March 27, 2023 Nashville Covenant School shooting news | CNN

At least 3 children and 3 adults killed in Nashville elementary school shooting

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'They escaped from the woods': Witness describes scene outside of school
03:02 • Source: CNN
03:02

What we know so far

  • Three 9-year-old children and three adults were killed Monday in a shooting at a private Christian elementary school in Nashville, Tennessee, police said.
  • Two of the victims were school employees. One was the head of the school and the other a custodian, according to the school.
  • The shooter, a 28-year-old Nashville resident police say was once a student at the school, was killed during gunfire with police, authorities said.
  • The attack, which police said was a targeted one and involved prior planning, was the deadliest US school shooting in nearly a year. The shooter had drawn detailed maps of the school, police said, including the entry points to the building. Police have also located writings from the shooter that they are reviewing.
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Church confirms former pastor’s daughter died in Nashville school shooting

Park Cities Presbyterian Church in Dallas released a statement Monday confirming that their former pastor, Chad Scruggs, lost his daughter Hallie in Monday’s shooting at the Covenant School.

CNN had reported that Hallie Scruggs was among the three 9-year-old students shot and killed in the shooting.

Here is the church’s statement:

Former teammate of shooter describes chilling message she received from shooter before school shooting 

In messages shared with CNN affiliate WTVF, a former middle school basketball teammate of Audrey Hale provides chilling new details regarding an exchange she had on social media with the shooter prior to yesterday’s school shooting in Nashville. 

Averianna Patton said she saw a message on her phone that Hale had sent to her on Instagram Monday morning that stated Hale was planning to die by suicide and that she would see it on the news. A screenshot of a message published by WTVF appeared to show that the message was sent at 9:57 a.m. local time.

“One day this will make more sense,” Hale wrote. “I’ve left behind more than enough evidence behind. But something bad is about to happen,” the message stated. 

“I tried to comfort and encourage her and subsequently reached out to the Suicide Prevention Help Line after being instructed to by my father at 10:08 am,” Patton said. 

Patton tells WTVF that she she called the Nashville Davidson County Sheriff’s Office at 10:13 a.m. to make them aware of the situation and was instructed to call Nashville’s non-emergency number. 

“I called Nashville’s non-emergency line at 10:14 a.m. and was on hold for nearly seven minutes before speaking with someone who said that they would send an officer to my home. An officer did not come to my home until 3:29 p.m.,” Patton said.

Don Aaron, spokesperson for the Metro Nashville Police Department, said during a news conference that the first calls of an active shooting came in at around 10:15 a.m. local time.

When officers arrived, they went through the first level of the building, he said. They then heard gunshots coming from the second level of the building, according to Aaron. He said that’s where police confronted and killed the shooter at 10:27 a.m. local time.

Here's the latest on the Nashville school shooting — and where things stand in the investigation

A person places flowers at a makeshift memorial outside the Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee, on March 27.

Police in Nashville are still digging into the background and motivations of a former student who entered a Christian elementary school armed with AR-style weapons and detailed maps and opened fire, killing three children and three adults.

If you are just reading in, here’s the latest on the shooting and investigation:

The shooter: The person was identified as 28-year-old Audrey Hale. Hale was shot and killed by police during the Monday attack, and left behind “drawn out” maps of the Covenant School detailing “how this was all going to take place,” Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake said. As police work to piece together what led up to the violence, officials said they had determined where the shooter lived in the Nashville area and have interviewed Hale’s father. 

Hale, who attended the Christian school years ago, left writings that pertain to the shooting and had scouted a second possible attack location in Nashville, “but because of a threat assessment by the suspect – there’s too much security – they decided not to,” police chief said.The writings revealed that the attack at Covenant School “was calculated and planned,” Metro Nashville said.

So far, little is known about the shooter. Hale graduated from Nossi College of Art & Design in Nashville last year, the president of the school confirmed to CNN, and a LinkedIn profile says Hale worked as a freelance graphic designer and a part-time grocery shopper.

Police have referred to Hale as the “female shooter” and at an evening press conference added that Hale was transgender. When asked for clarification, a spokesperson told CNN Hale used “male pronouns” on a social media profile.

The weapons: The shooter was “someone that had multiple rounds of ammunition, prepared for confrontation with law enforcement, prepared to do more harm than was actually done,” the police chief said in a news conference.

