Dallas (AP) – Educational boycott officials announced on Tuesday night that a suspect at a school at Dallas High School, which has suffered four students and attracted a severe response to the police on the campus had been detained.
Three students were injured by the shooting and the fourth was injured at the bottom of the body, according to the Dallas Rescue Department. The department said that the units were sent to the Wilmer Hatchens High School after one in the afternoon and that the four students, all of whom were males, were transferred to hospitals that suffer from injuries ranging from serious life.
“For a complete frankness, this has become just very familiar. It should not be familiar,” Stephanie Ellad, who supervises the independent province of Dallas, told a news conference.
The educational area said in a statement on Tuesday night that the suspect was arrested within hours of the shooting, but he did not provide details about the person or say whether he was arrested.
Christina Smith, the police chief in the independent Dallas Province, said at the former press conference that the investigation was fluid and had no information about what led to the shooting.
Dallas said, “The three who were shot dead were between the ages of 15 and 18, while the age of a person with” muscle and bone injury “was not known.
Educational boycott officials and police provided some details during the press conference held several hours after the shooting, which attracted a large number of police and other law enforcement agents to the campus of approximately 1,000 students.
“I know there are many questions and we will not get all the answers at the present time because some information will be inaccurate,” she said.
The authorities said that other students and their parents had been safely reunited after the students were evacuated early in the campus. On Tuesday afternoon, air television footage captured high school showed the multiple police vehicles.
Elisded said that there will be no high school school for the rest of the week, but the advisers will be available to students.
Smith said that Venice did not come to school during the “normal entry time”. “It was not the failure of our employees, our protocols, or the mechanism we have,” she said. But she said she could not explain it.
Shona Williams, who has the Taliban on the campus, said after the shooting she is now considering home education. In the same school last April, one of the student shot another in the leg.
“I cannot continue this as a parent,” she said to the Dallas TV station KDFW. “I tell you, it is very frightening to think about losing your child and children.”
“Our hearts go out to the victims of this meaningless act of violence,” Texas Greg Abbott said in a statement.