Lag in Wis. hostage response raises questions
By TODD RICHMOND, Associated Press
Dec 1, 2010 6:40 PM CST
Austin Biehl pauses as he talks Tuesday Nov. 30, 2010 in his Marinette, Wis. home about being held hostage at Marinette High School by a fellow student. A 15-year-old boy who held 23 students and a teacher hostage in a Wisconsin classroom died Tuesday at a Green Bay hospital from a self-inflicted gunshot...   (Associated Press)

For about two hours, no one at Marinette High School knew Sam Hengel was holding his social studies class hostage with two pistols and a bag stuffed with a pair of knives and more than 200 rounds of spare ammunition.

Although only Hengel was harmed in the standoff, fatally shooting himself as police stormed the room, students questioned the lag time in the response and whether security should be upgraded as they returned to class Wednesday after a day off.

"They should be aware when things go wrong or something," said sophomore Ricardo Jaimes. "Like, at least have a clue about it."

Hengel started the standoff by firing three shots in front of more than two dozen students in teacher Valerie Burd's class, blasting a hole in the wall and tearing apart a movie projector. But no one else realized anything was wrong until well after the school day ended, when the principal unlocked the classroom door and found himself looking down the barrel of Hengel's gun.

The incident shook this city of 12,000 people bordering Michigan's Upper Peninsula, and students and parents wondered how Hengel could have gone undetected for so long, especially after he fired three shots. Marinette Police Chief Jeff Skorik said students walked by the classroom as usual, completely unaware Burd's class was in danger.

"I was just wondering where the cops were and when we were going to get out of this," said Austin Biehl, a sophomore who was held hostage in the classroom.

Hengel's motive remains unknown. Students said he never hinted at what might have been bothering him but didn't threaten any of them and didn't appear to want to shoot anyone.

The sheer number of bullets suggests he was prepared to injure a large number of people, but Skorik declined Wednesday to draw any conclusions. He said investigators don't know whether the guns may have always been kept in the bag with the ammunition or whether Hengel put it all together specifically for the standoff.

Investigators are still piecing together a final report on the incident, but Skorik said no one identified the sounds of the first shots as gunfire.

Burd had a lot of high-tech video equipment in her room and was playing a movie when Hengel returned to class, which may have dampened the noise, Principal Corry Lambie said. School Board President Scott VandeHei said students outside the classroom may have assumed the sound was a desk turning over.

"From what I've heard, it's not that hard to see how that could happen," VandeHei said.

Lambie acknowledged library staff missed Burd when her seventh-hour class showed up without her but that it wasn't unusual for her classes to visit the library and the students were supervised.

Skorik pointed out Burd's sixth-hour class doesn't move from period to period en masse, so seventh-hour teachers likely would not miss one or two students who fail to show up.

"A student here or there could be skipping or get sick," the police chief said. "That really wouldn't be identified as a serious matter by any particular teacher."

Skorik said law enforcement's response was excellent, noting police held a school shooter exercise in August at Marinette High. Burd issued a statement late Tuesday saying she thought the response was handled "appropriately under the circumstances."

School officials have promised to re-evaluate their emergency procedures. Debate already has begun about whether metal detectors are the answer.

"Maybe," said Kody Baumler, 16, one of Hengel's friends. "Or something to make sure this wouldn't happen. One of my friends died."

District Superintendent Tim Baneck declined an interview request through his assistant Wednesday. VandeHei said it was too soon to know whether metal detectors are needed at the school, which serves about 700 students.

"We'll look at everything," VandeHei said. "You have to be careful not to jump too quick in a situation like this. You need to step back and check emotion a little bit."

Metal detectors are the least common security measure at the nation's schools, according to a federal report released last month. The National Center for Education Statistics said 10 percent of students reported that metal detectors were used at their schools.

Critics say the equipment is expensive and leads to logistical nightmares in school lobbies. And there are plenty of ways to beat them, said Kenneth Trump, the president of National School Safety and Security Services, a school safety consulting firm.

For example, a "clean" student who enters the school could have an accomplice stand outside and hand him a firearm through a window. Or a student could wait until the detectors aren't being used, such as during a basketball game, and stash weapons in a locker. Or a student could carry out an attack on a school bus or at a bus stop.

"The reality," Trump said, "is there is no 100 percent perfect security, from the schoolhouse to the White House."

Monday's standoff began sometime during the school's sixth-hour class period, which runs from 1:30 p.m. until 2:10 p.m. Hengel walked into Burd's Western Civilization class, asked to leave to use the bathroom and returned with two semi-automatic pistols and a bag later found to contain 205 rounds of extra ammunition and two knives, police and school officials said Wednesday.

After he shot the wall and projector, he then propped himself on Burd's stool in the front of the class, students said. Some of his classmates began to talk to him, trying to keep him calm.

When seventh period began, Hengel told Burd to post a note on the door directing those incoming students to the library.

School ended at 3:12 p.m., but nobody in Burd's class moved. Finally, a father who couldn't reach his daughter by cell phone came to the school looking for her. Lambie checked the girl's attendance records and discovered she was last recorded as being present in Burd's class.

He walked down to Burd's room, found it dark and unlocked the door. Hengel threatened him with the gun and told him to get out. He retreated and called police, triggering a standoff. The time was 3:48 p.m.

Around 8 p.m. Hengel fired more shots, hitting the classroom's phone and a computer. SWAT officers rushed the room and Hengel shot himself in the head, students said. He died Tuesday, but Burd and all of her students emerged unharmed.

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Associated Press writers Carrie Antlfinger in Marinette and Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

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