Parkland high school shooting


On February 14, 2018, a mass shooting occurred when 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz opened fire on students and staff at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, part of the Miami metropolitan area, Parkland, Florida, killing 17 people and injuring 17 others. Cruz, a former student at the school, fled the scene on foot by blending in with other students and was arrested without incident approximately one hour and twenty minutes later in nearby Coral Springs. Police and prosecutors investigated "a pattern of disciplinary issues and unnerving behavior".
The incident is the deadliest mass shooting at a high school in U.S. history. The shooting came at a period of heightened public support for gun control that followed mass shootings in Paradise, Nevada, and in Sutherland Springs, Texas, in 2017.
Some students at Parkland founded Never Again MSD, an advocacy group that lobbies for gun control. On, Governor Rick Scott signed a bill that implemented new restrictions to Florida's gun laws and also allowed for the arming of teachers who were properly trained and the hiring of more school resource officers.
The Broward County Sheriff's Office received widespread criticism for its handling of the police response, both for not following up on multiple warnings about Cruz despite a lengthy record of threatening behavior and for staying outside the school instead of immediately confronting him. This led to the resignations of several police officers who responded to the scene, and the removal of Sheriff Scott Israel. A commission appointed by then-Governor Scott to investigate the shooting condemned the police inaction and urged school districts across the state to adopt greater measures of security.
On October 20, 2021, Cruz pleaded guilty to all charges and apologized for his crimes. The prosecution sought the death penalty, and a four-month death penalty trial was expected to commence in January 2022. After suffering numerous delays, in part due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the trial commenced on July 18, 2022. On October 13, 2022, a jury unanimously agreed that Cruz was eligible for the death penalty, but deadlocked on whether it should be imposed, resulting in a recommendation to sentence him to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. On November 2, 2022, Cruz was sentenced to life without parole, in accordance with a Florida law requiring the court not to depart from the jury's recommendation. The unanimity required to impose the death penalty has since been overturned by a bill signed by Governor Ron DeSantis, partly as a result of Cruz's sentencing.

Shooting

The shooting took place during the afternoon of, 2018, at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, an affluent suburb about northwest of Fort Lauderdale and northwest of Miami. The shooter, Nikolas Cruz, was dropped off at the school by an Uber driver at 2:19 p.m., 20 minutes before dismissal time. According to a police report, Cruz was carrying a rifle case and a backpack. He concealed an AR-15–style semi-automatic rifle and multiple magazines. He was spotted and recognized by a campus monitor, who radioed a colleague that he was walking "purposefully" toward Building 12. The campus monitor did not declare a Code Red lockdown but sent a radio message to a colleague inside Building 12, which Cruz had entered. The school's policies did not specify clearly who could order a lockdown, and staff had been trained not to order a lockdown unless they saw a gun or heard shots being fired.
Cruz entered Building 12, a three-story structure containing 30 classrooms typically occupied by about 900 students and 30 teachers, at approximately 2:21 p.m.
Upon entering the building, Cruz rapidly assembled his weapon at the base of a stairwell adjacent to the first floor classrooms. As he did so, a student named Christopher McKenna encountered Cruz and Cruz informed him:
" better get out of here, something bad's about to happen." McKenna fled the building and notified staff members of the unfolding threat. As Cruz entered the first floor hallway, he saw and fatally shot three students—Martin Anguiano, Gina Montalto, and Luke Hoyer—who were in the hallway outside room 1215. They were killed at 2:21 p.m., and Cruz shot and wounded a fourth student in the hallway, 15-year-old Ashley Baez. He fired through the windows of four closed classroom doors, killing six more students and wounding thirteen others. He also killed two staff members shot on the first floor of the building.
Due to gunshot reverberation within the hallways, the fire alarm within the building activated, causing confusion because there had been a fire drill earlier in the day. Students were unable to seek shelter at "hard corners"—areas of a classroom that people could safely hide at if a gunman peered through the window of a door—because many of the classrooms in Building 12 lacked one, and furniture otherwise obstructed potential safe spaces.
As the shooting unfolded, employees did not call a "Code Red" because of their confusion over who had the authority to do so. At about 2:21 p.m., a staff member eventually activated a lockdown, but only after discovering one body and hearing gunfire. An armed school resource officer of the Broward County Sheriff's Office was on campus when the shooting broke out, and he remained outside between Building 12 and the adjacent Building 7.
After killing two staff members near the first floor stairwell, Cruz went to the second floor, and fired into two empty classrooms. On the third floor, he shot and killed five students and another staff member, who all had been stranded in the hallway; he shot and injured three other students and two teachers. Next, he went into a teachers' lounge where he attempted but failed to shoot out the hurricane-resistant windows facing the yard in order to target students and staff fleeing below.
After Cruz stopped shooting, he dropped his rifle on the third floor of the building and left the scene by blending in with fleeing students. He walked to a fast-food restaurant, stopping at a mall to get a soda on the way, and lingered before leaving on foot at 3:01 p.m.
Of the seventeen fatalities, fourteen were students and three were faculty members. Two of those killed were students in Ivy Schamis' Holocaust History class; Schamis was teaching a class lesson on combating hate when Cruz fired shots into her classroom. Four students in Schamis' class were injured. According to Schamis, Cruz was unaware that he was shooting into a class on the Holocaust. Cruz had, however, carved swastikas onto the ammunition magazines that he left at the school.
Cruz fired 139 shots during the shooting: 70 on the first floor, 2 in the stairwell, 6 on the second floor, and 61 on the third floor.

