Elementary school teacher shot and killed in Tacoma, Wash.


Aresye

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Elementary teacher killed at Wash. school - Crime & courts- msnbc.com

A special education teacher was shot to death at a Tacoma, Wash., elementary school and police fatally shot the suspect, according to media reports.

The Tacoma School District spokesman says the teacher worked in the language resource center at Birney Elementary School helping students one-on-one with reading problems.

The 7:35 a.m. shooting happened before the start of the school day, when very few students would have been there, witnesses told KIROTV.com in Seattle.

Police spokesman Mark Fulghum told The News Tribune of Tacoma that the suspect and the victim had known each other.

The suspect, who fled the scene, was fatally shot by police a few blocks away from the school, KIROTV.com reported.

The school has about 400 students in grades K-5. Classes have been called off for the day.

I'm interested in knowing what the relationship between the teacher and the gunmen were. Not enough info. as of right now.
 

The rest of the story!

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TACOMA, Wash. — The stalking began with bursts of phone calls — 10 or 15 in a day, about once a year, from an old college acquaintance. Then, flowers and unwanted visits, an anti-harassment order, an arrest — and bail.

Jennifer Paulson, a 30-year-old special education teacher at a Tacoma elementary school, knew she was in danger this week when her alleged stalker was released from the Pierce County Jail, three days after she had him arrested. She started staying away from her home in an attempt to avoid him.

It didn't work. When she showed up for work Friday morning, he was already there — and had been waiting for hours, according to reports neighbors gave police. Paulson was shot more than once as she walked into the school. Her body lay near the base of a large evergreen tree with blood seeping from her mouth.

A Pierce County sheriff's deputy tracked down the suspected killer, Jed R. Waits, 30, of Ellensburg, outside a daycare about 10 miles away and killed him in a shootout.

"She was a very kind, merciful, loving person," her father, Ken Paulson, said. "That's probably why she was a special education teacher — because she loved so much."

He described his daughter as a devout Christian, and said she had been pestered by Waits for years. The two had known each other since she was in college, when they worked together at a cafeteria at Seattle Pacific University.

In her petition for the anti-harassment order filed in Pierce County District Court in September 2008, Paulson said she and Waits occasionally socialized with co-workers and friends outside of work as a group but "never had any sort of romantic involvement."

After graduating, she heard from him only about once a year, when he would suddenly call her 10 or 15 times in a single day, she wrote. She would wait a few days to call him back, and then always left a message.

In spring 2008, though, his obsession seemed to intensify. She said he repeatedly showed up at her school, once walking inside past the office, where he was stopped by a secretary.

"I am shocked and tell him he must go," Paulson wrote. "I never told him where I work and do not know how he found out."
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A month later, she said he sent flowers and a bear to her school. Paulson's principal called Waits' commander in the National Guard to inform him of the harassment, she wrote.

In September that year, he showed up again, parking his car outside the school and watching her — an incident that finally drove her to obtain an anti-harassment order requiring him not to contact her and to keep 1,000 feet from her school and residence.

Keith Kosik, a spokesman for the Guard, said Waits was repeatedly disciplined during his tenure with the service and was less-than-honorably discharged in April 2009. He deployed to Kuwait with his unit in 2007.

Waits left Paulson alone for more than a year after she obtained the anti-harassment order, her father said. But a week ago, she noticed him following her as she was driving home from work. She called 911, and a dispatcher told her to drive to a police station.

Waits was arrested that night, but posted bail on Monday. Ken Paulson said his daughter stopped staying at home when she learned of his release.

Tacoma Police spokesman Mark Fulghum said there had been no indication that Waits had a weapon or had threatened Paulson with a weapon, but it appeared he had a serious infatuation. It's not clear where he got the gun.

The shooting happened at Birney Elementary, which has about 400 students in kindergarten through fifth grade. Classes were canceled for the day, and officials had not made a decision about Monday's classes.

Omar Moreno, 22, who lives across the street from the school, said he heard three gunshots.

"I heard a teacher screaming at the top of her lungs — just screaming," he said. "I looked out my window and I saw the guy. He started running down the middle of the street and got in his car."

Moreno said the man, wearing a white snow cap and white gloves, drove off in a tan car. Soon after, Moreno said, a custodian barreled out of the school screaming for someone to call the police.

A deputy pulled over the suspect's car in the parking lot of a daycare, and he came out firing a handgun, Troyer said. The deputy returned fire and killed the man.

School district spokesman Dan Voelpel said Paulson worked in the language resource center helping students one-on-one with reading problems. She had been with the district since 2004 and at the school since 2007.

Paulson's death "knocked everyone flat," Voelpel said. "It's going to hit this community hard."

The shooting occurred three days after a 32-year-old man with a history of mental illness opened fire in a middle school parking lot in Colorado, wounding two students.
 
Festus, thanks for the update and deeper info. It's such a f**ked up story, but clearly shows the fact that there are messed up people in this world, and everybody deserves the right to self-defense. Had teachers and staff members been allowed to carry, this scenario could have played out differently.
 
Festus, thanks for the update and deeper info. It's such a f**ked up story, but clearly shows the fact that there are messed up people in this world, and everybody deserves the right to self-defense. Had teachers and staff members been allowed to carry, this scenario could have played out differently.

I'm not so sure. It may have only changed the story slightly.
If you are attacked without the expectation of attack and are killed, the only difference may be that the attacker dies without the chance of retreat. This was an example of fast police response. This is not typical where I am. Here, the police response is about 20 minutes.

Anyway, back to the actual event. Even if the teacher was armed, there is no guarantee she would have reacted to save her life. She had encountered this crazy co-worker many times over the years. She may not have seen what was coming. One would hope she did see it. This is where my pro-gun thoughts come into play.
Had she been able to defend herself at school, or relay the threat to school officials...this event may not have occurred.
 
Another case of someone depending on the system to protect them, police new of the problem, she had a restraining order, should have ben safe, as to the fact that she could have ben armed or not, I understand that guns in schools in general, is not a good idea, but personaly if she was my wife, daughter, sister, she would have ben armed, and screw the rules, at least I may still have her
 

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