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Emergency alerts, desks barricading doors: How the FSU shooting upended the campus

Emergency alerts, desks barricading doors: How the FSU shooting upended the campus
AND HE HAS LIKE A RIFLE THAT HE’S KIND OF WAVING AROUND. SECONDS LATER, GUNSHOTS. AND THEN PROBABLY ABOUT MAYBE TEN GUNSHOTS HAPPENED AND EVERYONE’S LIKE, OH MY GOD. AND CONFUSION ON FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY’S CAMPUS. I JUST STARTED RUNNING AS FAST AS I COULD, AND THEN I COULD JUST HEAR, LIKE, SHOTS ECHOING AS I WAS RUNNING. PEOPLE RUNNING AWAY FROM THE STUDENT UNION. WE SAW. COPS RUNNING, STUDENTS RUNNING. IT WAS JUST LIKE COMPLETE CHAOS. EVERYONE WAS LIKE RUNNING ALL OVER THE PLACE. OTHERS BARRICADING DOORS WITH ANYTHING THEY COULD FIND TO KEEP THE GUNMAN OUT. PEOPLE WERE GOING EVERYWHERE. SOME WENT UP LIKE A MAINTENANCE ELEVATOR. SOMEONE UP SOME STAIRCASES. WE JUST KIND OF WENT IN A CORNER AND HID BEHIND SOME TRASH CANS. MADE A LITTLE FORT OUT OF PLYWOOD UNTIL POLICE ARRIVED TO TAKE THEM TO SAFETY. MY HANDS ARE SHAKING. JUST ADRENALINE KICKED IN AND I REALLY DIDN’T KNOW WHAT TO DO. I STARTED TEARING UP, JUST LIKE I WAS SCARED. TO BE HONEST, I WAS COMPLETELY IN SHOCK. I DIDN’T THINK THIS COULD HAPPEN AT FLORIDA STATE. AND TONIGHT A MEMORIAL IS GROWING AT FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY FOR THE TWO PEOPLE KILLED AND SIX OTHERS HURT IN TODAY’S MASS SHOOTING. THANKS FOR TRUSTING WESH 2 NEWS. I’M SUMMER KNOWLES AND I’M JESSE PAGON. THE SUSPECTED SHOOTER, 20 YEAR OLD PHOENIX ANCHOR EICHNER, IS IN CUSTODY TONIGHT. THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS HE IS THE SON OF A LEON COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPUTY AND USED HIS MOM’S FORMER SERVICE WEAPON IN THE SHOOTING. WESH 2’S HAYLEY CROMBLEHOLME LIVE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA WITH LOCAL REACTION TO THE TRAGEDY AND GAIL PASCHALL-BROWN UNCOVERING HOW OUR LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES PREPARE FOR ACTIVE SHOOTERS TO KEEP YOU SAFE. BUT LET’S GO AHEAD AND HEAD OUT TO WESH TWO ANCHOR STEWART MOORE, WHO LEADS OUR TEAM COVERAGE TONIGHT FROM THAT MEMORIAL ON CAMPUS AT FSU. STU. JUST. AND SUMMER AND JESSE, THAT MEMORIAL CONTINUES TO GROW AT THIS HOUR. YOU CAN SEE MORE STUDENTS ARE PUTTING FLOWERS THERE WHERE CANDLES ARE ALSO LIT AND PEOPLE HAVE LEFT DIFFERENT FSU MEMENTOS, FLOWERS, TEDDY BEARS, DIFFERENT THINGS TO MAKE SURE THAT PEOPLE KNOW THEY’RE NOT IN THIS ALONE. WE DID LEARN MORE INFORMATION THIS HOUR ABOUT THE SHOOTER, IN THIS CASE, THE SUSPECTED SHOOTER, 20 YEAR OLD PHOENIX EICHNER. INVESTIGATORS AGAIN TOLD US THAT HE IS THE SON OF A SHERIFF’S DEPUTY HERE IN LEON COUNTY, BUT ALSO THAT HE WAS IN MORE LIKE A JUNIOR PATROL TYPE OF SITUATION WHEN HE WAS IN HIGH SCHOOL. NOW, HE WAS ALSO A STUDENT AT TALLAHASSEE STATE COLLEGE, ACCORDING TO NBC. BEFORE HE ENROLLED HERE AT FLORIDA STATE AND SOMEONE WHO ATTENDED TALLAHASSEE STATE COLLEGE WITH HIM SAYS THAT HE WAS ALSO IN A GROUP CALLED THE POLITICAL ROUNDTABLE, AND HE SAID THAT HE