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Wednesday, March 23, 2005

In Minn., offering help in wake of tragedy
Officials assess counseling needs after shooting ramage that left 10 dead

By Amy Forliti
The Associated Press
Originally published March 23, 2005, 12:54 PM EST

RED LAKE, Minn. -- Teachers met today to work out ways of helping young survivors of the nation's worst school shooting in six years, as outsiders streamed in to help the tight-knit community cope with the tragedy.

"Kids, if you're out there listening, please, we'll be there for you. Come back to school and we'll get through this together," Red Lake High School Principal Chris Dunshee told KSTP-TV in Minneapolis-St. Paul. "Please, let us help you."

The school remained closed today, as Dunshee and others assessed what kind of counseling the students in this tight-knit community would need. Teachers and staff were called to a morning meeting at the nearby elementary school on the Red Lake Reservation.

Reporters weren't able to approach the school, which is set back from the main road, because the Red Lake Band of Chippewa sharply restricted their access, warning that venturing off the main road through town would be trespassing and threatening arrests.

Tribal chairman Floyd Jourdain Jr. told WCCO-AM of Minneapolis that the meeting at the elementary school was intended to produce a strategy to help families and victims.

"We're just coordinating our efforts with our community professionals and spiritual elders and then also we have people who are coming here to assist the community today," Jourdain said.

Authorities were still trying to determine why 16-year-old Jeff Weise went on the shooting rampage that began at his grandfather's house and ended at Red Lake High School. Nine people were killed and seven were wounded before the gunman apparently shot himself.

Many students saw their friends shot, or heard gunshots and screams. Some students said they saw dead bodies in the hall and trails of blood when they evacuated the school.

"First and foremost, we've got to be focused on getting our kids through this," Dunshee told The Associated Press. "They're good kids. They don't deserve this."

Dunshee said many of his colleagues have offered support and encouragement, including Scott Staska, the superintendent of the Cold Spring school district where two students were killed in September 2003. A 15-year-old student was charged in the slayings and is awaiting trial.

Dunshee said Staska told him "we belong to a rather exclusive and undesirable club now -- and we can get through it." Staska recommended Dunshee investigate grants that may be available to schools affected by such incidents.

Paul Fleckenstein, a mental health leader with the American Red Cross, said the organization is out in the community asking questions, learning about American Indian traditions and assessing what the families need.

"We are being particularly sensitive to the needs and the traditions of the community," Fleckenstein said.

It was the nation's deadliest school shooting since the Columbine High School rampage in Colorado in April 1999, which ended in the deaths of 12 students, a teacher and the two teen gunmen.

The Red Lake killings began at the home of Weise's grandfather, Daryl Lussier, 58, a tribal police officer who was killed with a .22-caliber gun, according to the FBI's Michael Tabman. Also killed was Lussier's companion, Michelle Sigana, 32.

Weise then drove his grandfather's police car to the school, where he gunned down unarmed security guard Derrick Brun, 28, at the door and spent about 10 minutes inside, targeting people at random, authorities said.

Students and adults barricaded themselves into offices and classrooms and crouched under desks. A teacher and five students were shot to death. Two 15-year-olds remained in critical condition with gunshot wounds to the face.

Weise, hard to miss at 6 feet, 250 pounds, often was seen alone on the school grounds, said Lorene Gurneau, a bus driver for the district who knew Weise and his mother, Joanne Weise.

"I used to see him standing near the fence looking out, but not really looking out at anything," she said. "I never saw anyone stop and talk to him."

Gurneau said she knew the family from when they all lived near each other in Minneapolis in the early 1990s. She said her ex-husband; Weise's mother, Joanne Weise; and Joanne Weise's husband at the time, who was not Jeff Weise's father, often used to drink too much.

Joanne Weise has been in a nursing home since suffering brain damage in a March 1999 car accident, said Kim Desjarlait, a former sister-in-law. She said Joanne Weise was a passenger in a car driven by a cousin, who was killed, and both women had been drinking. Because of his mother's drinking, Weise often was left home alone, she said.

Gurneau said Weise's father, Daryl Lussier Jr., killed himself in 1997 after a daylong standoff with tribal police. Red Lake police did not immediately return a call seeking comment this morning.

The Red Lake Reservation is in northern Minnesota, about 240 miles north of the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul. According to the 2000 census, 5,162 people lived on the reservation, and all but 91 were Indians.

On the Net:

Red Lake High School: http://www.paulbunyan.net/rlschools/hs.htm

Red Lake Nation: http://www.redlakenation.org

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nationworld/bal-shooting0323,1,6629704.story?coll=bal-nationworld-headlines&ctrack=2&cset=true

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