early intervention and suppression. Hysteria is as counter-proactive as denial. Without G.O.D. we can not solve this problem....

Home Chief Founding Officer Chief Executive Officer National President National Spokesperson National Advisor Naional  Board Regions Humantaian Speakers Bureau Feedback Contents Search Proclamation Fees Desidera

Past School Shootings

[Under Construction]

Home
What is CO3GA
Booking A Speaker
Speaking Engagements
Organizational History
Requested Topic
School Response
Membership
Dates to be mindful of
Community
A Day in the life of a child
Why Kids Join Gangs
Gangs, Fact or Friction
Drugs and Violence
Graffiti
Warning Signs
Gang Land USA
Girl Gangs
Latin Kings
Five Percenters
Bloods
Crips
Mexican Gangs
Santanic Crime
Skinheads Today
A Gangster's Prayer
What Educators Can Do
Intervention & Suppression
Solutions
National Authority
Ntl.  Alliance of Hate Crimes
Streetology
Police
Prosecuting Gangs
Forming a Bias/Gang Unit
Past School Shootings
School Safety
ABC's of Life
Programs

Past School Shootings

May 20, 1999: A student opened fire at Heritage High School, near Conyers, Ga., a town east of Atlanta, a month after the April 20 slaughter at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo. There are no life-threatening injuries but six schoolmates were injured. The student suspect was quickly taken into custody.

April 20, 1999: Two young men wearing long, black trench coats opened fire in a suburban high school in Littleton, Colo., injuring as many as 20 students. In all, 15 were killed, including the two gunmen.

June 15, 1998: A male teacher and a female guidance counselor are shot in a hallway at a Richmond, Va., high school. The man suffers an injury to the abdomen that wasn’t life threatening; the woman is reportedly grazed.

May 21, 1998: A 15-year-old student in Springfield, Ore., expelled the day before for bringing a gun to school, allegedly opens fire in the school cafeteria. Two students are killed. The suspect’s parents are later found shot dead in their home.

May 21, 1998: Three sixth-grade boys had a “hit list” and were plotting to kill fellow classmates on the last day of school in a sniper attack during a false fire alarm, police in St. Charles, Mo., say.

May 21, 1998: A 15-year-old boy dies from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head in Onalaska, Wash. Earlier in the day, the boy boarded a high school bus with a gun in hand, ordered his girlfriend off the bus and took her to his home, where he shot himself.

May 21, 1998: A 15-year-old girl is shot and wounded at a suburban Houston high school when a gun in the backpack of a 17-year-old classmate goes off in a biology class. The boy is charged with a third-degree felony for taking a gun to school.

May 19, 1998: Two boys are suspended from school in Johnston, R.I., after being accused of writing and handing out threatening notes to classmates. The notes said things such as, “All your friends are dead.” The boys are ordered to remain out of school until they have been evaluated to determine whether they are dangerous.

May 19, 1998: Three days before his graduation, an 18-year-old honor student allegedly opens fire in a parking lot at Lincoln County High School in Fayetteville, Tenn., killing a classmate who was dating his ex-girlfriend.

April 28, 1998: Two teenage boys are shot to death and a third is wounded as they played basketball at a Pomona, Calif., elementary school hours after classes had ended. A 14-year-old boy is charged; the shooting is blamed on rivalry between two groups of youths.

April 24, 1998 : A 48-year-old science teacher is shot to death in front of students at graduation dance in Edinboro, Pa. A 14-year-old student at James W. Parker Middle School is charged.

March 24, 1998: Four girls and a teacher are shot to death and 10 others wounded during a false fire alarm at Westside Middle School in Jonesboro, Ark., when two boys, ages 11 and 13, open fire from the woods. Both are convicted in juvenile court of murder and can be held up to age 21.

Dec. 1, 1997: Three students are killed and five others wounded while they take part in a prayer circle in a hallway at Heath High School in West Paducah, Ky. A 14-year-old student pleads guilty but mentally ill to murder and is serving life in prison. One of the wounded girls is left paralyzed.

Oct. 1, 1997: A 16-year-old outcast in Pearl, Miss., is accused of killing his mother, then going to Pearl High School and shooting nine students. Two of them die, including the suspect's ex-girlfriend. The 16-year-old is sentenced to life in prison. Two others await trial on accessory charges.

Feb. 19, 1997: A 16-year-old student opens fire with a shotgun in a common area at the Bethel, Alaska, high school, killing the principal and a student. Two other students are wounded. Authorities later accuse two other students of knowing the shootings would take place. Evan Ramsey was sentenced to two 99-year terms.

Feb. 2, 1996: A 14-year-old boy wearing a trench coat walks into algebra class with a hunting rifle and allegedly opens fire, killing the teacher and two students. A third student is injured during the shooting at a junior high school in Moses Lake, Wash.

School Violence Prevention: Strategies to Keep Schools Safe

School violence is an increasingly serious problem, especially in big cities and especially in public schools. About 3 million crimes a year are committed in or near the 85,000 U.S. public schools. About one in nine public school teachers, and one in four public school students, report being victims of violence. School crime and vandalism cost taxpayers an estimated $200 million a year. Violent school crime is on the rise, and suburban and rural schools are less and less of a haven. Improving the quality of American education is difficult without also addressing school violence, since regardless of how good the teachers or curriculum are, violence makes it difficult for students to learn anything in the first place.

School violence wears many faces. It includes gang activity, locker thefts, bullying and intimidation, gun use, assault--just about anything that produces a victim. Violence is perpetrated against students, teachers, and staff, and ranges from intentional vendettas to accidental killings of bystanders.

 

 

Home ] What is CO3GA ] Booking A Speaker ] Speaking Engagements ] Organizational History ] Requested Topic ] School Response ] Membership ] Dates to be mindful of ] Community ] A Day in the life of a child ] Why Kids Join Gangs ] Gangs, Fact or Friction ] Drugs and Violence ] Graffiti ] Warning Signs ] Gang Land USA ] Girl Gangs ] Latin Kings ] Five Percenters ] Bloods ] Crips ] Mexican Gangs ] Santanic Crime ] Skinheads Today ] A Gangster's Prayer ] What Educators Can Do ] Intervention & Suppression ] Solutions ] National Authority ] Ntl.  Alliance of Hate Crimes ] Streetology ] Police ] Prosecuting Gangs ] Forming a Bias/Gang Unit ] [ Past School Shootings ] School Safety ] ABC's of Life ] Programs ]

Send mail to CO3GA@AOL.com  or CO3GA@Myqth.every1.net with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2001 National Concerned Officers Organization On Gang Activities Inc.
Last modified: January 04, 2001. National Alliance of Hate Crimes Investigator