HAD TO BE KICKED OUT OF THE GROUP SAYING, QUOTE, BASICALLY OUR ONLY RULE WAS NO NAZIS. COLLOQUIALLY SPEAKING, HE ESPOUSED HIMSELF AS SO MUCH WHITE SUPREMACIST RHETORIC AND FAR RIGHT RHETORIC, AS WELL AS TO THE POINT WHERE WE HAD TO EXERCISE THAT RULE. THEN HE WAS REMOVED AGAIN. WE SPOKE TO A STUDENT THIS AFTERNOON WHO IS ACTUALLY GOING TO INTERN AT WESH THIS SUMMER. HE WAS IN THE STUDENT UNION WHEN THOSE SHOTS WERE FIRED. WE FIRST SAW PEOPLE RUNNING OUTSIDE OF OUR BOWLING ALLEY AND THEN SOMEONE MENTIONED ACTIVE SHOOTER, AND WE ALL KIND OF RAN TOWARDS THE BACK BILLIARDS ROOM, KIND OF PUTS LIKE ANOTHER GLASS WALL BETWEEN US AND THE OUTSIDE. PEOPLE WERE JUST KIND OF HYPERVENTILATING AND ME LIKE, OH MY GOSH, LIKE PRAYING. JUST STRESSED OUT. AND PEOPLE WERE LIKE, OH MY GOSH, OH MY GOSH. TEXTING PARENTS, CALLING, PARENTS CALLING FRIENDS. AND ONCE WE GOT OUTSIDE, HUGE AMOUNTS, THERE WAS SOMEONE BEING TREATED BY EMS. AND THEN JUST ALL AROUND THERE WAS POLICE AND THEY GUIDED US AND TOLD US, JUST GET OFF CAMPUS. AND RYAN, WHO YOU HEARD FROM THERE, WENT TO HAGERTY HIGH SCHOOL. HE’S INTERNING AT WESH FOR THE LAST FEW SUMMERS IN OUR METEOROLOGY DEPARTMENT. HE WENT ON TO TELL US HE’S JUST 21 YEARS OLD. HE SAYS HIS ENTIRE LIFE, WHILE HE’S BEEN IN SCHOOL, HE’S PRACTICED FOR THINGS LIKE THIS. TALLAHASSEE FROM KINDERGARTEN ON UP THAT WE’VE BEEN PREPARING AND UNFORTUNATELY, TODAY WE HAD TO USE IT FOR REAL. WE’VE BEEN GOING THROUGH LIKE, OH, WOW, WHAT STOPPED ME FROM GOING TO GET LUNCH OR GOING UPSTAIRS OR JUST, YOU KNOW, GOING TO DO SOMETHING OUTSIDE. OKAY. YEAH. AND AGAIN, THIS MEMORIAL CONTINUES TO GROW AS PEOPLE HAVE MORE AND MORE THOUGHTS LIKE THAT. RYAN TELLS US HIS KEYS ARE ACTUALLY STILL IN THE STUDENT UNION, SO HE HAS NOT BEEN ABLE TO GET BACK TO THEM, AS THAT IS STILL CONSIDERED AN ACTIVE CRIME SCENE. NOW, THIS IS NOT THE FIRST SHOOTING ON FSU’S CAMPUS. BACK IN NOVEMBER 2014, A 31 YEAR OLD ALUMNUS SHOT TWO STUDENTS AND AN EMPLOYEE AT STROZIER LIBRARY BEFORE POLICE SHOT AND KILLED HIM. INVESTIGATORS SAY HE CLAIMED THAT HE HEARD VOICES IN HIS APARTMENT AND THOUGHT THE GOVERNMENT WAS TARGETING HIM. ONE OF THE VICTIMS SHOT WAS A STUDENT FROM APOPKA. RONNIE AHMED WAS SHOT THREE TIMES AND PARALYZED FROM HIS WAIST DOWN. I COVERED THAT INCIDENT BACK IN 2014 FOR WESH TWO AS WELL. BRINGS BACK MEMORIES FROM BEING THERE. IT ALSO BRINGS BACK THE MEMORIES OF A CLOSE CALL. ANOTHER STORY THAT WE COVERED 12 YEARS AGO AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA. POLICE SAY JAMES SIVAKUMARAN RANG THE FIRE ALARM INSIDE THE TOWER. ONE DORMITORY TO POSSIBLY LURE AS MANY PEOPLE INTO THE OPEN AS POSSIBLE BEFORE HE PLANNED, ALLEGEDLY TO CARRY OUT A MASS SHOOTING BEFORE HE COULD SHOOT, HIS ROOMMATE ENCOUNTERED HIM AND THEN CALLED 911. HE LATER TOOK HIS OWN LIFE BEFORE POLICE ARRIVED. INVESTIGATORS FOUND GUNS, HUNDREDS OF ROUNDS OF AMMUNITION AND FOUR HOMEMADE BOMBS INSIDE OF A BACKPACK. NOW, WHAT HAPPENED IN TALLAHASSEE HAS SENT SHOCKWAVES THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE STATE AND, OF COURSE, THROUGHOUT CAMPUSES AROUND OUR NATION, WITH