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JURY POLL
Hundreds of students take refuge in Toronto high school after boy, 15, shot dead
DATE: May 23, 05:08 PM

By Tobi Cohen and Kristine Owram
TORONTO (CP) — Hundreds of frightened students took refuge in their classrooms for hours Wednesday as frantic parents descended on a high school after a 15-year-old student was killed by a single bullet, setting off calls to rid city streets of handguns.
One student at C.W. Jeffreys Collegiate Institute in north Toronto said a female classmate was so upset she wept and vomited as heavily armed tactical units scoured hallways and classrooms looking for a shooter.
The city’s police chief said students deserve safe schools while the mayor blamed guns for the latest eruption of school violence to send shock waves across the country.
The victim, identified by friends as Grade 9’s Jordan Manners, was described as a “sweet little boy” who turned 15 last Friday. Police were unable to provide any information about his killer.
“A young man lost his life, a young student lost his life in the school,” a grim Toronto police Chief Bill Blair said outside the school.
“Students have a right to a safe school environment. It is shocking that such a crime could take place in our schools.”
The boy was shot around 2:30 p.m. Officers received a call about a possible drowning, but arrived at the school to find a teenage boy in a corridor suffering from a single gunshot wound, prompting the lockdown.
Toronto Mayor David Miller said the incident underscores the need to crack down on gun crimes in the city.
“Handguns have one purpose, and that is to kill, and it really reinforces what we’ve been saying for quite a while at the city,” Miller told TV station CP24.
“We absolutely have to get the guns off the streets. It’s going to require some changes to our laws, but it has to be done.”
Sixteen-year-old student Jonathan Martin said C.W. Jeffreys has a reputation as a rough school, but the violence that erupted was too much for one teenage girl.
“A girl in my class fainted … she was crying and vomiting,” said Martin.
The police appealed for students to remain calm and assured parents their children were safe even as they remained locked down. Nonetheless, anguished parents gathered outside the school, some trying to reach their children by cellphone.
“I am feeling so distraught,” said Patricia Hudson, as she waited for news about her son, a Grade 12 student.
“It’s crazy trying to get answers — I can’t get no answers,” said a frustrated Robert Beatty, the father of another Grade 12 student.
Many of the students ran to embrace their tearful parents as the lockdown was lifted. The students then boarded Toronto transit buses and were brought to another nearby school before being allowed to return to the safety of their homes.
The school is located near the Jane-Finch corridor, a poor area of Toronto noted for years for its high crime rate.
Even without any answers about who would have committed such a crime or for what reason, politicians offered their condolences while focusing on the urgent need to address school violence.
“I speak for all Ontarians when I condemn and deplore the violence we’ve seen here today,” Premier Dalton McGuinty said in a statement. “I want the entire community at C.W. Jeffreys C.I. to know that they are in my thoughts and prayers at this difficult time.”
Opposition Leader John Tory called the shooting a “disgusting act” and lamented the frequency of school violence.
“Like many people, I grew up in a time where the notion of a school lockdown was a foreign one,” he said. “Now it seems like they’re almost common place. It’s clear we all must do much better and we can’t stand by and let this happen in our schools.”
Ontario’s education minister suggested this generation of children lack a sense of belonging and direction.
“We have to make sure there are programs in our communities so kids have things to do and have opportunities,” said Kathleen Wynne. “It really starts with kids feeling like they have hope and feeling like they have a place to belong.”
Neighbours remembered Manners as a “sweet little boy.”
“I just feel sorry for the kid and his family,” said a neighbourhood friend who had known Manners since he was in kindergarten. “He just didn’t deserve that.”
The neighbourhood is in mourning, said a woman who would only identify herself as Elaine.
“Every mother is crying,” she said. “He’s very friendly, active and loves kickball.”
Students leaving the school after the lockdown said the shooting happened near a pool area on first floor.
“It was scary because a guy from my class got shot,” said a 15-year-old girl who asked that her name not be used.
She said her friends were crying and were told to stay in class, where the doors and windows were shut.
The Toronto District School Board’s website said the school has about 850 students.
The shooting comes a little more than a month after a gunman killed 32 people at Virginia Tech before taking his own life.
