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School Shooting in Tennessee That National Media Did Not Report
tnsmartgirl.com ^ | 6 January, 2013 | TN Smart Girl

Posted on 01/07/2013 2:30:19 PM PST by marktwain

The following incident happened at a high school only minutes from my home in East Tennessee. I am sure that no one outside of our immediate region has ever heard the story, because the only person who was shot-and killed-was the gunman. These types of stories don’t fit the narrative of those who want “gun-free zones” and so are ignored by the national media. In this case an armed Security Resource Officer, Carolyn Gudger, became a local hero and saved an unknown number of lives by holding the gunman at bay until backup arrived. The text below is drawn from a local news website, Tricities.com. The story is not viewable on mobile devices, probably because it is so old. If you wish to view it on your PC, here is the link: http://tinyurl.com/ckqfcvf Security Resource Officer Carolyn Gudger

“On Monday morning, August 30, 2010, Thomas Richard Cowan loaded 13 bullets into two handguns, left his German shepherd chained to the fence and drove eight miles from his home in Kingsport to Sullivan Central High School. Whatever his mission, it was the 62-year-old Vietnam veteran’s final drive. For about an hour, Cowan’s armed invasion spread panic throughout the school before a burst of officers’ gunfire brought him down. No others were injured.

No one knows why Cowan pointed his Honda in the direction of the Blountville, Tenn., high school, where his brother is a janitor. He is described – in court records and interviews – as a peculiar man with a history of erratic, sometimes criminal, behavior and a deep suspicion of the government. He parked his car Monday morning in a handicapped space just in front of the school’s main entrance. Second period was just getting under way at 9:10 a.m. when Ashley Thacker, a junior, arrived at the main entrance of her high school. Thacker, 16, had been at a doctor’s appointment and was on her way to a music theory class as she approached the locked doors.

She noticed a man standing in the 10-foot waiting area between the two sets of doors, waiting to be buzzed in. His bald crown was framed with brown hair. He had a mustache, she remembered, and he was holding a cane. He told her to go on ahead of him. But she never made it through the doors. Instead, Melanie Riden, principal of Sullivan Central, came striding through the locked doors. “He pulled out his gun and started pointing it at people,” Thacker said. Cowan trained a .380-caliber semi-automatic pistol at Riden’s face, said Sullivan County Sheriff Wayne Anderson.

Carolyn Gudger, the school resource officer, drew her gun, then shielded the principal’s body with her own.

Thacker remembers Cowan shouting something – possibly including the words “10 years” – but she isn’t sure. She turned and ran out the set of public doors to the mulch pile in the front of the school, and hid behind bushes. “He might shoot someone,” Thacker remembered thinking. “I just wanted to get out of there.”

Riden fled and Gudger inched back into the school, leading Cowan through the scattered pastel chairs in the empty cafeteria. It was a tactical move, meant to lure the gunman into a more contained place, Anderson said. Sullivan County dispatch sent out a chilling alert: “Man with a gun at Central High School.”

Gudger told him to drop his weapon; he demanded she drop hers. Once, he tried, unsuccessfully, to lunge for her gun. Cowan repeated one thing only, Anderson said. That he wanted to pull the fire alarms. “I don’t know why, we can only speculate about that and I think everyone will speculate why he wanted to pull a fire alarm,” Anderson said. “Either to get the kids out of class or, I don’t know. We don’t know.”

Flattened against the bushes, Ashley Thacker waited two minutes, she thinks. “I didn’t hear anything else, so I thought Officer Gudger had arrested him.” She was wrong. As she approached the school, two assistant principals opened a window and yelled at her to run away. Crying and shaking, Thacker ran to her car and drove a half-mile to her parents’ business.

The view from the classroom

At about 9:15 a.m., a shaken voice came over the intercom. “Code red. Lockdown.” There was profanity in the background. This was no drill, students realized. With the announcement, teachers sprang into action – locking doors and papering over windows, turning off the lights and closing window blinds. Students huddled in the corners of classrooms, sitting in the darkness and searching for information with a storm of text messages.