Arrest

At about 3:41 p.m., police stopped Cruz from the school in the Wyndham Lakes neighborhood of Coral Springs and arrested him as the suspected shooter. He was then taken to a hospital emergency room with "labored breathing." After 40 minutes, Cruz was released back into police custody and booked into the Broward County Jail.
The shooting lasted for about six minutes in total, and all of the victims were shot within just under four minutes. School surveillance camera video showed Cruz as the shooter, and he was also recognized by eyewitnesses. While SWAT paramedics were inside the building, additional paramedics from the local Fire-Rescue department repeatedly asked to enter the building. These requests were denied by the Broward Sheriff's Office, even after the suspect was arrested.

Victims

Seventeen people were killed, and seventeen more were wounded. Three of the wounded remained in critical condition the day after the shooting, and one remained by the second day.

Fatalities

Fourteen of the fatalities died inside the building; three others died in or en route to the hospital.
Geography teacher Scott Beigel was killed after he unlocked a classroom for students to enter and hide from Cruz. Aaron Feis, an assistant football coach and security guard, was killed as he entered the building in response to reports of the ongoing shooting. Chris Hixon, the school's athletic director, was killed as he ran toward the sound of the gunfire.
Student Peter Wang was last seen in his Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps uniform, reportedly holding doors open so others could escape. At their respective funerals, Wang, Alaina Petty, and Martin Duque were all posthumously honored by the U.S. Army with the ROTC Medal for Heroism, and Wang was buried in his JROTC Blues uniform. On, Wang was posthumously admitted to the United States Military Academy.
Alyssa Alhadeff was the captain of the Parkland Soccer Club. On, 2018 she was honored by the United States women's national soccer team prior to a game in Orlando. Her teammates and family were invited to the game and presented with official jerseys that featured her name.
Meadow Pollack was a senior who was shot four times; upon being initially wounded seconds after cruz had fatally shot Scott Beigel, Pollack crawled toward a classroom door, where a 14-year-old freshman named Cara Loughran—also wounded by cruz had also sought refuge. cruz located Pollack and Loughran and discharged his weapon five more times—killing both girls.

Injuries and survivors

Sixteen students and two teachers were wounded in the shooting. The last victim to remain hospitalized, Anthony Borges, was discharged from hospital on. Borges was shot five times after reportedly attempting to barricade the door of a classroom. Upon his release, Borges issued a statement that criticized the actions of Broward Sheriff's deputies, Sheriff Scott Israel, and School Superintendent Robert Runcie. His family has filed notice of its intent to sue the school district for personal injury to cover costs related to his recovery. Borges was honored with a humanitarian award at the 2018 BET Awards.
Survivors of the shooting, teachers and students alike, have struggled with survivor's guilt and other symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. On March 17, 2019, thirteen months after the shooting, 19-year-old Sydney Aiello, who survived the shooting, died by suicide. She was reportedly terrified of being in a classroom and also had been treated for survivor's guilt and PTSD. Less than one week later, on March 23, 2019, 16-year-old Calvin Desir, another survivor of the shooting, also died by suicide. In December 2025, nearly eight years after the shooting, Donovan Joshua Leigh Metayer committed suicide because of trauma associated with the event; he had been suffering a "years-long battle with schizophrenia" according to his family.
Teacher Ivy Schamis was presented with USC Shoah Foundation's inaugural Stronger Than Hate Educator Award in 2019. During her acceptance speech at the award ceremony, Schamis honored victims Nicholas Dworet and Helena Ramsay, who died in her class during the shooting.