PEOPLE IN DIFFERENT CAMPUSES UNDOUBTEDLY CONNECTED TO HERE IN TALLAHASSEE. WESH HAYLEY CROMBLEHOLME JOINS US LIVE FROM UCF TONIGHT TALKING TO PEOPLE AND THEIR THOUGHTS ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED HERE TODAY. HAYLEY. SO STEWART, EVEN THOUGH THE SHOOTING OBVIOUSLY DIDN’T HAPPEN HERE, THE CONCERN WAS CERTAINLY FELT HERE. I SPOKE WITH SOME UCF STUDENTS I SPOKE WITH AN ORLANDO WOMAN WHOSE SISTER IS A STUDENT AT FLORIDA STATE. A LOT OF THE PEOPLE I TALKED TO TODAY TELLING ME AS SOON AS THEY HEARD ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED IN TALLAHASSEE, THE FIRST THING THEY HAD TO DO WAS CONTACT EVERYONE THEY KNOW AT FLORIDA STATE, A FEW HUNDRED MILES FROM TALLAHASSEE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA. THE RIPPLE EFFECT OF THIS DEADLY SHOOTING WAS FELT. I THINK IT’S DEFINITELY A CONCERN. I AM A TAD BIT NERVOUS BECAUSE IT’S STARTING TO GET MORE AND MORE COMMON IN AMERICA. THIS FRESHMAN DID WHAT PROBABLY A LOT OF FOLKS ON CAMPUS DID AS SOON AS THEY HEARD ABOUT THE SHOOTING, THE FIRST THING THEY DID WAS CONTACT MY FRIEND BECAUSE I HAVE A FEW FRIENDS THAT LIVE THERE, BUT THANKFULLY THEY WEREN’T AT THE SCENE WHEN IT HAPPENED, SO THEY’RE SAFE. THEY’RE A LITTLE BIT PARANOID, BUT THEY’RE GLAD THAT THEY’RE SAFE NOW, OBVIOUSLY. AND FOR SOME IN OUR AREA, IT’S NOT JUST FRIENDS, BUT FAMILY THAT ARE AT FLORIDA STATE. FOR DIANA BUENO, IT’S HER SISTER, ANGELICA, A GRADUATE OF OVIEDO HIGH SCHOOL WHO IS NOW A SOPHOMORE ON THE SOFTBALL TEAM AT FLORIDA STATE. IT’S A LITTLE SCARY BECAUSE SHE’S THE BABY OF THE FAMILY. YOU KNOW, SHE FIRST FOUND OUT SOMETHING WAS GOING ON WHEN HER SISTER SENT HER A MESSAGE WITH A VIDEO. I SAW EVERYONE RUNNING AROUND. I WAS LIKE, WAIT, WHAT’S GOING ON? SHE’S LIKE, THERE’S A SHOOTING. AND I WAS LIKE, OH MY GOSH, LIKE, ARE YOU OKAY? SHE SAYS HER SISTER IS SAFE AND UNHARMED, AND HER FAMILY WILL BE HEADING TO TALLAHASSEE THIS WEEKEND TO SEE HER. AND WITH THE SEMESTER NEVER ENDING, STUDENTS WILL SOON GET TO HEAD HOME AFTER WHAT’S HAPPENED SO THEY CAN JUST COME HOME TO THEIR FAMILIES, YOU KNOW, SETTLE DOWN, GET AWAY FROM IT ALL. AND HERE AT UCF, THE SCHOOL DID SEND OUT A STATEMENT CALLING WHAT HAPPENED IN TALLAHASSEE DEVASTATING. THEY ALSO LET STUDENTS KNOW THEY MAY NOTICE AN INCREASED PRESENCE OF POLICE ON CAMPUS. AND THEY ALSO ARE GOING TO BE SETTING ASIDE A SPACE STARTING TOMORROW MORNING AT THE LIVE OAK EVENT CENTER, WHERE PEOPLE WERE PART OF THIS COMMUNITY CAN REFLECT AND FIND SOME SUPPORT THAT’S GOING TO BE OPENING UP AT 10 A.M. LIVE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA. HAYLEY CROMBLEHOLME WESH TWO NEWS. HAYLEY. THANK YOU. ORANGE COUNTY HAS A LARGE POPULATION OF STUDENTS AT FLORIDA STATE. MORE THAN 2000 STUDENTS WERE ENROLLED IN THE FALL 2023 SEMESTER. THAT IS THE SIXTH MOST THROUGHOUT THE STATE. MEANWHILE, PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP HAS ALSO BEEN KEPT UP TO DATE ABOUT WHAT’S HAPPENED HERE IN TALLAHASSEE. EARLIER TODAY, HE ADDRESSED REPORTERS WHEN THEY ASKED HIM ABOUT ANY POSSIBLE GUN LEGISLATION IN THE WAKE OF THE