Twitter Google Share on Facebook Virginia Tech Massacre (redirected fromVirginia Tech shooting) Wikipedia A shooting that occurred on April 16, 2007, on the campus of Virginia Polytechnic Institute, in two separate attacks, two hours apart, in which the perpetrator, Seung-Hui Cho, a mentally ill...
The massacre at Virginia Tech was not a national news story for me. It was a local reality. The shooter, Seung-Hui Cho, grew up not far from my home. One victim came from our neighborhood and another half dozen from the general area. My son, John Paul, graduated from Tech four ...
This is not the first time that Zachary Cruz has been on the wrong side of the law, especially when it comes to trespassing. In March 2018, a month after his older brother confessed to the Parkland massacre,Zachary Cruz was arrested and charged with trespassingfor skateboarding on theMSD ca...
It was the second time the Blacksburg, Va., school became the scene of a gunfire since the 2007 massacre of 33 students. This evening, Virginia Tech officials identified the slain Virginia Tech police officer asDeriek W. Crouse, 39, of Christiansburg, Va., a four-year veteran of the forc...
On the second anniversary of the Virginia Tech massacre and nearly 10 years since the Columbine tragedy, experts say they can't predict which teens will become school shooters.
Virginia Tech Massacre On April 16th‚ 2007 on the campus of Virginia Tech in Blacksburg‚ Virginia‚ America’s deadliest random act of violence occurred. Seung-Hui Cho shot and killed thirty-two people and wounded 15 others. After the attacks he later shot and killed himself which makes...
VIRGINIA Tech shootings, Blacksburg, Va., 2007The article compares the cultural power of the Batman film "The Dark Knight" to the creation of a denying narrative for the Virginia Tech (VT) massacre. Aspects of the Joker character that illustrate the negotiation for power between media, security...
Lessons learned from the horrific Virginia Tech shootings in 2007 are credited with averting an even bigger massacre at Fort Hood, Texas, Thursday afternoon when police officer Kimberly Munley confronted the gunman without waiting for backup and took him down with four shots. Reviews in the ...
The shooter appeared to walk up to the victims and stand a few feet away from them while holding the weapon. The three, in the midst of a live TV interview, do not seem to notice the gunman, who doesn't start shooting until Ward points the camera at Parker. ...