Three weapons – an AR-style rifle, an AR-style pistol and a handgun – were found and police believe Hale obtained at least two of the weapons legally, Drake said. A search warrant executed at Hale’s home also resulted in the seizure of a sawed-off shotgun, a second shotgun and other evidence, according to police.

The victims: All three students shot and killed were 9 years old. They were identified as Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs and William Kinney. Three adults killed in the shooting were identified as 61-year-old Cynthia Peak, 60-year-old Katherine Koonce and 61-year-old Mike Hill, police said. Two Covenant School employees are among the victims of Monday’s mass shooting, according to the school.

What is expected to happen today: Investigators were expected to spend Tuesday processing the scene and gathering more details about what happened during the roughly 14 minutes of terror at the elementary school.

Mass shootings in America: The attack marked the 19th shooting at a school or university so far in 2023 in which at least one person was wounded, according to a CNN tally. With six victims, the shooting at Covenant is the deadliest school shooting since the attack in Uvalde, Texas, last May left 21 people dead.

Read more about the shooting here.

President of gun control nonprofit says "this is on us"

Kris Brown, the president of Brady: United Against Gun Violence, speaks to CNN on Tuesday.

Kris Brown, the president of Brady: United Against Gun Violence, said the solutions to stopping mass shootings “are before us and they have been for a long time” but it will take voters to make the change.

Brady is a US nonprofit that advocates for gun control and against gun violence.

“It takes all of us. This isn’t just on the kids. This is on adults,” Brown added. “This is on their grandparents. This is on us and we can make a difference, but we have to make it an absolute priority and then hold elected officials to account when they do not vote ‘yes’ on bills to advance lifesaving measures.”

Analysis: America's kids are failed again

Children from the Covenant School hold hands as they are taken to a reunification site after a deadly shooting at their school in Nashville on Monday.

A more heartrending and quintessentially American scene is hard to imagine.

A human chain of children, hand-in-hand, shepherded by police officers, fled the latest school struck by unfathomable tragedy. On Monday, it was Nashville’s turn to join the roster of cities made notorious by a mass shooting epidemic much of the country seems prepared to tacitly accept as the price of the right to own high-powered firearms. 

The reality of what unfolded inside was inhuman, but it can unfortunately be imagined given the gruesome insider accounts that emerged from previous school shootings — in Uvalde, Texas, last year, or at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticut in 2012.

Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs and William Kinney, all 9 years old, were gunned down by a shooter armed with two AR-style weapons and a handgun, two of which police said were bought legally. Their names — known only to the rest of America in death — were released by police about the same time as they should have been going home from Covenant School for the day.

Three staff, all half a century older, also died. They were Cynthia Peak, 61, Katherine Koonce, 60, and Mike Hill, 61.

They were all murdered in the place that should be the safest: where kids go to school. But a plague of recent classroom rampages, distinguished even among America’s gun violence by their depravity, shows that nowhere is really secure.

Read the full analysis here.

Covenant School says "community is heartbroken" following shooting

People attend a vigil for the Covenant School mass shooting victims at Woodmont Christian Church in Nashville, Tennessee, on March 27.

The Covenant School that was the scene of Monday’s school shooting in Nashville said their community is “heartbroken” following the attack that killed three young students and three staff members.

The private Christian elementary school released a statement to CNN affiliate WZTV.

The Covenant School said “we are tremendously grateful to the first responders who acted quickly to protect our students, faculty and staff” and asked for “privacy as our community grapples with this terrible tragedy.”

Nashville police identify officers who fatally shot school shooting suspect 

Officer Rex Englebert, left, and Officer Michael Collazo.

The two Metro Nashville Police Department officers who fatally shot school shooting suspect Audrey Hale have been identified as Officer Rex Englebert and Officer Michael Collazo, according to a news release from MNPD. 

Englebert is a four-year veteran with MNPD and Collazo has been with the department for nine years, police said. 

Hale was fatally shot on the second floor in a common area of the school where the shooter had been opening fire through a window at arriving police cars, the release said. 

Writings recovered from Hale revealed that the attack was calculated and planned, police said. 

A search warrant executed at Hale’s Nashville home resulted in the seizure of a sawed-off shotgun, a second shotgun and other evidence, police said. 

Shooter graduated from Nashville art college, school president says

Audrey Hale graduated from Nossi College of Art & Design in Nashville last year, the school’s president confirmed to CNN Monday.

Nossi College of Art & Design is described on its website as “the only college in Tennessee designed specifically as an art school.”

