Three injured in Idaho school shooting

Three people have been injured in a shooting at a school in the US.

Two students and a custodian were injured in the shooting in eastern Idaho, authorities said. A male student has been taken into custody.

The victims’ injuries are not believed to be life-threatening, said Jefferson County sheriff Steve Anderson.

Police were called to the school at around 9.15am local time after students and staff heard gunfire. Multiple law enforcement agencies responded and students were evacuated to a nearby high school to be reunited with their parents.

Idaho Shooting
Police tape outside Rigby Middle School (Natalie Behring/AP)

Iandel’s mother Adela Rodriguez said her daughter and son were OK but “still a little shaky” from the shooting as they left the campus.

“Today we had the worst nightmare a school district could encounter. We had a school shooting here at Rigby Middle School,” Jefferson School District Superintendent Chad Martin said. “What we know so far is the shooter has been apprehended. There is no further threat to the students.”

Bonneville County sheriff’s sergeant Bryan Lovell said an investigation was under way.

Rigby is a small city about 95 miles south west of Yellowstone National Park. Rigby Middle School has about 1,500 students in sixth through eighth grades, according to the National Centre for Education Statistics.

Idaho Shooting
Students embrace after the school shooting (John Roark /The Idaho Post-Register via AP)

Police tape surrounded the middle school, and small evidence markers were placed next to spots of blood on the ground.

Lucy Long, a sixth-grader at Rigby Middle School, told the Post Register newspaper in Idaho Falls that her classroom went into lockdown after they heard gunshots, with lights and computers turned off and students lined up against the wall.

Lucy comforted her friends and began recording on her phone, so police would know what happened if the gunman came in. The audio contained mostly whispers, with one sentence audible. “It’s real,” one student said.

Lucy said she saw blood on the hallway floor when police escorted them out of the classroom.

The president of the Idaho Education Association, Layne McInelly, said the union was ready to provide whatever support school staff, students and the community needs.

“We send positive thoughts to the victims of this tragic incident and hope for their full and rapid recovery. Patience will need to be at a premium while school officials and law enforcement agencies investigate the situation,” Ms McInelly said.

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