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Student gunman kills 2, wounds 3 others at Southern California high school

A Southern California high school student killed two classmates and wounded three others on Thursday, pulling a .45 calibresemiautomatic handgun from his backpack and emptying it in a matter of seconds as the school day began.

Sheriff says attacker, 16, is in grave condition after shooting himself

Marco Reynoso hugs his son, 11th-grader Dylan Reynoso, after reuniting at a park near Saugus High School after a shooting at the school left two students dead and three wounded in Santa Clarita, Calif. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

A Southern California high school student killed two classmates and wounded three others on Thursday, pulling a .45 calibresemiautomatic handgun from his backpack and emptying it in a matter of seconds as the school day began.

He saved the last bullet for himself. It was his 16th birthday.

The teenaged gunman, whose name was not provided by police, survived the self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head but was in grave condition in hospital, law enforcement officials said.

Capt.Kent Wegener of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department told reporters the entire incident, captured on videotape, took 16 seconds as the young man stood in one spot and fired on one student after another.

(CBC)

"From right where he was standing, he doesn't chase anybody, he fires from where he is until he shoots himself," Wegener said.

The scene at Saugus High School was reminiscent of other mass shootings at U.S. schools, including Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., where a former student with an assault gun killed 17 people on Feb. 14, 2018.

85th incidence of gunfire at a school this year

It was the 85th incidence of gunfire at a school this year, according to Everytown, a gun control advocacy group. It seems sure to reignite a debate over gun control in the 2020 presidential election.

Wegener said the suspect posted a message on an Instagram account before the shooting that said: "Saugus have fun at school tomorrow." But a spokeswoman for Instagram's parent company Facebook later told Reuters that the account did not belong to the suspect. The post was taken down and the account removed.

The two slain students were a 16-year-old girl and a 14-year-old boy. Two other girls, aged 14 and 15, were wounded, as was a 14-year old boy, Wegener said.

Students are evacuated from Saugus High School. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Investigators said they did not yet know what led the student to open fire at the school 65 kmnorth of Los Angeles.

Introverted, quiet and sad

Police said the accused shooter had acted alone. Investigators descended on his family home, blocking off the street. They found no further danger there.

A next-door neighbour, registered nurse Jared Axen, said the suspect had seemed introverted, quiet and sad, possibly despondent over the loss of his father from a heart attack in December 2017.

Students are comforted as they wait to be reunited with their parents following the shooting. (Ringo H.W. Chiu/The Associated Press)

Axen, 33, said it was the boy who found his father deceased, not long after the older man had regained his sobriety and gotten his life "back on track" after years of struggling with alcohol abuse.

"I would say he [the boy]was hurting and couldn't ask for help," Axen said of the suspect, who was a track athlete at the school, involved in Boy Scouts and liked the outdoors, going on hunting trips with his father.

'We need to say "No more!"'

He was of mixed race, born to Japanese-born mother and white father, with an older sister who became a nurse and moved away.

"I would ask him how school was.... He would never bring up concerns of bullying or being a loner there," Axen said.

A suspect in the shooting is being treated at a local hospital for a gunshot wound to the head. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

There was no immediate word on where the teen gunman obtained the weapon.

"How do we come out of tragedy? We need to say 'No more!' This is a tragic event. It happens too frequently," said Capt.Robert Lewis of Santa Clarita Valley sheriff's station, striking an emotional note in an otherwise sombrenews conference.

'We've had drills. It doesn't prepare you'

A 16-year-old Saugus High School junior named Pamela, who spoke to Reuters on condition that she not give her last name, said she was in her first-period choir class when some girls ran into the room and said there was a shooting going on.

"Our teacher immediately grabbed a fire extinguisher and got us into her office and locked the door," Pamela said, adding that one of the girls had been shot in the shoulder.

Taylor Hardges reported seeing people running in the hallways shouting "Run!" She raced into a classroom, where a teacher barricaded the room.

"We've had drills. It doesn't prepare you for the real thing," she said after reuniting with her father at a designated spot in Santa Clarita's Central Park.

Her father, Terrence Hardges, said he felt his heart race after Taylor texted him from inside the classroom with the message: "I love you. I'm pinned in a room. We're locked in."

It is the second tragedy in just over two weeks for Santa Clarita, a city of around 210,000 in a large brush-covered valley. The Tick Fire forced 50,000 people to flee in the valley and closed schools in the area, including Saugus. Central Park, the reunification point for the shootings, was the command control centrefor the wildfire.