Student charged with attempted murder after gunshot at New Mexico high school

Russell Contreras
Associated Press
A Sandoval County Sheriff's Department deputy stands in front of Cleveland High School following a shots fired call in Rio Rancho, N.M., Thursday, Feb. 14, 2019. A shot was fired Thursday on the grounds of the suburban Albuquerque high school on the anniversary of the Parkland, Florida, high school massacre, but police and school officials said no one was injured and a suspect was in custody.

RIO RANCHO - Authorities say a 16-year-old boy suspected of opening fire inside a New Mexico high school is being charged with three counts of attempting to commit murder.

Police and school officials said no one was injured, but the incident sparked an evacuation and had worried parents rushing to the school on the anniversary of the Parkland, Florida, high school massacre.

Rio Rancho police said in a statement late Thursday that the male student also is facing a felony count of unlawfully carrying a deadly weapon on school grounds. He has been booked into the Bernalillo County Juvenile Detention Center. He was not immediately identified.

“It was extremely scary,” said Rio Rancho Police Chief Stewart Steele. “We just thank God it ended the way it did.”

He said the student had fled the school after the shooting and left the weapon behind. He was spotted by police 30 minutes after the shooting in dry wash near the school, Steele said, and was caught running away.

The shooting occurred around 7 a.m. Police believe the shot had been fired inside a hallway but didn’t know if the shooter has pointed a gun at anyone.

More:Shot fired at Cleveland High School in Rio Rancho, no injuries

Rio Rancho Superintendent V. Sue Cleveland, whose name dons the high school, said at least two students witnessed the gunshot. “They are doing as well as expected,” she said.

More than 2,500 students attend the high school.

School officials said on Twitter that all students were safe, and the district’s other schools were open. They announced later Thursday that classes at the high school would be postponed until Tuesday, the day after Presidents’ Day.

Kristy Berberich said outside the high school that her 16-year-old son called her immediately after students heard a gunshot.

“I was worried sick but I knew he was safe,” she said.

Police and school officials advised parents to stay away from the school and to await word on a plan to pick up students, who were taken to an arena about 3 miles from the school.

The episode comes as thousands of students and others planned a moment of silence to remember the 14 students and three staff members killed last Valentine’s Day at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in the deadliest high school shooting in the nation’s history.

That tragedy — along with a deadly shooting at New Mexico’s Aztec High School in December 2017 — is helping to fuel debate in the state Legislature over an ambitious slate of bills related to firearms and school safety.

The arrival in January of a Democratic governor to succeed a pro-gun rights Republican has opened the door to calls for broader background checks on private gun sales and initiatives to remove firearms from the hands of people who may be suicidal or seen as a danger to others.

Student advocates for new gun safety regulations hold a silent "lie-in" protest in the state Capitol in Santa Fe, N.M., on Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2019, in anticipation of the anniversary Thursday of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. Some wore T-shirts bearing the names of individuals killed in Parkland. The New Mexico House of Representatives was poised to vote on a bill that would make it easier to take guns away from people who may be suicidal or bent on violence.

The gun-seizure measure was passed by the Democrat-led House late Wednesday following an emotionally charged debate. Outside the House chamber, about 30 high-school aged students gathered in the Capitol rotunda to mark the anniversary of the Parkland massacre. They received praise from Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham for pushing peacefully for new gun-safety regulations.

Additional initiatives would ensure teachers cannot carry firearms at schools and expand child neglect laws to encompass the secure storage of household firearms.

Democratic House Speaker Brian Egolf said the episode reinforces the need for gun safety reforms and infrastructure spending to secure schools.

In Rio Rancho, school buses shuttled students to the nearby event center as police cordoned off the school and blocked roads leading to the campus. While no details were immediately released about the suspect in custody or the circumstances of the gunshot, police planned a briefing later Thursday.

Associated Press writers Paul Davenport in Phoenix, Mary Hudetz in Albuquerque and Morgan Lee in Santa Fe contributed to this report.