Casey Deel, a 17-year-old senior, was on his way to a doctor’s office when his girlfriend, Alicia Edwards, sent him a text at 9:15 a.m. “There’s a code red lock down. im scared,” the 16-year-old junior texted from her government class. “r u serious?” Deel texted back. He skipped his appointment. In Kayla Nichols’ cosmetology class, students squeezed into a storage room the size of a parking space, and locked the door, the 17-year-old said. Ryan Kendrick was in algebra class, just off the main office. The 17-year-old senior thought he heard the gunman making threats – about not leaving the building alive and taking others with him – and Gudger urging him to calm down.

Then he heard a volley of gunshots. Kendrick and his friend, Andrew Ray, began to pray. Landon Sillyman was in his honors biology class, where the teacher had instructed students to put their heads on their desks in the darkened classroom. The 14-year-old freshman estimated the suspense lasted about an hour. But it was all over in minutes, Anderson estimated.

One hundred and twenty seconds after Cowan drew his gun, two deputies, Lt. Steve Williams and Sam Matney, arrived. They entered through separate doors and met Cowan and Gudger – still in a moving standoff – as they reached a science pod behind the cafeteria. Cowan wavered; he jerked his gun from Gudger to the other deputies then back again. The three officers told him, again, to drop his weapon. He wouldn’t. So they opened fire. Some students counted five shots, others counted six. Anderson would not say how many rounds hit the gunman.

Cowan fell to the ground, his shoes just feet from door to the library full of teenagers. The pistol in his hand had seven bullets in the magazine and another in the chamber. He had a second handgun in his back pocket, loaded with five rounds. “That’s how close he was,” Anderson said. “We all know this could have been much more dangerous.”

Yes, it could have been much worse. It could have been another national headline about multiple deaths, sparking a national outcry for stricter gun laws. But it wasn’t. Why? Because the good people of Tennessee have enough sense to place armed officers inside of our schools to protect our children.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: armedcitizen; banglist; guncontrol; gunfreezone; mediabias; sandyhook; schoolshooting; secondamendment; tennessee; tn
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To: pfflier

Not only would that not stop a determined shooter, if there hadn’t been an armed “school safety officer” there, this guy would have killed the principal with the first few shots and the alert may not even have gone out. What if people didn’t hear the shots and the next thing they heard was a fire alarm? Next thing you know, the hallways are full of targets.

The officers who were sent by dispatch did a good job, but the onsite officer saved a bunch of kids that no one could have saved otherwise.


41 posted on 01/08/2013 8:21:27 AM PST by Mr. Silverback (Don't worry about the cliff. We're going to all land on some rich guy's wallet.)
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To: riverrunner

It’s very difficult to kill another human being face to face and many people delay pulling the trigger as long as possible. That said, she may have figured there was a strong possibility she would lose the gunfight (at that range with guns already drawn and pointed at each other even training won’t make enough difference) and he would step over her body and start killing kids, but if she kept him talking he wasn’t shooting, and backup would eventually arrive and change the tactical equation to a definite dead bad guy outcome.


42 posted on 01/08/2013 8:26:36 AM PST by Mr. Silverback (Don't worry about the cliff. We're going to all land on some rich guy's wallet.)
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To: riverrunner
My question is why did not the school resource officer shoot him long before the other deputies arrived.

I saw this video long ago...It was like watching a comedy skit with the two pointing weapons at each other for a long time...Like a Mexican standoff...

Clearly this woman was not physically fit or trained well. If she had been, she would have opened up immediately upon seeing the gun, and this would have been over quickly.

She was just damn lucky he didn't' pull the trigger first.

43 posted on 01/08/2013 9:08:50 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: dragnet2
She was just damn lucky he didn't' pull the trigger first.

Probably a lib.

That icky thing is part of her uniform. She was never going to actually have to use it, was she?

44 posted on 01/08/2013 9:13:27 AM PST by going hot (Happiness is a momma deuce)
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To: marktwain

File this under; So damn lucky to be alive it isn’t funny.


