Nashville school shooting: Six killed by 28-year-old shooter in Tennessee

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Watch: Police says the Nashville suspect was a female armed with assault weapons

Six people - three children and three staff - have been killed in a shooting by a former student at a school in the US city of Nashville, Tennessee.

Three of the victims were pupils aged nine or under at Covenant School. Police named them as Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs and William Kinney.

The adult victims were named as Cynthia Peak, 61, Katherine Koonce, 60, and Mike Hill, 61.

The private Christian school has about 200 students.

It teaches pupils from three years old up to around 12.

Ms Peak was a substitute teacher working at the school that day. Mr Hill was a janitor and Ms Koonce was described as the Head of School on Covenant's website.

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Shooting survivor: 'Aren't you tired of covering this?'

Police said the suspect was 28-year-old Audrey Hale, who identified as transgender.

Hale was armed with three guns, including a semi-automatic rifle, and was shot dead by police.

Nashville Police Chief John Drake said the shooter had conducted surveillance, and that maps of the building showing entry and exit points were found by investigators at a nearby home.

Police received the first call about the incident at 10:13 local time on Monday morning.

Police said the suspect got in by firing through one of the school doors, which were all locked.

Image source, Nashville police
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The shooter fired at police from the second floor when they arrived

Hale fired shots on the ground floor before moving to the building's second floor.

As police cars arrived, Hale fired on them from the second floor, striking one in the windscreen, said police.

Police rushed inside and shot the suspect dead at 10:27. One officer was injured by broken glass.

A search of a nearby parked car had led officers to "firmly believe" that Hale was a former student of the school, said police.

Police spoke with the attacker's father during a search of a nearby home that is listed as the shooter's address.

Chief Drake said investigators there found a manifesto and "a map of how all of this was going to play out".

In the hours that followed the shooting, parents gathered at a nearby church to be reunited with their children. As buses of children arrived, they hung their heads and hands out of the windows to wave to their parents, according to the Tennessean newspaper.

Image source, NEWSNATION/Reuters
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An ambulance stands near Nashville's Covenant School as children are escorted away

The Presbyterian-affiliated Covenant School is located in the upscale Green Hills neighborhood, just south of downtown Nashville.

The mother of one pupil at the school said her son had been left traumatised by the shooting.

"I think he's doing better now that he knows that the shooter is dead," Shaundelle Brooks told BBC News.

"These are conversations we shouldn't be having," she added. "We're failing our children."

Image source, Nashville police
Image caption,
The killer shot through a locked side door to break inside

In a statement, Nashville Mayor John Cooper said the city had "joined the dreaded, long list of communities to experience a school shooting".

President Joe Biden called the shooting a "family's worst nightmare".

"We have to do more to stop gun violence," he said, calling on Congress to pass gun control laws. "It is ripping our communities apart, and ripping at the very soul of this nation."

The attack was America's 129th mass shooting of 2023, according to Gun Violence Archive, a non-profit that tracks gun violence data.

According to data compiled by Education Week, there have been 12 school shootings that have resulted in deaths or injuries in the US this year up until the end of last week.

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