Morning of Terror at Va. Tech Campus

By SHARON COHEN
The Associated Press
Monday, April 16, 2007; 11:50 PM

-- The first crackle of gunfire shattered the Monday morning calm. It was 7:15 a.m. on the campus of Virginia Tech and an epic killing spree had just begun.

Snow was swirling on the windy April day and classes had not yet started when a murderous rampage that would shake the nation started in a coed dormitory, West Ambler Johnston, home to 895 people.


Virginia Tech student Gerald Goad, 21, leaves his Ambler-Johnston Hall dorm at the school in Blacksburg, Va., Monday, April 16, 2007. A gunman opened fire in a Virginia Tech dorm and then, two hours later, shot up a classroom building across campus Monday, killing 32 people in the deadliest shooting rampage in U.S. history. The gunman committed suicide, bringing the death toll to 33. (AP Photo/Allen Breed)
Virginia Tech student Gerald Goad, 21, leaves his Ambler-Johnston Hall dorm at the school in Blacksburg, Va., Monday, April 16, 2007. A gunman opened fire in a Virginia Tech dorm and then, two hours later, shot up a classroom building across campus Monday, killing 32 people in the deadliest shooting rampage in U.S. history. The gunman committed suicide, bringing the death toll to 33. (AP Photo/Allen Breed) (Allen Breed - AP)

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The first reports of trouble were tragic, but small in scope, giving no hint of the massacre about to unfold in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia: One person was dead, another injured.

The official word to students apparently did not come right away.

In a mass e-mail, Virginia Tech officials announced that a shooting had occurred at the dorm and that police were on the scene, and they urged anyone in the university community to "be cautious" and contact police if they saw anything suspicious or had information.

The e-mail was signed off at 9:26 a.m.

Police would later say they thought the two had been shot in a domestic dispute. They thought the gunman had fled the campus.

"We secured the building; we secured the crime scene," Virginia Tech Police Chief Wendell Flinchum said. For a long while, there were no new reports of anything suspicious.

Classes on the Blacksburg, Va., campus had gone ahead as scheduled; the first period began at 8 a.m. The doors of the buildings remained open. And the heavily armed gunman with a motive yet unknown had set his sights elsewhere, at Norris Hall, an engineering building nearly a half-mile away on the 2,600-acre campus.

Police believe the shooting at Norris began around 9:45 a.m. The building's doors had been chained shut, possibly by the gunman, authorities said.

Brittany Zachar, an 18-year-old freshman who lives at West Ambler Johnston, decided to attend an economics class even though she saw a handwritten sign on pink paper posted in the dorm bathroom saying something had happened and going to class was optional.

As she walked on campus, she heard the pop of gunshots coming from the direction of Norris Hall. She saw police running.


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