They said they're finding
some "very good evidence" in their search of the school, and at the
home of the man identified by authorities as the shooter -- 20-year-old
Adam Lanza. Lanza's mother was killed at that house before the school
rampage began, authorities said.
"The detectives will
certainly analyze everything and put a complete picture together of the
evidence that they did obtain, and we're hopeful -- we're hopeful --
that it will paint a complete picture as to how and why this entire
unfortunate incidence occurred," said Lt. J. Paul Vance, a spokesman for
the Connecticut State Police.
Vance said police are already talking to the one wounded adult at the school, a woman who has not been named.
"She has been treated and she'll be instrumental in this investigation,
as I'm sure you can understand," Vance said.
Thursday, the day before
the shootings, Lanza was involved in some kind of altercation at Sandy
Hook Elementary, a law enforcement source told CNN.
The disagreement was
between Lanza and four adults, three of whom were killed Friday, the
source said. It's not clear whether the altercation happened inside or
outside the school, but it had something to do with Lanza trying to
enter the school, the source said.
Two days before the
argument, Lanza tried unsuccessfully to buy a gun at Dick's Sporting
Goods in nearby Danbury on Tuesday, according to a law enforcement
source with knowledge of the investigation. The source said store
employees have been interviewed and have searched the store's
surveillance cameras for evidence that Lanza was there.
Lanza was found dead next
to three guns, a semi-automatic .223-caliber Bushmaster rifle and two
pistols made by Glock and Sig Sauer, a law enforcement source told CNN.
All belonged to his mother.
Nancy Lanza was a gun
collector and recently showed off a newly bought rifle to fellow Newtown
resident Dan Holmes, who owns a landscaping business in the town.
"She told me she'd go target shooting with her boys pretty often," Holmes told CNN.
Lanza also had access to
at least three more guns, a second law enforcement source said.
Investigators recovered a .45-caliber Henry Repeating Rifle, a
.22-caliber Marlin Rifle and a .30-caliber Enfield Rifle, though it's
unclear where they were found, the source said.
Authorities have
identified all of those killed in Friday's tragedy, but they are not
releasing a formal list of names and birthdates until the state medical
examiner has completed his work, Vance said Saturday morning.
Newtown school murders: World reacts
Among the dead are Dawn Hochsprung, the school's beloved principal, and school psychologist Mary Sherlach.
Based on CNN's contacts
with friends and family members, CNN was able to identify two other
adults killed at the school: Vicki Soto, a first-grade teacher, and
substitute teacher Lauren Rousseau.
Vance said Saturday that
Lanza forced his way into the school, though he wouldn't say how or
whether Lanza used weapons to do it.
Authorities said it's
also not clear whether Lanza entered before or after 9:30 a.m., the time
each day when the school would lock its doors as part of a security
system introduced this year. Authorities say the first emergency call
about the shooting came in at "approximately" 9:30 a.m. Friday.
Within minutes, 26 people had been killed with chilling efficiency, leaving only the one wounded survivor, according to Vance.
"Stuff like this does
not happen in Newtown," said Renee Burn, a teacher at another school in
the town, which is roughly 60 miles northeast of New York City.
Until Friday, only one
homicide in the past 10 years had been reported in the upscale community
of expansive homes surrounded by woods, where many residents commute to
jobs in Manhattan and the nearby Connecticut cities of Stamford and
Hartford.
The number of young victims, between the ages of 5 and 10, sent shockwaves across the nation.
With the death toll at
26, the massacre in Newtown is the second-deadliest school shooting in
U.S. history, behind the 2007 Virginia Tech mass shooting that left 32
dead.
Flags were lowered to
half-staff in a number of states, and vigils were held at houses of
worship and at schools amid a national outpouring of grief.
Two law enforcement
sources said Adam Lanza lived with his mother. Contrary to early
reports, they said, Nancy Lanza was not a teacher at Sandy Hook
Elementary.
Investigators believe
Lanza killed his mother and then took her guns and made his way to the
elementary school wearing black fatigues and a military vest, according
to a law enforcement official.
At about 9:30 a.m., as announcements were read over the loudspeaker to the nearly 700 students, the first shots rang out.
Students described being ushered into bathrooms and closets by teachers after hearing the first shots.
It sounded like "pops, gunshots," Janet Vollmer, a kindergarten teacher, said.
Vollmer locked her classroom doors, covered the windows and moved her 19 pupils toward the back of the room.
"We're going over in a safe area," she told the 5-year-olds. Then, she opened a book and started to read.
Outside Vollmer's classroom, a gunman was moving through the hallway of the one-story building.
In the first few
minutes, the gunman is believed to have shot the principal, Hochsprung,
and the school's psychologist, Sherlach.
One parent who was at
the school in a meeting with Hochsprung, Sherlach and the vice principal
said she heard a "pop, pop, pop." All three left the room and went into
the hall to see what was happening. The parent ducked under the table
and called 911.
"I cowered," she told CNN. The gunman "must have shot a hundred rounds."
At the police station, dispatchers began to take calls from inside the school.
"Sandy Hook school.
Caller is indicating she thinks someone is shooting in the building,"
the dispatcher told fire and medical personnel, according to 911 tapes.
Then, another caller reported gunshots. And then another.
"Units responding to
Sandy Hook School at this time; the shooting appears to have stopped.
The school is in lockdown," the dispatcher said.
The dispatcher warned
police and medical personnel that callers were reporting "multiple
weapons, including one rifle and a shotgun."
Then, a police officer or firefighter called for "backup, ambulances, and they said call for everything."
The dispatcher, according to the 911 tapes, asked how many ambulances were needed.
"They don't know. They're not giving us a number," the officer or firefighter said.
Inside a classroom, Vollmer was still reading to the children when police officers banged on the locked door.
The kindergartners were
told to line up and cover their eyes as they were led by police past
bodies, presumably of their fellow schoolmates, Vollmer said.
As reports of the
shooting made their way around town, frantic parents descended on a
nearby firehouse where the children had been taken.
"Why? Why?" one woman wailed as she walked up a wooded roadway leading from the school.
Inside the firehouse, Vollmer's kindergartners were beginning to understand something terrible had happened.
"They saw other people upset," Vollmer said. "We just held them close until their parents came."
By nightfall, the
firehouse became a gathering point for parents and family members whose
loved ones would never walk out of the school.
Authorities, meanwhile,
in Hoboken, New Jersey, were questioning Ryan Lanza, the suspected
gunman's older brother, law enforcement sources said, though they did
not label him a suspect. Lanza's father, Peter, who lives in
Connecticut, was similarly questioned, one of the law enforcement
officials said.
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