The Columbine High School massacre occurred on April 20, 1999 at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, United States, when two teenage students, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, executed a planned shooting rampage that coincided with Adolf Hitler's 110th birthday, killing 12 other students and a teacher before committing suicide. Some argue that one of the shooters killed the other and then himself.

Table of contents
1 Firearms
2 Chronology of events on April 20
3 Chronology of events on the next day
4 Aftershock
5 Shooters
6 Victims
7 Cultural Impact
8 External Links

Firearms

The firearms used, one handgun, one rifle and two sawed-off shotguns, were illegally obtained from adults during the year-long planning period for the killings. In addition to the firearms, the killers had constructed as many as 97 bombs of various designs and sizes and exploded many of them during the attack. The boys got most of the guns from 18-year old student Robyn Anderson, who legally purchased them. She did not know what the boys planned to do with the guns. Fifty-five shots were fired from the Semi-automatic handgun, which was used to kill 4 students and wound 2 others. That gun was not legal to sell to children under 21. Two adults, Mark Manes and Philip Duran, who knowingly violated the laws to provide these firearms have been sentenced to prison.

Chronology of events on April 20

All times in Denver Time (MST).

16 Minutes of Terror


Much of the massacre was captured on the high school's security cameras.
The teenagers had already planted two bombs, that they expected to explode at 11:00, in the cafeteria. They had calculated that that was when the most students would be in the cafeteria - 900 Columbine students were on their lunch break. The 20-pound cafeteria bombs, which were their largest, were each made of a pipe bomb surrounded by fuel cylinders filled with
propane. The boys had already planted other bombs around the campus, and expected them to explode too, yet most of them never went off. They brought the bombs to school in backpacks, and in bomb-cases strapped to their bodies. Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold were wearing trench coats so that students did not know that they were smuggling guns and bombs into the school.

The boys fired their first shots at about 11:19, in the parking lot after running to there from the soccer field. By 11:25, the boys, who had already shot Rachel Scott dead, ran into the cafeteria shooting children and shooting at the bomb that didn't detonate, in an attempt to detonate it, but to no avail. Had the two cafeteria bombs that Harris and Klebold planted exploded, then all of the four hundred and forty-eight students in the cafeteria would probably have perished. It would also have been devastating if the other bombs had exploded. Students hid in closets, bathrooms, offices, and under heavy desks and chairs. Some of the students, hidden behind a heavy door, called for help on cell phones. Some students fled the building, some to the Robert F. Clement Park.

The first 911 call relating to the incident was made at 11:25. A custodian reported hearing gunfire and explosions at the school. The custodian had also reported seeing a shooter on the roof, but he was later revealed to be an innocent repairman who was hiding from the gunmen.

By 11:28, deputy Neil Gardner of Jefferson County exchanged gunfire with Harris and Klebold near a building entrance. He radioed for help at 11:29. Other deputies from Jefferson County, Colorado arrived on the scene at 11:30 a.m. They call other agencies for help, as they heard explosions and gunshots. The shooters moved upstairs, shooting at students in classrooms. The gunmen then came to the library, killing ten students and injuring several more. When it was clear that they weren't going to escape the building, the two committed suicide. Harris put a shotgun in his mouth. Klebold is generally thought to have shot himself in the right temple. Some say that Harris killed Klebold since Klebold was left handed. Harris had injured his last victim at 11:31 a.m. The two teenagers shot themselves before noon came.

The Shooting Stops

By 12 Noon, SWAT teams found explosive devices around the school, and ambulances started taking the wounded to local hospitals. Parents gathered at Leawood Elementary School. The call for additional ammunition to police officers in case of a shootout came at 12:20. However, the killers had supposedly stopped shooting prior to 12 Noon.

The SWAT teams started checking every room in the high school in great detail by 12:30. Even desks and backpacks were examined. Authorities reported pipe bombs being found by 13:00.

SWAT teams started to free hidden students by 14:30. The students and teachers were taken away and were questioned and offered medical care in small holding areas. Officers found bodies in the library by 15:30. Both of the dead suspects were boobytrapped with bombs.

By 16:00, the Sheriff made an initial estimate of 25 dead students and teachers; his estimate was 10 over the true count. Police officers were searching the bodies of Harris and Klebold in the library. At 16:30, the school was declared safe, yet at 17:30, additional officers were called in as more explosives were found in the parking lot. At 18:15, officials found a bomb in a car in the parking lot, so the Sheriff marked the entire school with yards of yellow tape as a crime scene. All of the dead were still inside the school at the time. At 22:45, one of the homemade bombs detonated while police tried to defuse it.

