Oakland Elementary School shooting
Oakland Elementary School Shooting | |
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Jamie being taken to court during his 1988 trial. | |
Location | Greenwood, South Carolina, United States |
Coordinates | 34°13′37″N 82°08′27″W / 34.2269°N 82.1408°WCoordinates: 34°13′37″N 82°08′27″W / 34.2269°N 82.1408°W |
Date |
September 26, 1988 11:30 a.m. |
Attack type | School shooting |
Weapons | 9-shot .22-caliber revolver |
Deaths | 2 |
Non-fatal injuries | 9 |
Victims | Shequila Bradley and Tequila Thomas |
Perpetrator | James William Wilson, Jr. |
The Oakland Elementary School shooting was a mass shooting in Greenwood, South Carolina, in which a gunman shot and killed two 8-year-old students, and wounded seven other students, a teacher and gym coach at a public elementary school. He shot people in the cafeteria and in a classroom.[1] He was identified as James William Wilson, Jr., 19 years old and with a history of mental illness.
The shooting
At 11:30 a.m., a gunman entered Oakland Elementary School and started firing shots in the cafeteria, where at least 100 students were seated for lunch. He wounded two students and a first-grade teacher. He went into a girl's restroom, reloaded his gun, and left. He was confronted by physical education teacher Kat Finkbeiner, who accosted him and tried to stop him; he shot her twice, wounding her.[2] He entered a third-grade classroom and shot at the teacher, missing and hitting the blackboard. Wilson turned toward the students and opened fire, killing Shequila Bradley and Tequila Thomas, both eight years old, and wounding five students. Finkbeiner entered the room and tried to force him to surrender but he kept firing. When the police arrived, they eventually subdued and arrested him. They identified him as James William Wilson, Jr.
Victims
Shequila Bradley died at the scene,[3] while Tequila Thomas died at Self Memorial Hospital three days after the shooting.[4]
Perpetrator
Wilson was 19 years old, unemployed, and living a rather isolated life with his mother. He had frequently been a patient at psychiatric hospitals. He was treated with Benzodiazepine drug Xanax to address anxiety and depression. He got relief from his symptoms with this medication. His family's insurance eventually ran out and he was no longer able to be treated as an in-patient.[2] After losing the medication of Xanax, Wilson suffered depression. He was bullied by contemporaries because of being overweight and due to his style of clothes.
On the morning of the shooting, Wilson took a revolver from the mantel at his home, where he was living with his mother. She had bought it for self-defense. He drove to Sky City, a local department store, where he bought two boxes of ammunition, then drove to Greenwood and to Oakland Elementary School. He walked in the front door and went to the cafeteria, where children were gathered for lunch.
Prosecution and sentencing
Wilson was convicted of the murders and sentenced to the death penalty by electric chair. He has been imprisoned on death row for 18 years, and his attorneys have sought an appeal to his sentence. [5]
References
- ↑ "postandcourier - After Newtown, residents of Greenwood, killer’s mother relive school shooting". Post and Courier.
- 1 2 "nytimes.com - Man Held in School Shooting Is Depicted as Jobless Recluse". nytimes.com.
- ↑ "Herald-Journal - Community Mourns Slain Girl at Funeral". news.google.com.
- ↑ "Times Daily - Second victim dies from wounds; school reopens". news.google.com.
- ↑ "WisTV - 18 years on death row: The shootings". wistv.com.
Media data and Non-free use rationale | |
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Description | This page contains two images which could be considered copyrighted material, as they are taken from copyrighted news sources. |
Author or copyright owner |
Unnamed |
Source (WP:NFCC#4) | The Deseret News - Sept. 28, 1988 |
Use in article (WP:NFCC#7) | Oakland Elementary School Shooting |
Purpose of use in article (WP:NFCC#8) | The photos shown in this article is strictly used for the disclosing of the people involved in this incident. |
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This article may be replaced with a freely licensed work if the freely licensed work published such material. |
Minimal use (WP:NFCC#3) | The copyrighted pictures shown in this article are minimal, because it shows the two most major people in the incident (the shooter and one of the victims). |
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The images in this article is not used to replace the original source, but rather to shed light on the issue that is discussed in this article. |