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Lindhurst High School shooting

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Deaths
  
4

Non-fatal injuries
  
10

Lindhurst High School shooting Eric Christopher Houston Murderpedia the encyclopedia of murderers

Date
  
May 1, 19922:40 p.m.–c. 11:30 p.m. (PST)

Target
  
Students and staff of Lindhurst High School

Attack type
  
Weapons
  
12-gauge pump-action shotgunSawed-off .22-caliber rifle.

Location
  
Olivehurst, California, United States

Similar
  
Stockton schoolyard shooting, Frontier Middle School sh, Olean High School shooting, Red Lake shootings, Oikos University shooting

Perpetrator
  
Eric Christopher Houston

Lindhurst shooting 20 years later mary stickle


The Lindhurst High School shooting was a school shooting and subsequent siege that occurred on May 1, 1992, at Lindhurst High School in Olivehurst, California, United States. The gunman, 20-year-old Eric Houston, was a former student at Lindhurst High School. Houston killed three students and one teacher, and wounded nine students and a teacher before surrendering to police.

Contents

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Background

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Lindhurst High School, where the shooting took place, has a multiethnic student body, most from poor and working-class backgrounds.

Shooting and siege

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Eric Houston arrived on campus armed with a 12-gauge pump-action shotgun and a sawed-off .22 caliber rifle around 2:40 p.m. on May 1. As he entered the school, he fatally shot teacher Robert Brens, his civics teacher during his senior year. He then shot and killed Judy Davis, a 17-year-old student inside Brens' classroom. Houston then walked through the hallway outside the classroom and fatally shot student Jason Edward White in the chest. Further on, Houston pointed his shotgun at another student, Angela Welch, but before he could fire his weapon, another student, 16-year-old Beamon A. Hill, pushed her to safety, taking a fatal shotgun blast to the side of his head. Ten others were injured from the gunfire.

Lindhurst High School shooting Eric Christopher Houston Murderpedia the encyclopedia of murderers

Houston then entered a classroom with about 25 to 30 students inside. According to reports, Houston would send student Andrew Parks to retrieve more hostages, threatening that if he did not come back he would kill another student, and eventually held over 80 students hostage. He engaged in an eight-hour standoff with police before surrendering to authorities.

Aftermath

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While in police custody, Houston stated that he was despondent over losing his job and was angered that he failed to graduate from high school or obtain a GED. He claimed to be "out of touch with reality" when he committed the murders. He also confessed to holding a grudge against his former Civics teacher Robert Brens, who failed Houston in his class. On September 21, 1993 Houston was found guilty on all charges against him, and was sentenced to death. In 2012, the California Supreme Court upheld his death penalty. He is currently awaiting execution at San Quentin State Prison. Eric Houston also stated that he had not warned the school that he was coming on campus as some alleged. His statements were introduced as evidence in both the civil and criminal trials. As of September 2016, Houston is still on death row.

Lindhurst High School shooting State Supreme Court Upholds Death Penalty For Houston In Lindhurst

A memorial park was erected on McGowan Parkway in Olivehurst, California in remembrance of the four people who died that day.

Film

Detention: The Siege at Johnson High (a.k.a. Hostage High and Target for Rage) is a 1997 drama thriller film based on the Lindhurst High School shooting. The film stars Rick Schroder, Freddie Prinze, Jr., Katie Wright, Alexis Cruz, and Henry Winkler. The script was written by Larry Golin and directed by Michael W. Watkins. The film was released on May 19, 1997. The television series Hostage Do or Die also produced an episode recreating the events of the shooting and standoff. The episode aired on December 29, 2011.

References

Lindhurst High School shooting Wikipedia


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