In September, a gunman at Montreal’s Dawson College killed a student and wounded 20 others before he died from police gunfire.
*****
(CP) – A list of some major violent incidents at Canadian schools:
May 23, 2007: Gunman shoots and kills 14-year-old student at C.W. Jefferys Collegiate Institute in Toronto.
Sept. 13, 2006: Kimveer Gill, 25, opens fire at Dawson College in Montreal, killing one woman and injuring 20 people.
April 20, 2000: Four students and one staff member wounded in knife attack at Cairine Wilson High School in Orleans, Ont. Occurs on first anniversary of Columbine massacre.
April 28, 1999: 14-year-old boy shoots two students, one fatally, at W.R. Myers High School in Taber, Alta.
Feb. 8, 1999: Man fires shot at Woodland Elementary School in Verdun, Que. No one injured.
October 1997: 35-year-old man fatally shoots teacher at Montreal language school for immigrants.
October 1994: Two guidance counsellors at Brockton High School in Toronto shot and wounded by student unhappy with grades.
June 1993: Teen wounded outside Gladstone Secondary School in Vancouver in drive-by shooting.
Aug. 24, 1992: Valery Fabrikant, professor at Concordia University in Montreal, goes on shooting rampage at school, killing four colleagues and wounding one.
February 1990: Jilted teenager shoots and wounds estranged girlfriend at General Brock High School in Burlington, Ont.
December 1989: Marc Lepine, 25, shoots dead 14 women at University of Montreal’s Ecole polytechnique engineering school, then kills himself.
October 1978: 17-year-old student shoots 16-year-old to death at Sturgeon Creek Regional Secondary School in Winnipeg.
Oct. 27, 1975: Robert Poulin, an 18-year-old militia sharpshooter, shoots six people at Ottawa’s Saint Pius X school and then kills himself. One wounded student dies just over a month later. Poulin had killed a girl at a youth home before he went to the school.
May 1975: Michael Slobodian, 16, kills teacher and student and wounds 13 others at Centennial Secondary School in Brampton, Ont., before turning gun on himself.
-
Outbreaks of violence at U.S. and Canadian schools
(CP) – A list of some major violent incidents at North American schools:
May 23, 2007: Gunman shoots and kills 14-year-old student at C.W. Jefferys Collegiate Institute in Toronto.
April 16, 2007: Deadliest shooting rampage in U.S. history as gunman opens fire in a dorm and classroom at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Va. The toll is 33 dead, including the gunman, who committed suicide.
Oct. 2, 2006: A 32-year-old gunman enters an Amish schoolhouse in Nickel Mines, Pa., and holds 10 girls hostage before shooting them. Five girls are killed, and five more wounded. The gunman also kills himself.
Sept. 13, 2006: Kimveer Gill, 25, opens fire at Dawson College in Montreal, killing one woman and injuring 20 people.
Aug. 30, 2006: 19-year-old man in Hillsborough, N.C., kills father, then opens fire at Orange High School, wounding two students before surrendering to police.
March 14, 2006: 14-year-old boy in Reno, Nev., bring’s father’s revolver to Pine Middle School and wounds two classmates.
Jan. 13, 2006: 15-year-old boy at Milwee Middle School in Longwood, Fla., holds class hostage at gunpoint before being fatally shot by police. It is later learned his weapon was a pellet gun.
Nov. 8, 2005: Student at high school in Jacksboro, Tenn., shoots and kills assistant principal. Principal and another assistant principal wounded.
March 21, 2005: 16-year-old boy in Red Lake, Minn., fatally shoots grandfather and grandfather’s partner at home, then goes to Red Lake High School, where he kills five students, a teacher and a security guard before committing suicide.
May 7, 2004: Two men, 18 and 24, shoot and wound four students at high school in Randallstown, Md.
March 30, 2004: Student at Wallace High School in Gary, Ind., shot to death in school parking lot by classmate.
Feb. 3, 2004: 14-year-old boy in Palmetto Bay, Fla., stabs and slits throat of 14-year-old classmate at Southwood Middle School.
Feb. 2, 2004: 19-year-old man shoots to death 17-year-old boy at Ballou Senior High School in Washington, D.C.