Police earlier identified Hale, 28, as the shooter Monday in the killing of three 9-year-old students and three adults at the Covenant School, a private Christian elementary school in Nashville where the shooter was a former student. Hale was shot and killed by police during the attack, which was the deadliest school shooting in nearly a year.

A LinkedIn profile said Hale worked as a freelance graphic designer and a part-time grocery shopper.

2 victims in Monday's mass shooting were school employees

Photo of Covenant School Shooting victims Katherine Koonce and Mike Hill.

Two Covenant School employees are among the victims of Monday’s mass shooting, according to the school.

Katherine Koonce was identified as the head of the school on its website.

Mike Hill was identified in the staff section of the Covenant Presbyterian Church’s website, which is now offline. He was listed as facilities/kitchen staff. A friend of Mike Hill confirmed his image to CNN. Hill, 61, was a custodian at the school, per police.

Biden orders flags flown at half-staff to honor victims of Nashville school shooting

President Joe Biden has ordered the flags at the White House and all federal buildings be flown at half-staff to honor the victims from Monday’s school shooting in Nashville, Tennessee.

The order will be in effect until Friday, according to the White House.

Mother who lost son in 2018 mass shooting says her other son was on lockdown for Monday's shooting

A mother who lost her son in a 2018 mass shooting told CNN’s Anderson Cooper that Monday’s shooting in Nashville took her back to that moment as her other son was in lockdown at a nearby high school.

Shaundelle Brooks lost her son, Akilah DaSilva, during a mass shooting at a Nashville-area Waffle House in 2018. Her other son, Aldane Brooks, was placed on lockdown at a nearby high school on Monday when the shooting occurred at Covenant School.

“We didn’t know if we were safe,” Aldane Brooks told CNN’s Anderson Cooper. “We didn’t know if someone was coming to kill us or not.”

Brooks added that she wanted to race to her son’s school the moment she heard news of a shooting, but he told her to wait as they had no information as to what was going on.

“We’re not safe anywhere,” Brooks said, “We’re not safe in schools, we’re not safe when we go out to eat, we’re not safe in church, we’re not safe at the Waffle House.”

Brooks said she thinks about mass shootings every time she drops her son off at school.

The mother and son addressed families of the victims of Monday’s shooting saying they “understand this feeling first hand.”

“The pain will forever be there, but you’re not alone,” Aldane Brooks said.

Police release photo of shooter's car on school campus and locked door that was shot out to gain entry

In a tweet, Metro Nashville Police shared a photo of the car driven by Covenant School shooter Audrey Hale as well as the doors that the shooter shot out to gain entry into the school.

Inside the vehicle, additional material written by the shooter was found, the tweet said.

“Active shooter Audrey Elizabeth Hale, 28, drove this Honda Fit to the Covenant Church/school campus this morning and parked. MNPD detectives searched it and found additional material written by Hale.”

In a second tweet, police released photos of the doors the shooter shot out to enter the building.

“Hale entered the Covenant building after shooting out the glass of these doors,” the tweet said.

Survivor of Illinois shooting was visiting Nashville when she heard about today's shooting

Ashbey Beasley speaks about gun safety legislation on Monday in an interview with CNN.

A survivor of the Highland Park, Illinois shooting in July was visiting Nashville at time of Monday’s shooting at Covenant School.

Ashbey Beasley told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Monday evening that she was visiting her sister-in-law in Nashville and was set to have lunch with a friend when she heard about the shooting.

Following the Highland Park shooting, Beasley has joined a gun violence prevention group and dedicated her life to making a change with gun laws.

“It’s the access to guns that is killing us,” Beasley said, “We’re not going to see any change until our lawmakers step up and pass gun safety legislation,”

“Unfortunately that’s where we’re at, we have to take care of each other, survivors have to take care of each other,” Beasley said.

Beasley jumped in a news conference earlier Monday, following the Nashville shooting, to protest against gun violence.

Former president Barack Obama took to Twitter to share the video of Beasley during that news conference saying, “We are failing our children. Guns are now the leading cause of death for children in the U.S. Michelle and I mourn with the students and families of the Covenant School today.” 

Nashville shooter may have resented having to attend Covenant School, chief says

The shooter who killed six people at Covenant School in Nashville Monday may have resented having to attend the school in the past, according to Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake.

Police said Monday they believe the 28-year-old shooter attended the school, but they weren’t sure what years.

Drake said the shooter targeted random people in the school.