SHOOTING. HERE’S WHAT HE HAD TO SAY. AS FAR AS LEGISLATION IS CONCERNED, THIS HAS BEEN GOING ON FOR A LONG TIME. I HAVE AN OBLIGATION TO PROTECT THE SECOND AMENDMENT. I RAN ON THE SECOND AMENDMENT, AMONG MANY OTHER THINGS, AND I WILL ALWAYS PROTECT THE SECOND AMENDMENT. AND GOVERNOR RON DESANTIS ALSO WEIGHED IN THIS AFTERNOON ON SOCIAL MEDIA, OFFERING HIS CONDOLENCES TO FLORIDA STATE. CASEY AND I STAND IN SOLIDARITY AND ARE PRAYING FOR THE ENTIRE FLORIDA STATE COMMUNITY. WE’RE MOURNING THE TWO INDIVIDUALS WHO LOST THEIR LIVES IN THIS TRAGIC ATTACK, AND WE WISH WELL THOSE WHO ARE CURRENTLY RECOVERING IN THE HOSPITAL. THIS KILLER MUST AND WILL BE BROUGHT TO JUSTICE TO THE FULLEST EXTENT OF THE LAW. AND TODAY WE WERE ABLE TO WITNESS A MASSIVE POLICE RESPONSE FROM FSU PD TO TALLAHASSEE POLICE DEPARTMENT TO LOCAL SHERIFF’S OFFICE, TO STATE AND FEDERAL AGENCIES ALL SWARMING ON CAMPUS. AND PEOPLE TELL US THAT THAT’S THE ONLY WAY THAT YOU CAN STOP THIS SORT OF THING. WESH TOS GAIL PASCHALL-BROWN SPOKE TO THE MANAGEMENT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT DIRECTOR ABOUT WHAT IT TAKES TO STOP AN ACTIVE SHOOTER AND GAIL THE INSIGHT THAT THEY GAVE TODAY REALLY WAS EYE OPENING AS TO WHAT YOU NEED TO DO. ABSOLUTELY. YOU KNOW, YOU HAVE TO STAY READY IN TERRIBLE TRAGEDIES LIKE THIS. STEPHEN LERNER WITH SEMINOLE COUNTY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT SAYS ONGOING TRAINING IS ESSENTIAL AS HE SENDS HIS HEARTFELT SYMPATHIES TO THE ENTIRE FSU FAMILY. THIS REALLY DOES HIT HARD, YOU KNOW, JUST GIVING MY THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS TO, YOU KNOW, ALL THE INDIVIDUALS THAT ARE AFFECTED AT FSU, STEPHEN LERNER IS THE DIVISION MANAGER FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT. HOW DO YOU PREPARE FOR SOMETHING LIKE THIS? EVERYBODY FROM, YOU KNOW, OUR PHONE OPERATORS IN THE 911 CENTER ALL THE WAY UP TO OUR AGENCY LEADERSHIP, HAS A ROLE TO PLAY IN THESE TYPES OF INCIDENTS. AND WE WE HAVE A VERY ROBUST EXERCISING AND TRAINING SCHEDULE WITH OUR LAW ENFORCEMENT AND FIRE PERSONNEL AND THOSE OTHER AGENCIES THAT MAY BE IMPACTED BY THESE TYPES OF MASS SHOOTINGS OR ACTS OF VIOLENCE. JUST NORTH OF BUILDING NINE, ONE SUSPECT IS DOWN. EXERCISES LIKE THIS, WHERE A STOREFRONT INSIDE THE OVIEDO MALL IN SEMINOLE COUNTY BECAME A SCHOOL WITH A SHOOTER INSIDE. ITS TRAINING FOR FIRST RESPONDERS ON HANDLING THE CHAOS AND CONFUSION OF AN ACTIVE SHOOTER. ALL OF THE AMR PERSONNEL, THEY ARE NOT ALLOWED THROUGH THE DOORS. AND THEN THERE’S THIS ANNUAL MASS CASUALTY EXERCISE LAST WEEK IN CENTRAL FLORIDA, INVOLVING MORE THAN 60 HOSPITALS. THIS TYPE OF INCIDENT IS NO STRANGER TO CENTRAL FLORIDA. I WORKED THE ORLANDO PULSE NIGHTCLUB SHOOTING AGAIN. STILL, THE COMMUNITY IS WORKING TO RECOVER FROM THAT. IT’S THE RECOVERY THAT HAPPENS ONGOING AFTER FROM, YOU KNOW, YOU KNOW, BRINGING CLASSES BACK AT, YOU KNOW, AT THE SCHOOL. YOU KNOW, PROVIDING MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELING, DONATIONS, MANAGEMENT. YOU KNOW, ALL OF THOSE THINGS NEED A COORDINATED PROCESS. AND THAT’S