A teenager who opened fire with a 9 mm pistol in his Nashville high school cafeteria fired a total of 10 shots within 17 seconds of entering the room, according to police.
Two people were shot before the shooter turned the gun on themselves at Antioch High School in Nashville, Wednesday, according to officials.
Law enforcement officials seeking a motive for a shooting at Nashville’s Antioch High School on Wednesday morning are examining alarming social media posts and writings tied to a teenager police say shot and killed a 16-year-old girl.
One student is dead and another is wounded after a third student opened fire with a pistol Wednesday at Antioch High School in Nashville, Tennessee, police said. The 17-year-old shooter then shot himself and died, according to police.
A bill that would provide metal detectors for Tennessee schools but stalled in committee last session is expected to continue through the legislature.
Details are emerging surrounding the alleged online writings of the gunman at Antioch High School as investigators in Nashville, Tennessee, are looking for a motive.
An AI gun detection system installed in a Nashville, Tennessee high school couldn’t spot the gun a 17-year-old used to fatally shoot another student and himself earlier this week, according to district officials.
The deadly shooting is the latest to rock the Nashville community nearly two years after another school massacre sparked a debate for gun reform.
Police say the gun used in the Nashville school shooting was purchased in Arizona as detectives piece together why the high school student fatally shot a classmate before killing himself
Nashville police said teen fired 10 shots from a nine-millimeter pistol 17 seconds after entering the cafeteria at Antioch High Wednesday.
Mayor Freddie O'Connell on Thursday announced a new Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee fund for victims in the Antioch High shooting.