Chronology of events on the next day

The next day, on April 21, bomb squads combed the high school looking for bombs. At 08:30, the official death toll of fifteen was released. The bomb squad declared the building safe for officials to enter. By 11:30, a spokesman of the sheriff said, "The investigation is under way." Thirteen of the bodies were still inside the high school as investigators photographed the building.

By 14:30, a press conference was held by Jefferson County District Attorney David Thomas and Sheriff John Stone, saying that they suspected that other children helped plan the shooting. Formal identifications of the dead had not taken place yet, but families of the children thought have to been killed were notified that such probably happened. Throughout the late afternoon and early evening, the rest of the bodies were gradually removed out of the school and taken to the Jefferson County Coroner's Office to be identified and autopsied. By 17:00, the identities of those dead started to be known.

Aftershock

In the following weeks, media reports about the two killers portrayed them as outcast "nerds" who were unpopular and ostracized by much of the school's population. Harris and Klebold were peripheral members of a club called the "Trenchcoat Mafia" in which they wore heavy black trenchcoats. By the time they shot up the school, most of the major members of the group had already either graduated or dropped out of Columbine. Harris and Klebold were fans of violent video games such as "Doom", and in fact, Harris often created multiplayer levels for thr game. They were widely distributed, and can still occasionally be found on the internet as the Harris levels.

The pair had an elaborate plan cooked up for not only the school shooting, but also a massacre in the neighborhood and, if they were unable to escape out of the United States, a planned hijacking of an airplane which the boys would then crash into New York City.

In the aftermath of the shootings, there was a great deal of debate about what "provoked" the killers and whether anything could have been done to prevent the crime. The reality of social cliques in high schools was a frequent topic of discussion. Many argued that the boys' isolation from the rest of their classmates prompted feelings of helplessness, insecurity and depression, as well as a strong desire for attention.

It's been publicly revealed that Harris had been prescribed and was taking Luvox® (Fluvoxamine maleate), a powerful antidepressant, at the time of the shooting spree. Although Klebold's medical records have been sealed, there is strong reason to believe that he too had been prescribed one of several popular drugs for depression. Throughout the 1990s these drugs arguably became the standard response to a wide variety of behavioral problems in schools, especially for boys. An alleged side-effect of these drugs is a loss of empathy for other human beings. Of the various USA "school shooters" whose medical history has been made public, all were either currently taking or had recently gone off one of these powerful mind-altering prescription drugs given to them to treat various serious behavioral problems.

Other analysts argued that part of the killers' problem may have been a result of their constant exposure to violent imagery in video games, music, and movies, theorizing that their obsession with these forms of media may have led them to have trouble telling the difference between reality and fantasy.

In response to concerns over the causes of Columbine and other school massacres, many schools later instituted new anti-bully policies as well as so-called "zero tolerance" approaches to weapons and threatening behavior.

In the months following the shooting, many in the Christian community were capivated by reports of Cassie Bernall, who, when asked "Do you believe in God?" by one of the shooters, responded "Yes" before being shot and killed. Alternate accounts surfaced soon thereafter, attributing the remark to victim Rachel Scott. Both Bernall and Scott were regarded as Christian "martyrs" by many. Official investigation attributed the statement to survivor Valeen Schnur.

Shooters

Victims

Deceased

  • Cassie Bernall, 17
  • Steven Curnow, 14
  • Corey DePooter, 17
  • Kelly Fleming, 16
  • Matthew Kechter, 16
  • Daniel Mauser, 15
  • Daniel Rohrbough, 15
  • Dave Sanders, 47 (Teacher)
  • Rachel Scott, 17
  • Isaiah Shoels, 18
  • John Tomlin, 16
  • Lauren Townsend, 18
  • Kyle Velasquez, 16

Injured

  • Brian Anderson, 17
  • Richard Castaldo, 17
  • Jennifer Doyle, 17
  • Stephen Eubanks, 17
  • Nicholas Foss, 18
  • Sean Graves, 15
  • Makai Hall, 19
  • Anne Hochhalter, 17
  • Patrick Ireland, 17
  • Joyce Jankowski, 45
  • Michael Johnson, 15
  • Mark Kintgen, 17
  • Lance Kirklin, 16
  • Lisa Kreutz, 18
  • Adam Kryler, 16
  • Stephanie Munson, 17
  • Patricia Nielsen, 35
  • Nicole Nowlen, 16
  • Jeanna Park, 18
  • Kasey Ruegsegger, 17
  • Valeen Schnurr, 18.
  • Danny Steepleton, 17
  • Mark Taylor, 16

Cultural Impact

The massacre was one of the subjects of the 2001 Michael Moore documentary film Bowling for Columbine, about the culture of violence in the US.

The Columbine shooting spree also served as the inspiration for the fictional 2003 Gus Van Sant film, Elephant.

See also: school massacres

External Links