- Associated Press - Tuesday, February 28, 2012

CHARDON, Ohio — The death toll rose to three Tuesday in the shooting rampage in an Ohio high school cafeteria as schoolmates and townspeople grappled with the tragedy and wondered what could have set off the teenage gunman.

The teenager under arrest in Monday’s attack, T.J. Lane, faced an afternoon hearing in juvenile court.

Shaken residents offered condolences and prayers to the families of those killed and wounded at 1,100-student Chardon High School in suburban Cleveland. All three of the dead were students, as are the two people wounded.

“This gets more tragic, the whole area is suffering, our prayers go up to God to give all strength, healing and closure,” said one of hundreds of Facebook postings on a memorial page.

The community offered grief counseling to students, staff and others at area schools.

“We’re not just any old place, Chardon,” Chardon Local School District Superintendent Joseph Bergant II said. “This is every place. As you’ve seen in the past, this can happen anywhere, proof of what we had yesterday.”

A Cleveland hospital said Demetrius Hewlin, who had been in critical condition, died Tuesday morning. The news came shortly after Police Chief Tim McKenna said 17-year-old Russell King Jr. had died.

Another student, Daniel Parmertor, died hours after the shooting, which sent students screaming through the halls and led teachers to lock down their classrooms, as they had practiced so many times during drills.

Both Russell King and Daniel Parmertor were students at the Auburn Career Center, a vocational school, and were waiting in the Chardon High cafeteria for a bus for their daily 15-minute ride when they were shot.

The police chief would shed no light on a motive.

“I feel sorry not only for that family, but all the families that are affected by this,” Chief McKenna said. Characterizing himself as a “hometown boy,” he added, “Chardon will take care of Chardon.”

A student who saw the attack up close said it appeared that the gunman targeted a group of students sitting together and that one of the dead was shot while trying to duck under the cafeteria table.

T.J. Lane’s family is mourning “this terrible loss for their community,” attorney Robert Farnacci said in a statement.

T.J. Lane did not go to Chardon High, instead attending nearby Lake Academy, which is for students with academic or behavioral problems.

Fifteen-year-old Danny Komertz, who witnessed the shooting, said T.J. Lane was known as an outcast who apparently had been bullied, but others disputed that.

“Even though he was quiet, he still had friends,” said Tyler Lillash, 16. “He was not bullied.”

Mr. Farinacci, representing T.J. Lane and his family, told WKYC-TV that the youth “pretty much sticks to himself but does have some friends and has never been in trouble over anything that we know about.”

Student Nate Mueller said that he was at the table in the cafeteria where the victims were shot and that a bullet grazed his ear.

“My friends were crawling on the floor, and one of my friends was bent over the table, and he was shot,” Nate Mueller told the Cleveland Plain Dealer. “It was almost like a firecracker went off. I turned around and saw (T.J. Lane) standing with a gun, and I saw him take a shot.”

Nate Mueller told the Cleveland newspaper that T.J. Lane would wait at the school to take a bus to Lake Academy. He said Russell King — one of those killed — recently had started dating T.J. Lane’s ex-girlfriend.

T.J. Lane “was silent the whole time,” Nate Mueller said. “That’s what made it so random.”

AP writers Dan Sewell in Cincinnati and Julie Carr Smyth and Andrew Welsh-Huggins in Columbus, Ohio, contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide