One of the first things she noticed was that her child, and other students at STEM School Highlands Ranch, weren’t getting enough sleep. The academic workload, she said, seemed crushing. The parent noticed kids stressing out, and lashing out. She said she heard reports of violence, sexual assault and bullying. Yet school officials, she said, seemed to be ignoring the mounting problems.
Colorado Strong: School Shooting T-Shirt
One of the first things she noticed was that her child, and other students at STEM School Highlands Ranch, weren’t getting enough sleep. The academic workload, she said, seemed crushing. The parent noticed kids stressing out, and lashing out. She said she heard reports of violence, sexual assault and bullying. Yet school officials, she said, seemed to be ignoring the mounting problems.
2019 Colorado School Shooting Shirts
Survivors of the shooting at the charter school in Colorado that killed one student and injured eight others stormed out of a community vigil Wednesday, calling it a “political stunt.”
The event, organized by Team Enough — the student-led initiative of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence — was intended to be an interfaith vigil to honor the STEM School Highlands Ranch shooting survivors and 18-year-old Kendrick Castillo, who died Tuesday after trying to stop one of the shooters.
Hundreds of grieving students, parents, and community members packed the Highlands Ranch school’s gym, but their anger and frustration became apparent after none of the STEM students themselves had a chance to speak about Castillo at the vigil.
Instead, several speakers — including Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Michael Bennet, Democratic Rep. Jason Crow, and a Moms Demand Action volunteer, Laura Reeves — addressed the need for gun control legislation.
“[Our kids] have a job to do when they come to school,” Bennet told the crowd. “Their job is not to fix American’s broken gun laws. Their job is not, as Kendrick so selflessly did yesterday, give up their own life to save their classmates’ lives or their teachers’ lives. That’s not their job. They’re relying on the rest of us to do our job so they can do their job.”
walking out in protest.
However, an organizer of the event told the crowd that they hadn’t been able to connect with any STEM students to have them speak at the vigil.
“You never asked,” some students said in response, prompting an exodus of students and parents, according to an eyewitness who attended the vigil but wished to remain anonymous.

Students and others gather in the high school hallway after walking out of the vigil.
One organizer blamed the media for sending attendees outside, but students later said that was false and that they had chosen to leave themselves.
The protesting students then gathered in the high school hallway, chanting, “Mental health,” “STEM strong,” and “Fuck the media,” the eyewitness told BuzzFeed News on Thursday.
“Everyone was upset there was no time to honor Kendrick,” one eyewitness said, adding that students and parents appeared to be frustrated at the news media for taking photos of people crying.
“It’s just about votes and something that doesn’t have anything to do with anything,” a school parent, Chris Barrette, told KRDO-TV. “It’s about the victims, our faculty, and the first responders, the horror that our students went through just yesterday.”
Several students who walked out of the gym also gathered outside the high school and held their own impromptu vigil in the rain, pointing their illuminated cellphones toward the sky.
Many students then returned to the gym and held a moment of silence for Castillo and the shooting survivors. Several of them took the microphone to express their frustrations with the organized event and to speak about Castillo.
“This was not a vigil,” one student said in his speech. “This was purely a political stunt. This is not what we wanted for Kendrick. We didn’t want Kendrick to be a prop. We wanted Kendrick to be mourned. We wanted all of you to join us in that mourning, but that was not allowed here. We all walked out. We were not kicked out, despite what you have heard. And we’re back now to tell you that we love Kendrick and we love all of the survivors.”

A STEM student gives a speech at an impromptu vigil for Kendrick Castillo.
One of Castillo’s classmates broke down as she remembered her friend.
“I came here for my close friend Kendrick,” she said. “I just wanted to talk about him a little bit because everybody’s been sitting here talking about gun violence and avoiding the fact that he died.”
In a statement following the vigil, the Brady group apologized, saying that organizers are “deeply sorry any part of this vigil did not provide the support, caring and sense of community we sought to foster and facilitate and which we know is so crucial to communities who suffer the trauma of gun violence.”
A spokesperson for Bennet said in a statement that the vigil “should have been about Kendrick Castillo and the STEM School students.”
“They are our focus and the event should have been set up to ensure their voices were fully heard,” the statement added.
STEM shooting 2019 Shirts
The father of a student who was shot at STEM School Highlands Ranch on Tuesday told Denver7 that his son said he was in a classroom when one of the shooters pulled out a gun and started firing.
All of the shooting victims are students ages 15 and older. The male student who died was 18 years old, the sheriff tweeted at 6:45 p.m. MDT.
The shooting suspects are in custody, Douglas County Sheriff Tony Spurlock said. One is an male juvenile and the other was identified by police as Devon Erickson, 18.
“We will not be releasing any photos at this time as it could jeopardize this critical on-going invest,” the sheriff said on Twitter. “We still have interviews to conduct and we want to make sure we have the most accurate information.”
Robert Helfer, 13, was in math class when he heard a disturbance.
“Everyone thought it was a theater play at first. Then when we just started hearing banging and gunshots and cursing,” the seventh-grader said, his eyes red, his shaking hands twisting a plastic water bottle. “There was a body by the door when the police officer came to get us.”
Spurlock said the suspects opened fire in two separate classrooms at STEM School Highlands Ranch, a public charter school with more than 1,850 students in kindergarten through 12th grade.
Police responded to the shooting before 2 p.m., arriving quickly because there is a law enforcement substation nearby. Deputies engaged the suspects and took them into custody without injuring them, Spurlock said.
Two of the injured are in serious condition, two are in stable condition and one is in good condition, area hospitals said. Three of the injured have been discharged, Littleton Adventist Hospital spokeswoman Wendy Forbes told USA TODAY.
“This is a terrible event,” Spurlock said. “This is something that nobody wants to happen in their community. We’re going to investigate that and we will get to the bottom of it to figure out how and what has occurred.”
The sheriff’s office directed parents to a recreational center to reunite with their children.
Andrea Pedatto, 46, was installing a ceiling fan at her nearby home when she got the news her son’s school was under attack. Her husband burst into tears in frustration while she swung into action, grabbed their Yorkie, Stella, and headed to the center.
“I wasn’t panicking because they hadn’t given any details yet. It’s hard when you don’t know,” she said. “This is Colorado. We have school shootings.”
Pedatto counted herself lucky: she was able to collect her first-grader, Dax, 7, about three hours after the shooting. Other parents waited in the hot recreation center for the buses to deliver their kids, pacing the indoor walking track or sitting on the basketball court near a whiteboard reading “Kids currently ready for reunification” and 11 names.
Many parents still in work uniforms held tight to their sobbing children, offering the reassurance of home-cooked dinners and the chance to get back belongings left behind in the evacuation.
“The heart of all Colorado is with the victims and their families,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said in a statement.
Tactical teams searched the area Tuesday afternoon as the STEM school was on lockdown and all other Douglas County schools were on lockout, the school district said. Lines of firetrucks, ambulances and law enforcement vehicles rushed to the scene along with medical helicopters.
Il mio nuovo Libero blog!
Questo è un articolo (o post) di esempio per il tuo nuovo blog su LiberoBlog 🙂
Puoi modificarne titolo o testo, inserire immagini e video o, se vuoi, cancellarlo.
Inizia subito a scrivere sul tuo blog ciò che più ti piace e ti interessa, pensa alle persone che lo leggeranno e buoni post!
Scopri tutto quello che puoi fare in Libero Aiuto