Police continue to investigate the school shooting that killed 6 in Nashville. Here's what we know now

Mario Dennis, one of the kitchen staff at the Covenant School, sits near a police officer after a shooting at the facility in Nashville, Tennessee, on Monday.

At least three students and three adults are dead following a shooting at the Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee, the Metro Nashville Police Department said Monday. The students who were killed were all 9 years old, police said.

The shooter, who was identified as a 28-year-old former student of the school, was also killed in a shootout with police.

Here’s what we know so far:

  • About Covenant School: The school is a private Christian school founded in 2001 as a ministry of Covenant Presbyterian Church. It has an average enrollment of about 200 people in recent years, according to its website, and it teaches preschool through 6th grade.
  • What happened: Don Aaron, spokesperson for the Metro Nashville Police Department, said the first calls of an active shooting came in at around 10:15 a.m. local time. When officers arrived, they went through the first level of the building, he said. They then heard gunshots coming from the second level of the building, according to Aaron. He said that’s where police confronted and killed the shooter at 10:27 a.m. local time.
  • The shooter: The shooter has been identified as 28-year-old Nashville resident Audrey Hale. The shooter was armed with a handgun and two AR-style weapons — one a rifle and an AR-style pistol, Metro Nashville Police Chief John Drake said. Two of those may have been obtained legally and locally in Nashville, Drake said. According to initial findings, the shooter was once a student at the school, he added, though he said police are unsure what years.
  • Prior planning: The shooter had drawn detailed maps of Covenant School, Drake said, including the entry points to the building and detailing “how this was all gonna take place.” Drake said police believe the shooter shot through one of the doors to get into the school. Drake said the school was the only location targeted by the shooter. Police have also located writings that they are reviewing.
  • The victims: The three students who were shot and killed at Covenant School were all 9 years old, police said. They have been identified as Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs and William Kinney, according to police. Three adults were also killed in the shooting. They have been identified as 61-year-old Cynthia Peak, 60-year-old Katherine Koonce and 61-year-old Mike Hill, police said.
  • What’s next: Police will spend the next two days processing the scene and working to gather more details about what happened during a shooting at a Nashville elementary school, Aaron said, adding police also intend to release video soon. Officials said they knew where the shooter lived and they have interviewed the shooter’s father.
  • Call for gun safety legislation: President Joe Biden called the shooting at a Nashville school “heartbreaking, a family’s worst nightmare,” while advocating for gun reform. Biden said Congress needs to pass an assault weapons ban because we “need to do more to protect our schools.” However, a bipartisan solution is extremely unlikely this Congress with a slim Democratic majority in the Senate and a GOP-led House. Nashville Mayor John Cooper said too many children are dying from guns and that the community needs to come together to support each other.
  • Mass shootings in America: There have been at least 130 mass shooting in the US so far in 2023, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive. The Gun Violence Archive, like CNN, defines a mass shooting as one in which at least four people are shot, excluding the shooter. 

Presbyterian Church in America sends "heartfelt concerns and prayers" to shooting victims

In a statement sent to CNN, Bryan Chapell of the Presbyterian Church in America expressed the church’s condolences to the victims of the Covenant School shooting.

Covenant School was founded as a ministry of the Covenant Presbyterian Church, according to its website. The church is part of the Presbyterian Church in America.

Police expected to be processing shooting scene into Tuesday

Metro Nashville Police officers gather near The Covenant School, in Nashville, Tennessee on Monday.

Police will spend the next two days processing the scene and working to gather more details about what happened during a shooting at a Nashville elementary school, the Metro Nashville Police Department said.

This will likely occur Monday evening into Tuesday, said the department’s spokesperson, Don Aaron.

Aaron said police also intend to release video soon.

Police also said they knew where the shooter lived and they interviewed the shooter’s father and will continue their investigation.

Shooter identified as 28-year-old Nashville resident

According to Metropolitan Nashville Police Chief John Drake, the person who killed six people, including three children at Covenant School in Nashville Monday has been identified as Audrey Hale, a 28-year-old Nashville resident. 

Drake said that they have determined that maps were drawn of the school with details of surveillance and entry points.

The shooter gained entry into the school by shooting through one of the doors, he added. 

Drake said police have interviewed the shooter’s father.

Shooter had 2 AR-style weapons and a handgun, police chief says

A weapon allegedly used at the Covenant School by the mass shooting suspect is seen in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. on March 27.

The suspect in Monday’s shooting was armed with three firearms, Metro Nashville Police Department Chief John Drake said.