Second fire alarm of school day, then gunfire and chaos

Jim Gard has been a math teacher for 36 years. One of the basics of the job is that “you’re responsible for the kids every day,” he said Wednesday. But “certainly, today was different.”

Gard’s math class at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, was just finishing up a review for a test Wednesday when “the fire alarm went off, which I thought was unusual because we’d just had a fire drill.”

It wasn’t another fire drill, or even a fire. It was far, far worse. Authorities said Nikolas Cruz, a 19-year-old man who’d recently been expelled from the school, had returned to campus and opened fire with an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle. Seventeen people were killed. More than a dozen others were wounded, five of them with life-threatening injuries.

Because they’d just had a fire drill, Gard told his students to wait a minute before leaving, but then “our administrator got on and said, ‘Evacuate the building,'” he told MSNBC on Wednesday night.

A superseding announcement quickly came, he said: “code red.” All but six of his students fled, Gard said; following protocol, he and the rest returned to the building, hid in a closet and “just turned the lights off, as you’re supposed to do in a code red — you know, an active shooter.”

Gard said that all of his students had been accounted for and that, “thank goodness, they’re safe.”

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Melissa Fulkowski, an English and journalism teacher, told a similar story — she and her class evacuated because of the fire alarm but returned to the classroom when the code red was declared. They, too, hid in a closet until a SWAT team showed up.

Because her classroom is on the other end of the campus and had been cleared, more students and teachers were taken there — about 150 in all, Falkowski told MSNBC — before they were moved off campus.

Falkowski said she and her colleagues were frantically texting one another for more information. That’s when she learned that one of her colleagues was among the injured.

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Falkowski said she didn’t know Cruz but had heard students talking about him.

Broward County schools Superintendent Robert Runcie said Wednesday that Cruz had recently been expelled from Douglas for disciplinary reasons and was currently enrolled in another school in the district. Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said investigators were reviewing social media postings that he described as “very disturbing.”

“It was just a normal day,” Falkowski said. “In the past, there have been threats made on social media, and in my experience at our school, when they’re aware of those threats, they take precautions, and they investigate and take the precautions at school to make sure nothing happens.”

Image: Nikolas Cruz Image: Nikolas Cruz

Nikolas Cruz during his arrest after a fatal shooting Wednesday at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

Many students, like Eddie Bonilla, a senior, described the suspect with words like “a little bit off” and “troubled.”

Cruz used to show off his guns, brag about shooting them “for fun” and “threatened to bring the guns to school multiple times,” Bonilla said. Other students, he said, “threw jokes around that he’d be the one to shoot up the school.”

But Gard said Cruz left little impression when he was a student in one of his classes last year.

“I never had any problems with him,” Gard said Wednesday night. “He wasn’t a problem in class — but that was over a year ago.”