The shooter was “significantly influenced by web-based material, especially that found on non-traditional sites that most would find harmful and objectionable,” police said.
A 17-year-old male student armed with a pistol opened fire in a high school cafeteria in Nashville, Tennessee, on Wednesday, fatally shooting a 16-year-old female student and injuring a male student before killing himself,
Police responded to a shooting at Antioch High School in Nashville, Tennessee. Police told CBS News the shooting happened in the school cafeteria.
The deadly shooting is the latest to rock the Nashville community nearly two years after another school massacre sparked a debate for gun reform.
Investigators say the now-deceased gunman who opened fire at a Nashville, Tennessee ... On Wednesday, Metropolitan Nashville police identified 17-year-old Solomon Henderson as the shooter at ...
Tennessee, high school has been identified. Metropolitan Nashville police identified 17-year-old Solomon Henderson as the shooter at Antioch High School. Henderson, who was an active student at ...
A student shot at least two other students Wednesday at Antioch High School outside Nashville, Tennessee, police said. The shooter then shot himself, according to police.
As 31-year-old Travis Garland walked into the Gordon Jewish Community Center in Nashville at about 7:45 p.m. Jan. 13, he was stopped by a front desk staff person who noticed him holding a phone up to look like he was recording, the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department said in a Jan. 16 news release.
Police are actively investigating a shooting at Antioch High School in Nashville, Tennessee. According to police, two students were shot by another student in the cafeteria.
The teenager who fatally shot a student at a high school in Nashville, Tennessee ... on Wednesday, the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department said in a statement Thursday.
A student shot at least two other students Wednesday at Antioch High School outside Nashville, Tennessee, police said. The shooter then shot himself, according to police.
A student opened fire in Madison. Another killed a classmate in Nashville. Both were active in an online subculture glorifying mass shooters.