WHAT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT’S ROLE IS. LERNER SAYS STOPPING THESE ACTIVE SHOOTER INCIDENTS BEFORE THEY HAPPEN IS SO IMPORTANT, AND THE COMMUNITY’S HELP IS NEEDED. YOU KNOW, IF SOMEBODY SEES SOMETHING, THEY REALLY NEED TO REPORT IT AND SAY SOMETHING TO LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT. STEVEN LERNER SAYS. EVERY TIME THERE IS AN ACTIVE SHOOTER INCIDENT, THERE’S TYPICALLY A QUESTIONABLE INDIVIDUAL OR SOCIAL MEDIA POST THAT COMES OUT BUT YET GOES UNREPORTED, HE SAYS. LET’S TRY TO STOP IT BEFORE IT TURNS TRAGIC. BACK TO YOU. STEWART. YEAH. ALL RIGHT. GAIL. THANK YOU. AND TOMORROW MORNING, FSU HAS JUST ANNOUNCED FROM EIGHT UNTIL FIVE THEY WILL HAVE A SUPPORT CENTER OPEN FOR ANY STUDENTS OR ANY PERSON IN THE COMMUNITY WHO NEEDS TO TALK ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED HERE TODAY. AND OF COURSE, WE’VE ALSO LEARNED THAT THE TWO PEOPLE WHO WERE KILLED WERE NOT STUDENTS. WE DO NOT KNOW WHO THE FIVE PEOPLE WERE THAT WERE ALSO INJURED, BUT WE HAVE BEEN TOLD THAT THEY ARE IN FAIR CONDITION. TOMORROW NIGHT AT AROUND 5:00, THERE WILL ALSO BE A VIGIL ON CAMPUS FOR THE ENTIRE COMMUNITY TO GATHER. AND OF COURSE, WESH TWO WILL HAVE CONTINUING COVERAGE OF THE DEADLY MASS SHOOTING AT FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY ON AIR AND ONLINE@WESH.COM. WE’LL HAVE A CREW ON CAMPUS TOMORROW MORNING WITH SUNRISE WITH THE NEWEST INFORMATION ON THIS TRAGEDY. REPORTING L
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Emergency alerts, desks barricading doors: How the FSU shooting upended the campus
It was an ordinary afternoon for Jayden D’Onofrio, who was spending time with a friend at their apartment complex when they received a text that made their blood run cold.An active shooter was on campus, and their friend was hiding in the library.Without a second thought, they ran to her.A perfect, sun-drenched Florida spring day had suddenly descended into horror when a gunman began firing at victims near Florida State University’s student union building, marking the next chapter in America’s grim epidemic of gun violence.“That is one of the most gutting feelings possible, to not know if your friends are okay
 and if they’re going to make it through that moment,” D’Onofrio told CNN.“There’s no words to sort of describe that feeling and that experience.”Another college campus – and thousands of students – are now scarred by the lasting trauma of gun violence, transforming the once-idyllic lawns, where students usually gather with books and coffee, into a dreadful reminder of where innocent lives were taken.Two weeks before the semester’s end, just as seniors were gearing up for graduation, two people were killed and five others injured when the suspect, a student at the university and the son of a local sheriff’s deputy, police said, opened fire.D’Onofrio is no stranger to the reality of how gun violence can tear a community apart. Thursday’s shooting comes seven years after the bloodbath in Parkland, Florida, when a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School killed 17 people