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Maryland High School Shooting: Two Students Injured, Gunman Dead After Incident at Great Mills High School

'This is what we train for. This is what we prepare for and this is what we pray we never have to do.'

(TNS) — Two students were injured and a third, the gunman, has died after a shooting at Great Mills High School in Southern Maryland on Tuesday morning, according to the St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office.

A school resource officer fired at the student gunman, who fired back with a handgun, Sheriff Tim Cameron said. The school resource officer was not injured, Cameron said.

"He pursued the shooter and engaged the shooter," Cameron said of the school resource officer, whose identity has not been released.

The two students who were injured — a 14-year-old boy and a 16-year-old girl — were being treated at local hospitals, officials said. Neither their identities, nor the shooter’s, were released Tuesday morning.

The boy is in good condition and is being treated at MedStar St. Mary’s Hospital. The girl was initially brought to MedStar, officials said, but was later stabilized and transferred to University of Maryland Prince George’s Hospital Center.

The shooting happened just before 8 a.m. at the school at 21130 Great Mills Road, county spokesman Tony Jones said from the emergency operations center. The St. Mary’s County school was placed on lockdown and students were evacuated, Jones said.

Cameron said multiple law enforcement agencies and fire departments assisted in the "mass response" at the school.

"This is what we train for. This is what we prepare for and this is what we pray we never have to do," Cameron said. "And on this day we realized our worst nightmare that our greatest asset — our children — were attacked in a bastion of safety and security, one of our schools."

Senior Terrence Rhames was standing with his friends outside their first-period class around 8 a.m. when he heard a shot. He said he knew instantly what the loud crack meant.

He started running, heading to a first-floor bathroom before thinking to himself, “This is a dead end.” He turned to instead sprint toward the nearest exit. Out of the corner of his eye, Rhames said, he saw a girl fall.

“I just thank God I’m safe,” said Rhames, 18. “I just want to know who did it and who got injured.”

Great Mills, which enrolls about 1,600 students, is about 90 miles outside of Baltimore. Parents were asked to meet their children at a reunification site on the Leonardtown High School campus, where counselors and other support staff are on hand.

Lexington Park resident Shonita Somerville said her daughter heard a gun shot, but did not see anything and is not hurt. She's since reunited with her daughter.

“I’m so happy to see her face,” Somerville told The Sun in a Facebook message, as she waited with several dozen other parents inside the Leonardtown High School auditorium.

The Great Mills shooting comes just over a month after a deadly rampage in a Florida high school. Seventeen people died in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, catalyzing a national conversation about gun violence in schools.

Last Wednesday, Great Mills students participated in a nationwide “school walkout” on the one-month anniversary of the Parkland shooting. The students called for an end to gun violence and more school safety measures, according to local news reports.

One of the student activists from Marjory Stoneman Douglas tweeted her anger about the Great Mills incident.

“Less than a WEEK ago Great Mills High School students walked out with us to protest gun violence...now they’re experiencing it for themselves,” Jaclyn Corin wrote. “The state of our country is disgusting - I’m so sorry, Great Mills.”

Gov. Larry Hogan said he was “closely monitoring” the situation at Great Mills. Maryland State Police troopers, agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosive’s Hyattsville offices, and FBI agents are working with county officials on the investigation.

School safety has been a prominent topic in the deliberations of the Maryland General Assembly since the Parkland shooting.

Less than a month ago, after the Parkland shooting, Hogan proposed spending $125 million next year to enhance security at schools in the state, including by reinforcing doors and installing panic buttons to prevent and react to shooters.

He also suggested $55 million for two ongoing spending initiatives, including $50 million for “school safety grants” that could pay for armed school resource officers, technology and counselors at public schools, and increased funding for the state’s Center for School Safety, which would include money to hire social media experts to scour the internet looking for threats.

The proposals are currently being considered by lawmakers in Annapolis, who have already given initial approval to three tougher gun-control laws.

Sen. Steve Waugh, a Republican who represents St. Mary’s County, said his Annapolis office had become a clearinghouse for information in the hours after the incident.

Waugh, with the support of the Senate’s Democratic leadership, recently introduced a package of four bills dealing with school security. He said he’s sure Tuesday’s shooting will focus attention on it.

“It certainly adds urgency to it,” Waugh said. “I’m just grateful we have a vehicle for us to begin the decision.”

Waugh said the legislation is a bipartisan effort and that Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller is a co-sponsor of the four bills. Waugh said the number of co-sponsors is growing. “We have a bipartisan consensus that things need to be done,” he said.

The Maryland House of Delegates opened their session Tuesday with a moment of silence for the shooting victims in St. Mary’s County.

But Del. Matthew Morgan, who represents St. Mary’s County, said Tuesday he was pessimistic about whether proposed legislative actions, such as a ban on bump stocks, would make a real difference. The shooter at Great Mills used a handgun, according to the sheriff’s office.

“I don’t know if there is a policy fix,” he said, calling on parents of troubled teens to step in to counsel their kids. “Parents: Take the opportunity to connect with your child.”

U.S. Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin was giving a speech in Washington about water infrastructure when he learned of the Great Mills shooting. He said his immediate reaction was "shock, anger, just frustration that now it happened in Maryland."

He said this latest school shooting underscores the need for more gun control. Cardin added that while school resource officers play an important role in schools, he remains opposed to the idea of arming school teachers as President Donald Trump has advocated.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos called the incident at Great Mills a “horrifying situation,” and said her agency stands ready to help.

“Our hearts and prayers are with those impacted, and our deep appreciation goes out to the first responders,” she wrote on Twitter.

Since the Parkland shooting, many districts around the country have seen an spike in threats made against schools. In late February, local media reported that police were investigating a social media threat against Great Mills, warning of an upcoming school shooting.

Police increased their presence at the high school, according to TheBayNet.com, though the threat was not substantiated. There has been no indication that Tuesday’s incident is related.

This weekend, thousands of Maryland students are expected to flood Washington for the “March for Our Lives,” a national protest to demand an end to mass shooting in schools.

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