Tag: school stabbing
Teen Suspect In PA School Stabbings Said To Be Shy, Quiet

Teen Suspect In PA School Stabbings Said To Be Shy, Quiet

By Robert Zullo, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

MURRYSVILLE, PA — He always seemed to be “the shy kid in the corner,” a classmate said.

Hours after a startling and savage attack Wednesday morning that left 21 students and a security guard wounded, that was the picture that began to emerge of 16-year-old Alex Hribal, a sophomore at Franklin Regional Senior High School. Armed with two 8-inch knives, he is accused of stabbing and slashing his way through a crowded hallway in an assault that was labeled “bizarre” by both a prosecutor and his own lawyer.

Interviews with nearly two dozen students Wednesday evening at various vigils organized by churches yielded precious little background about Hribal, who was arraigned on charges of attempted homicide, aggravated assault and weapon possession. Four of his alleged victims remained in critical condition Wednesday night.

Many students said they did not know him. Others, like sophomore Anissa Park, who knew Hribal from elementary school but hadn’t talked with him for some time, invariably used the words “shy” and “quiet” to describe him. Some said he was involved in athletics, including street hockey, track and tennis, though The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette could not confirm those details Wednesday night.

Another student who knew Hribal, though he spoke on condition of anonymity, said he was stunned by the attack.

“I know him pretty well,” the boy said, adding that Hribal’s interests swung toward the usual for a teenage boy, including hockey and video games. “I’ve never seen any anger from him, ever. … He never seemed like someone who would do anything violent. He never seems very upset or any of that.”

Though his parents could not be reached Wednesday, Hribal’s lawyer, Patrick Thomassey said he had spoken to them about an hour before the teen’s arraignment.

“They did not foresee this coming. They expressed absolute horror,” Thomassey said, adding that the family’s thoughts were with the victims.

Thomassey said the teenager was not a loner nor was he aware of any instances of bullying that would have provoked the attack.

“He’s scared,” Thomassey said. “He’s a young kid. He’s 16, looking like he’s 12. This is all still new to him.”

Thomassey said Alex is a B-plus student from a stable home, describing his family as “like Ozzie and Harriet.”

“They have dinner together every night,” the attorney said, though he would not provide details of his discussions with his client.

“I’m not sure he knows what he did, quite frankly,” Thomassey said. “Something happened here. There’s an issue that maybe nobody knew about.”

District Attorney John Peck said during the brief hearing that Hribal made some statements after school officials tackled him that indicated he wanted to die.

Dan McCool said his 16-year-old daughter, Trinity, was in the hallway as the attack unfolded.

“They just know who he is. They don’t know necessarily much about him. They just say he was kind of quiet and kept to himself,” McCool said, adding that the terror of what had happened didn’t hit him until he went to pick his daughter up at the school, where he was struck by the degree of order and efficiency. “Any time something happens I just try to remain calm. … When I went down to the school to pick her up after she talked to the FBI, I was breaking up then.”

Though she would not discuss the Franklin Regional case specifically, Mary Margaret Kerr, chair of administrative and policy studies and a professor of psychology in education and psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh, said it can be difficult for schools to predict violent behavior in students.

She said standard psychological tests haven’t been successful in predicting targeted violence in schools, adding that many school attackers had no histories of mental disorders.

Kerr, author of “Strategies for Addressing Behavioral Problems in the Classroom,” referenced a report by the U.S. Secret Service and Department of Education on school shootings and school-based attacks dating back to 1974.

It found that school attacks are rarely impulsive acts, but are typically planned in advance.

“The study findings also revealed that there is no ‘profile’ of a school shooter; instead, the students who carried out the attacks differed from one another in numerous ways,” according to a synopsis of the report on the Secret Service website.

The study said, however, that most attackers had engaged in prior behavior that concerned at least one adult, and often several adults.

AFP Photo/Scott Olson

After Pennsylvania School Stabbing, Community, Students Seek Solace

After Pennsylvania School Stabbing, Community, Students Seek Solace

By Richard Simon and Alana Semuels, Los Angeles Times

MURRYSVILLE, PA — Students who witnessed Wednesday’s stabbing rampage at Franklin Regional High School felt as if they had survived a horror movie.

Some attended an evening prayer service for at least 19 students and two adults who were wounded in the morning attack. Alex Hribal, 16, has been charged as an adult with four counts of attempted homicide, 21 counts of aggravated assault and one count of bringing a weapon on school property, said his attorney, Patrick Thomassey. Hribal is being held without bail.

Brenda Gossar, a 10th-grader, was standing at her locker when she turned around and saw a young man stabbing people, she said. One of her friends was stabbed in the back, and Gossar feared she might be next.