Sept. 24, 2003: 15-year-old boy shoots two classmates at Rocori High School in Cold Spring, Minn. One dies same day, other dies two weeks later.
April 24, 2003: 14-year-old boy shoots principal to death in school cafeteria in Red Lion, Pa., before killing himself.
March 5, 2001: 15-year-old freshman opens fire with .22-calibre pistol at Santana High School in Santee, Calif., killing two students and injuring 13 others.
Jan. 10, 2001: 17-year-old gunman fires shots at Hueneme High School in Oxnard, Calif., before taking female student hostage. He is later shot and killed by police.
May 26, 2000: 13-year-old honours student shoots and kills teacher on last day of classes in Lake Worth, Fla.
April 20, 2000: Four students and one staff member wounded in knife attack at Cairine Wilson High School in Orleans, Ont. Occurs on first anniversary of Columbine massacre.
Feb. 29, 2000: Six-year-old boy shoots six-year-old girl to death in Grade 1 classroom at Buell Elementary School in Mount Morris Township, Mich. Because of his age, boy is not charged.
Dec. 6, 1999: 13-year-old student fires at least 15 shots at Fort Gibson Middle School in Fort Gibson, Okla., wounding four classmates.
Nov. 19, 1999: 12-year-old boy shoots 13-year-old girl in head at school in Deming, N.M. Girl dies next day.
May 20, 1999: 15-year-old boy opens fire at Heritage High School in Conyers, Ga., with .357-calibre Magnum and rifle, wounding six students.
April 28, 1999: 14-year-old boy shoots two students, one fatally, at W.R. Myers High School in Taber, Alta.
April 20, 1999: Two heavily armed teenagers rampage through Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., killing 12 students and one teacher before committing suicide.
April 16, 1999: High school sophomore fires two shotgun blasts in school hallway in Notus, Idaho. No one injured.
Feb. 8, 1999: Man fires shot at Woodland Elementary School in Verdun, Que. No one injured.
May 21, 1998: 17-year-old boy kills parents, then goes to high school in Springfield, Ore., on shooting rampage, killing two teens and wounding more than 20 people.
May 19, 1998: 18-year-old honours student opens fire at high school in Fayetteville, Tenn., killing classmate who was dating his ex-girlfriend.
April 24, 1998: 15-year-old boy opens fire at eighth-grade dance in Edinboro, Pa., killing teacher.
March 24, 1998: Four girls and teacher shot to death and 10 people wounded during false fire alarm at middle school in Jonesboro, Ark., when two boys, 11 and 13, open fire from woods.
Dec. 1, 1997: Three students die and five wounded at Heath High School in West Paducah, Ky., after 14-year-old boy opens fire.
October 1997: 35-year-old man fatally shoots teacher at Montreal language school for immigrants.
Oct. 1, 1997: 16-year-old boy in Pearl, Miss., shoots two students to death and wounds seven others after stabbing his mother to death.
Feb. 19, 1997: 16-year-old boy takes shotgun and bag of shells to school in Bethel, Alaska, killing principal and student and wounding two others.
October 1994: Two guidance counsellors at Brockton High School in Toronto shot and wounded by student unhappy with grades.
June 1993: Teen wounded outside Gladstone Secondary School in Vancouver in drive-by shooting.
Aug. 24, 1992: Valery Fabrikant, professor at Concordia University in Montreal, goes on shooting rampage at school, killing four colleagues and wounding one.
February 1990: Jilted teenager shoots and wounds estranged girlfriend at General Brock High School in Burlington, Ont.
December 1989: Marc Lepine, 25, shoots dead 14 women at University of Montreal’s Ecole polytechnique engineering school, then kills himself.
October 1978: 17-year-old student shoots 16-year-old to death at Sturgeon Creek Regional Secondary School in Winnipeg.
Oct. 27, 1975: Robert Poulin, an 18-year-old militia sharpshooter, shoots six people at Ottawa’s Saint Pius X school and then kills himself. One wounded student dies just over a month later. Poulin had killed a girl at a youth home before he went to the school.
May 1975: Michael Slobodian, 16, kills teacher and student and wounds 13 others at Centennial Secondary School in Brampton, Ont., before turning gun on himself.
