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Teacher Tackles Ex-Student With Pipe Bombs
This is a discussion on Teacher Tackles Ex-Student With Pipe Bombs within the Off-Topic forums, part of the General category; Principal, Counselor Help Hold Suspect Down SAN MATEO, Calif. -- When a former student entered Hillsdale High School on Monday ...
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08-25-2009, 01:05 PM #1
Teacher Tackles Ex-Student With Pipe Bombs
Principal, Counselor Help Hold Suspect Down
SAN MATEO, Calif. -- When a former student entered Hillsdale High School on Monday with 10 pipe bombs, a sword and a chainsaw, teacher Kenneth Santana reacted.
Santana said Tuesday he was merely reacting to the chaos around him when he tackled and subdued the former student.
Santana’s actions were praised by police for preventing a Columbine-style massacre at the school attended by more than 1,000 students, KTVU-TV reported.
He told the station his Monday had a pretty normal start. It was around 8 a.m., and he had just checked in at the school office when the events began to unfold.
“I was on my way to make some copies,” he said. “I heard the first bang --- it sounded more like a crash to me. So that slowed me down. The second bang came right after that. There was a rush of students and teachers going away from the noise.”
What Santana did not know at the time was the noise was two pipe bombs exploding in a hallway. Fortunately, no one was injured by the blasts. Instead of joining the exodus out of school, Santana decided to go toward the noise.
“I decided to turn around and go back the way I came, and that’s when the young man came through some glass doors,“ he said. “We were facing each other face-to-face.”
“I did not recognize him,” he said “I just started my third year at Hillsdale High School, so I haven’t been there very long.”
But what Santana did recognize was the military-style vest the young man was wearing.
“It was a reaction, it was really quick,” he said. “After I had my hands on him, I made decisions about what I wanted to do. But closing the distance and grabbing the young man, there wasn’t a lot thinking involved in that.”
“Once he was on the ground,” Santana said, “I saw one pipe bomb in a back pocket. What I did realize, I kind of recognized, was the type of vest he had on. It was a tactical vest.”
The English language development teacher wasted little time subduing the suspect.
“I put him in a bear hug and then I decided to flip him and put him on the ground,” he said. “That’s when the thinking came in -- I thought -- ’If I'm wrong, I’ll apologize to his parents later, and if I’m right I’m going to hold this kid down.’”
At that moment, a teacher came out of a nearby classroom and Santana told her to go get help.
“That’s when the principal (Jeff Gilbert) came with another counselor,” he said. “Between the three of us -- the principal took an arm, I held onto an arm and (the counselor) took the legs. We restrained the kid until the police came.”
When asked if the young man said anything to him, Santana said, “He said he couldn’t breathe -- which was too bad for him, I guess.”
Santana said that 24 hours later he was not having any second thoughts about the risks he took.
“I definitely feel like I did the right thing,” he said. “When I think about the risk, I never really looked at his hands, so thinking back, if he had something in his hands that would have been bad for me.”
“I haven’t had enough time to realize the danger I was in,” he continued. “I slept well last night.”
But his heroics were not lost on San Mateo Police Lt. Mike Brunicardi.
"All the while that the teachers and principal are confronting this kid, holding him down and tackling him, he's got eight live pipe bombs attached to his person," he said.
Meanwhile, the 17-year-old suspect remained in juvenile custody Tuesday while authorities decided on what charges will be filed against him. The high school was closed for the day.
Well done!!Last edited by Blitz1; 08-25-2009 at 01:11 PM.
"Criminals don't obey laws" - Common Sense
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08-25-2009, 01:08 PM #2
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08-25-2009, 01:08 PM #3
Thankfully this wasn't in MA.
Originally Posted by Martha Coakley
“Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms (of government) those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny”
“The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government”
If you live in Massachusetts protect your 2nd Amendment rights and donate... Comm2a.org
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08-25-2009, 01:09 PM #4
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08-25-2009, 01:12 PM #5
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08-25-2009, 01:18 PM #6NES Member
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What's the over/under for this kid's parents filing a lawsuit against the school saying that the faculty had no right to lay a hand on their son?
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08-25-2009, 01:19 PM #7
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08-25-2009, 01:21 PM #8
Another DOOM fan huh? (Chainsaw).
Penn&Teller did an episode on video game violence... Even the Harvard researchers called BS... That was a good show...
"We cannot but pity the boy who has never fired a gun; he is no more humane, while his education has been sadly neglected." - Henry David Thoreau
Hasa diga Terror
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08-25-2009, 01:51 PM #9
That's a good man, there.
Hopefully more will do what he did, when faced with something like that.
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08-25-2009, 01:51 PM #10
Oh man, I hope the liberals don't start trying to blame video games for this one too. I'm a gamer, and mostly everything I play is a little extreme on the violence. Some people aren't playing with a full deck, but I hardly feel it's the video game's fault when those people do something. The problem is people who aren't playing with a full deck, not violent video games.
Not to get too OT, but in the end, it's much the same argument as it is with guns. Should guns be taken away from all just because there's people out there who can't be trusted? Nope. Should video games be taken away just because there's people out there who can't be trusted? Nope.


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