and wounded 17 others, ripping the community apart.He was in his 7th grade English class when he got the phone notification that there was a shooting 15 minutes away from his school. Following the massacre, D’Onofrio had school shooting drills every month growing up, he says, “and this is just another chapter of that.”Video below: "It was complete chaos": Florida State University student reacts to the shootingScrambling to dodge bulletsAs the university went into lockdown, students and staff received emergency alerts urging them to shelter in place. Inside the buildings, students crouched beneath desks, texting loved ones in fear. In one classroom, they piled desks against the door in an attempt to barricade themselves.Sam Swartz, a senior at the university, was forced to rely on his high school training for responding to school shootings. He hunkered down with other students in the basement of the student union during the attack, hoping to “hide it out.”Swartz and his group quickly pushed trash cans and plywood into place, stacking them into a low barricade. The makeshift barrier was a deliberate tactic Swartz remembered from high school.“The best thing to do is to try and deter the shooter,” he told CNN’s Omar Jimenez. “Their goal is always just to try and (shoot) as many people as possible, so if you can try and delay that, you’re going to be pretty good.”Another senior, Will Schatz, was also inside the student union during the shooting.“I heard commotion before, but it didn’t really register until I saw a bunch of people just running to the exit. And while some stayed behind to seek shelter, I ran outside the building as well,” Schatz told CNN.Holden Mamula told CNN he was in his calculus class when he heard sirens in the distance and an active shooter alert sounding on campus. “I saw this police officer with an assault rifle, and I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is real,’” he said.The political science and statistics major texted his parents and sat on his knees, preparing to run, as classmates hid behind desks and turned off the lights.Video below: FSU student speaks after shooting: 'I really didn't know what to do ... I was scared'“It’s insane to me how we keep having these incidents, after incidents, after incidents, of just mass shootings,” Mamula said, describing the experience as traumatizing. “I don’t think you feel the emotion until you’ve been through that.”A video taken by a student who hid behind a bush during the attack captured someone’s body lying still in the grass as others frantically scrambled to dodge bullets, their screams filling the air while gunshots rang out, one after another.McKenzie Heeter was leaving the student union when she saw an orange Hummer parked nearby on a service road. She then saw a man next to the car holding “a larger gun,” when he “let off a shot” in her general direction, where other people were also walking.She witnessed the man turn around and pull a handgun out of the car, turn toward the student union and shoot a woman wearing purple scrubs in the back.