45 posted on 01/08/2013 9:23:53 AM PST by alexandria ("If this be treason, make the most of it!" Patrick Henry)
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To: going hot

Yep...No doubt she was another affirmative action job winner. It’s something you’d expect out of a pink panther movie...


46 posted on 01/08/2013 9:27:51 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: marktwain

Bump.

Feinstine makes platitudes from the coffins of children.


47 posted on 01/08/2013 9:32:27 AM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: marktwain

Bump!


48 posted on 01/08/2013 10:11:26 AM PST by Carlucci
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To: dragnet2

From the article: “Carolyn Gudger, the school resource officer, drew her gun, then shielded the principal’s body with her own.”

You said she was likely an “affirmative action job winner”. I say she put her ass on the line. Who the hell knows why she didnt fire, and it didnt matter in the end, the bad guy got his lead one way or the other.

Jeez people, can you not believe that sometimes black people actually do things right!


49 posted on 01/08/2013 10:25:28 AM PST by freedomlover
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To: freedomlover

Stop with the hero BS. In most circumstances and venues, if ya tried what this woman did, you’d be way dead Fred.

The ***only*** reason this did not end badly, was due to the fact the bad guy didn’t put a bullet through her head by simply pulling the trigger first.


50 posted on 01/08/2013 10:43:48 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: dragnet2

there are no liberals in the foxhole.

he was a retired vet(?) and seemed somwhat agile.

she was out of shape and overweight.

and yet they were equalized enough with tools for her to delay him and save one life confirmed, and probably the kids too.

there are no liberals in the foxhole.


51 posted on 01/08/2013 10:46:50 AM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: longtermmemmory
A nice convoluted whimsical load of cowflop.

Now the facts:

She's lucky this nutball was extra stupid.

How long ya think she would have lasted against someone genuinely bent on killing? Like Dylan Klebold? The Virginia tech shooter, Aurora CO, or sandy hook killer?

The ugly fact is this lady and her strategy would have lasted about a 1/2 second and she'd be way dead.

If your going to put armed people in schools for protection, which is perfectly appropriate, it's best to use fit and trained individuals. This woman was clearly not trained or fit, and is extremely lucky to be alive.

52 posted on 01/08/2013 11:22:11 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: dragnet2; longtermmemmory

“Stop with the hero BS.”

LOL


53 posted on 01/08/2013 11:31:30 AM PST by freedomlover
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To: freedomlover

Polyana’s abound....

The thread is yours!


54 posted on 01/08/2013 11:35:18 AM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: dragnet2

You may have had a gun pointed at you. If so, you have more experience than I do and I defer to your superior knowledge and experience.

You apparently know that “In most circumstances and venues, if ya tried what this woman did, you’d be way dead Fred.” I dont know that; again I defer to your superior knowledge on that.

My point is that the woman, who you chose to identify for some reason as an affirmative action hire, didn’t bolt when she probably could have. I don’t know why she didn’t fire, she might not have been confident a round was even chambered. But then you would always know such a thing and would stay cool as a cucumber looking down a gun barrel.

No doubt you are fit as a fiddle and could take on ten armed SWAT members with ... a herring!

So - you win!

Take the last word and we can be done.

Take care,
FL


55 posted on 01/08/2013 11:37:57 AM PST by freedomlover
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To: marktwain

You are exactly correct it didn’t fit the adjenda so it was ignored.


56 posted on 01/08/2013 11:44:14 AM PST by Rightly Biased (Avenge me Girls AVENEGE ME!!!! ( I don't have any son's))
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To: freedomlover
You may have had a gun pointed at you. If so, you have more experience than I do and I defer to your superior knowledge and experience.

Again, you have absolutely no clue here slick.

Probably 99 percent of cops never had guns pointed at them, but I can guarantee you 99 percent of them will shoot you dead in 1 second of ya point a gun at them.

Don't believe me? Just try it sometime.

57 posted on 01/08/2013 12:14:54 PM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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