“I just ran,” she said.

Other friends were wounded too.

“I thought it was a dream,” Gossar said.

Later, she visited her injured friends in the hospital, where one was in critical condition.

The suspect, Hribal, had been bullied, she said.

“People picked on him,” she said. “I think he targeted people who were bullying him, who he didn’t like. He looked scared, and he looked angry.”

Hribal was quiet, she said, and he had ignored the bullying until Wednesday morning.

On Wednesday night, Gossar had to excuse herself from a prayer service at Newlonsburg Presbyterian Church, which is about a block from the school, to meet with a grief counselor because she’s having trouble dealing with the violence, she said.

She isn’t the only one. “It will be hard for us to walk in the hallways and not think of it, but we’re going to pull through,” she said.

The school is temporarily closed while authorities investigate. Ministers and grief counselors have been made available to the students.

Some of the stabbing victims and their friends joined hundreds of others at another prayer service down the road, at Cornerstone Ministries. Many wore the yellow and blue attire of the Franklin Regional High School Panthers.

Nate Scimio was there, surrounded by his friends, after posting a selfie of himself in a hospital gown and a bandaged arm. He declined to speak to the media.

Sydney Contraguero, a senior, said she was in an upstairs hallway when the fire alarm sounded. She followed Jared Boger, a fellow student, down the stairs, and saw another student coming toward them. At first she thought the student, Hribal, was going to hug Boger, she said. But when Hribal ran away, Boger was bleeding.

“I didn’t even know until I saw blood on the ground,” she said. “It all happened so quick.”

Outside, she saw a girl with a neck wound and a boy with a leg injury, she said.

Boger was still unconscious late Wednesday night, according to a Twitter feed belonging to his brother, Carter.

Hribal’s father appeared briefly outside the family’s home in Heritage Estates, a planned community of spacious homes on hills, many with basketball hoops and hockey nets out back.

“My prayers go out to everyone,” he said, adding that he hoped the victims all recovered.

“Kids are resilient,” said Pastor Brian Smith of Cornerstone Ministries, who visited the school to talk with students after the stabbing. “There was just a sense of a heaviness in the air,” he said.

“We saw an act of evil that took place today, but although we saw an act of evil, we saw many, many acts of good,” said another pastor, Dan Hertzler, who directs student ministries at Cornerstone. He counseled many of the students after the stabbings.

The community as well as the students sought solace Wednesday night.

Joanne Witkowski attended the service at the Newlonsburg Presbyterian Church. Her nephew Brandon Brown, 14, was seriously wounded, even though “he did not know the suspect.”

Her nephew wasn’t even aware he was stabbed, Witkowski said. “He thought that he was punched and then he looked down and saw his clothes were bloody and his shirt was ripped.”

Brown was airlifted to a hospital, where he initially was in critical condition, she said, but had improved to stable by nightfall.

The knife “just missed” his liver but punctured a lung, she said.

Witkowski said her nephew did not know Hribal. “He did not know the suspect — never hurt or harmed the suspect.”

She called the attack “senseless” and said people “need to begin to recognize what the warning signs are.”

Sarah Jean Thompson and her husband, Paul, have lived in the community for 40 years. The retirees attended the Presbyterian service, which was themed “God’s Heart Breaks,” to show support for the community.

“Just like everybody else is saying, this doesn’t happen in Franklin Regional,” Sarah Jean Thompson said.

AFP Photo/Ross Mantle

Multiple Stabbings Reported At Pennsylvania High School

Multiple Stabbings Reported At Pennsylvania High School

By Molly Born, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Twenty students were injured — four seriously — in a multiple-stabbing incident Wednesday morning inside Franklin Regional High School in Murrysville, about 20 miles east of Pittsburgh.

Westmoreland County public safety spokesman Dan Stevens said a suspect, also a student, is in custody and was being questioned by Murrysville police and Westmoreland County detectives.

Those seriously injured were flown to hospitals by medical helicopter. Some of the 20 injured students suffered stab wounds to the extremities, he said.

None of the injuries was life-threatening, he said.

The injured students’ ages range from 14 to 17.

Just before 7:15 a.m., a school resource officer asked for medical assistance at the school for a stabbing. The students were injured in several classrooms and in the hallways before the classes started, Stevens said.

Parents of the injured students were being contacted.

Police, emergency crews and school buses lined the entrance to the school Wednesday morning. A stretcher was loaded into an ambulance around 8:15 a.m.

On its website, the school district said, “A critical incident has occurred at the high school. All elementary schools are canceled, the middle school and high school students are secure. Additional information will be released as soon as possible. Please keep our campus clear of traffic.”

AFP Photo/Ross Mantle