ALPINE, Texas: A 14-year-old girl died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound on Thursday after shooting and injuring another female student inside a high school in West Texas, according to the local sheriff.
Authorities did not release a possible motive for the gunfire that erupted shortly before 9 am at Alpine High School in Alpine, a town of 5,900 about 220 miles southeast of El Paso. The shooting was followed by a series of unrelated threats made by a male caller that added to the chaos of the morning and diverted law enforcement from the high school.
"That's ridiculous for someone to call in something like this when we've got this situation going on," Brewster County Sheriff Ronny Dodson told radio station KVLF.
The sheriff said the family of the girl who died had moved to the Alpine area about six months ago. She was a freshman at the school.
Dodson said the injured student ran outside seeking help and was taken to a hospital with injuries that weren't considered life threatening.
Dodson said a US Homeland Security officer who was responding to the incident was shot in the leg when a US marshal who also was responding accidentally discharged his weapon. The injured officer was transported to a hospital in Odessa, Texas.
The shooting at the high school prompted a lockdown at Alpine's three public schools, which were later evacuated.
Alpine police Chief Russell Scown said even after the shooter was found mortally wounded in a bathroom at the school, it wasn't immediately clear that she was the assailant. Emergency responders at one point thought two shooters may have been involved.
The school district declined comment, saying it would release a statement later.
Law enforcement officials were also dealing with threats made in the wake of the shooting. They said they don't believe there was a connection between the threats and the shooting at the high school.
Authorities said threats were phoned in to an Alpine hospital and to Sul Ross State University, which is about a mile from the high school. Officers and bomb-sniffing dogs had to search for explosives in each building of the university, Dodson said. None were found.
"Right now, we have a nut," Dodson said at an afternoon news conference, adding, "Basically, he's what we're looking for right now."
There was also a threatening note left at a motel in Marathon, Texas, about 30 miles east of Alpine.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said earlier that he's monitoring developments in the Alpine shooting and promised to provide support for law enforcement agencies investigating the matter.
Authorities did not release a possible motive for the gunfire that erupted shortly before 9 am at Alpine High School in Alpine, a town of 5,900 about 220 miles southeast of El Paso. The shooting was followed by a series of unrelated threats made by a male caller that added to the chaos of the morning and diverted law enforcement from the high school.
"That's ridiculous for someone to call in something like this when we've got this situation going on," Brewster County Sheriff Ronny Dodson told radio station KVLF.
Dodson said the injured student ran outside seeking help and was taken to a hospital with injuries that weren't considered life threatening.
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The shooting at the high school prompted a lockdown at Alpine's three public schools, which were later evacuated.
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The school district declined comment, saying it would release a statement later.
Law enforcement officials were also dealing with threats made in the wake of the shooting. They said they don't believe there was a connection between the threats and the shooting at the high school.
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"Right now, we have a nut," Dodson said at an afternoon news conference, adding, "Basically, he's what we're looking for right now."
There was also a threatening note left at a motel in Marathon, Texas, about 30 miles east of Alpine.
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