Ten children wounded after shooting at high school football match

Seventeen-year-old charged with nine counts of attempted murder after shooting at high school football game

Derrick Bryson Taylor
Monday 02 September 2019 12:21 BST
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Deangelo Dejuan Parnell, 17, has been charged with nine counts of attempted murder, police said
Deangelo Dejuan Parnell, 17, has been charged with nine counts of attempted murder, police said

A shooting at a high school football game in Mobile, Alabama, on Friday night wounded at least 10 people, police said.

The city’s police chief, Lawrence Battiste, said at a news conference Friday that the victims were between 15 and 18 years old, according to local station WKRG 5. Their conditions were not immediately available.

One person suffered a seizure and another injured his hand in an attempt to escape, Mr Battiste said. It was not clear whether they were among those who had been shot.

Deangelo Dejuan Parnell, 17, was charged with nine counts of attempted murder, Lori Myles, public affairs director for the Mobile County Sheriff’s Office, said on Saturday. A motive for the shooting was not immediately known.

Students were gathered at Ladd-Peebles Stadium on Friday night for a game between LeFlore High School and Williamson High School when the gunfire erupted.

Footage from the game on social media showed attendees and football players getting on the ground and taking cover under the bleachers as screams were heard in the background.

“Why are young people bringing this type of violence to public events?” Mr Battiste said during the news conference. “They’re bringing their beefs that they have with each other in neighbourhoods, and they are putting other people in harm’s way.”

The safety policy on the website of Ladd-Peebles Stadium prohibits weapons, including firearms, knives and box cutters in the stadium, regardless of a permit.

A clear-bag policy is in effect for major events like University of South Alabama games; it was unclear whether high school football games fell under that category.

Mr Battiste said he was “disappointed” that a mass shooting had occurred in Mobile. “This is juvenile violence taken to a public venue for the purpose of harming somebody in a public setting,” he said.

New York Times

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