Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Sonali Kohli, Brittny Mejia, Howard Blume and Ruben Vives

4 students injured in LA middle school shooting; 12-year-old girl in custody

LOS ANGELES _ A 12-year-old girl was in police custody Thursday after a shooting at Salvador Castro Middle School injured four students.

The gunfire erupted in a classroom at the school in the Westlake neighborhood shortly after the opening bell and caused numerous students to run from the area, Los Angeles Police Department Officer Drake Madison said.

When authorities responded around 8:55 a.m., they found a 15-year-old boy with a gunshot wound to the head and a 15-year-old girl shot in the wrist and three others with minor injuries.

The boy, who was shot in the temple, was in stable condition Thursday afternoon, and was expected to fully recover, said Dr. Carl Chudnofsky, of L.A. County-USC Medical Center. The girl, who was shot in the left wrist, was in fair condition.

Three others _ a 30-year-old woman, an 11-year-old boy and a 12-year-old girl _ also suffered minor injuries, including two from gunshots, health officials said.

At a news conference outside the hospital Thursday, Dr. Aaron Strumwasser said the 15-year-old boy was extremely lucky because the bullet wound failed to cause serious damage. "I think he will do fine," Strumwasser said.

The suspected shooter was taken into custody and a firearm was recovered, officials said. Helicopter news footage showed two officers leading a handcuffed girl with long hair, jeans and a sweat shirt to a waiting squad car. Robert Arcos, a deputy chief with the Los Angeles Police Department, said it was too early to determine a motive in the shooting.

Investigators were still conducting interviews to determine whether the shooting was intentional or a "terrible accident," he said.

In a morning news conference, Los Angeles School Police Chief Steve Zipperman said he did not know how a young person got access to a gun and brought it to campus, but warned gun owners to keep their weapons secure and away from children.

"Los Angeles has a law about the safe storage of weapons," L.A. City Attorney Mike Feuer added. "Every responsible gun owner needs to take heed."

There was no longer any danger at the school, Zipperman said, but the campus remained on lockdown. School officials directed parents to an information center at Belmont Avenue and Beverly Boulevard and gave them a number to call for further information.

Tyresha McNair got to the school Thursday morning with her young niece. She had seen news of the shooting on TV and came to get her daughter, a student at the middle school.

"I saw it on the news and I came here to get my baby," she said.

At the front gate of the school, McNair said she was directed to the back, which was blocked off. She said she had been texting her daughter, but hadn't heard back.

"Any other time my baby would respond and she's not responding," McNair said. "I just want my daughter, I want my daughter."

It was sometime after 9 a.m. when Rosario Hernandez, 41, got a phone call from her 16-year-son, Jimmy Romero, telling her a shooting had occurred at his brother's school. Jimmy attends Belmont High School, which is located across the street.

Hernandez left work and sped to the school campus.

She texted her 14-year-old son, Johnny Romero, whose number was listed under "Johnny baby," and asked him if was OK.

When he finally responded, he told her they were still on lockdown and said the shooting had happened inside a seventh-grade classroom.

"She shot a girl and a boy," he wrote.

"OMG," Hernandez responded. "But why mijo."

"I don't know. Mom go home, I will tell you when we are not in lockdown."

Hernandez said there are problems at the school, including bullying and gangs. She sat waiting with worried parents at a baseball field.

Nearby, Laura Gonzalez waited to get information from police and school district officials.

"I'm worried and I want her to be released already. We want to take our children home," Gonzalez said. "I didn't think something like this would happen here."

Gonzalez said the area around the school can be dangerous at times.

"There's a lot of gangs around the school and you do see them," she said. "You see them fighting sometimes."

Laya Esteban found out about the shooting from a call that went out to parents, and came from her home half a mile away. Her 11-year-old daughter, a sixth-grade student, doesn't have a cellphone, but school officials said she's safe, Esteban said.

Two of her children attended Salvador Castro and did not experience any violence, so she's always felt the school was safe.

"Now I don't know," she said. "The only thing I want now is to have my daughter and say how much I love her."

Castro Middle School is located in a building across the street from the main Belmont High School campus. The middle school building used to be part of Belmont High when the high school had a higher enrollment.

Zipperman said on KNX-AM that the school takes part in the district's safety plan, which includes random searches of students for weapons and other contraband.

The Los Angeles Unified School District is the only district its size that requires every middle and high school campus to conduct daily random searches for weapons using metal-detecting wands.

However, an internal district audit of 20 schools released in April found inconsistencies in how random searches were conducted. Some schools failed to do the searches daily, the audit found. One-fourth lacked enough metal-detecting wands to search properly.

The district started random searches in 1993 after a 16-year-old was shot and killed at Fairfax High School. A month later, a student died from a shooting at Reseda High School.

The district began requiring the daily searches with metal-detecting wands in 2011 after two students were injured in a shooting at Gardena High School, district officials said.

At an informal presentation in January of good-attendance certificates, Principal Erick Mitchell said his campus was becoming a destination for families who wanted a smaller school setting. Last year, Castro Middle had an enrollment of 355 students.

The enrollment is 92 percent Latino, and most students are from low-income families.

Mitchell added that the school has made academic strides because more students are coming in better prepared from elementary school and because the school has emphasized long-term goals such as college and career.

This focus also has improved overall student behavior, he said.

"We have a new culture here," Mitchell said. "I love this school. We have really good kids here. It's the best-kept secret in town."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.