Disgruntled law student kills three in US school

US: A disgruntled law student yesterday shot and killed the school's dean, another member of staff, and a fellow student in …

US: A disgruntled law student yesterday shot and killed the school's dean, another member of staff, and a fellow student in a small rural school in Virginia. Three others were injured before students subdued the killer, according to state police.The Appalachian School of Law is in Grundy, Buchanan County, near the Kentucky border. It has a student body of only 170.

Early reports say that the foreign exchange student had been upset at his grades and had opened fire with a semi-automatic pistol.

He was tackled and apprehended by his fellow students after killing the dean and firing on others and is now in custody. "It looked like a war zone," Dr Jack Briggs, the local coroner who was one of the first on the scene reported.

He said the killer was a former patient of his who he treated for stress. He believed the student was about to be expelled from the school.

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The dean, Dr Anthony Sutin, is a former US Assistant Attorney General for Legislative Affairs, who served in the Clinton administration, under Ms Janet Reno. The law school opened in 1997 in a renovated junior high school in this small town 120 miles west of Roanoke.

The school was opened to ease a historic shortage of lawyers in the coalfields of southwest Virginia, and to help change the region's image and foster renewal in Appalachia. The first class of 34 graduated in 2000. The school has about 15 academic staff. However, despite a number of celebrated school killing incidents, including the Columbine massacre, US schools are becoming safer.

There are fewer violent deaths every year, although there has been an increase in incidents involving multiple victims.

The FBI Uniform Crime Reports showed that between 1993 and 1999, youth homicides decreased 68 per cent to their lowest rate since 1966. And in 1998, the National Crime Victimisation Survey showed that youth crime overall was at its lowest rate in the survey's 25-year history.

The number of children killed in school violence is about half the number of Americans killed every year by lightning. A federal study of 253 school-related violent deaths published last week found that in most cases there were warning signs, such as a note, journal entry or a threat. The killings were usually not random but stemmed from personal disputes over romance or money, or were related to gang activity. Student killers were more likely to have been bullied by peers, been involved in discipline problems at school and uninvolved in school activities.

Patrick Smyth

Patrick Smyth

Patrick Smyth is former Europe editor of The Irish Times