“When he turned to the woman and shot her, that’s when I realized, there was no target. And that it was anybody he could see,” Heeter said. “And I took off.”She started running until she made it back to her apartment, around a mile away. For the first 20 seconds, she heard continuous gunfire. “It was just shot after shot after shot,” she said.Meanwhile, ambulances and a swarm of police vehicles sped toward campus, their sirens swallowing the calm that had existed just moments before. Students lounging on the lush lawns of the university’s sprawling Tallahassee campus were sent fleeing for their lives, abandoning their shoes and backpacks in the grass.Taking shelter at a churchMany of those fleeing ran to the Co-Cathedral of St. Thomas More, a church across the street from Florida State University, where the priest was helping terrified people find shelter.Father Luke Farabaugh was attending a staff birthday party when he heard pops, which gave him a bad feeling, he said. People started pouring into the cathedral with “a fear that I had never seen before,” Farabaugh said. “It was surreal to be thrust into a life-and-death situation.”Once the all-clear was issued hours after the shooting, streams of students, some with their hands in the air, were evacuated from campus buildings and brought to safe locations, where many were seen collapsing into hugs and breaking down in tears.“You go to school to get your degree, make friends, you make memories, not to go to school to experience stuff like this,” FSU student Garrett Harvey told CNN from a building where he had been evacuated to with hundreds of other students.D’Onofrio shared the sentiment, saying he managed to get his friend — who was in shock — to safety.“This isn’t normal. It keeps happening, again and again,” he said. “It’s depressing, and there’s no real action being taken to change it, especially here in Florida.”FSU itself is no stranger to such tragedies.In late fall 2014, a gunman opened fire just after midnight at the school’s Strozier Library, which was packed with hundreds of students studying for finals. Three people were injured, including a student who was left paralyzed. The gunman, who had graduated from FSU nearly a decade earlier, was shot and killed by campus police after firing at officers.Gun violence in the U.S. has turned into a relentless crisis, claiming lives daily and leaving shattered communities to pick up the pieces every time. There have been 81 mass shootings in the United States so far this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive.As students returned to collect the belongings they’d left behind while fleeing the gunfire, evidence markers dotted the lawn near the student union building, where shell casings lay scattered in the grass.On the night of the shooting, a mass was held at the church where people fled for safety. What was meant to be a joyous time for the community as Easter approaches, Farabaugh said, turned into tragedy.“We will be entering into this Holy Week in a different way this year,” Farabaugh added. “I don’t have any spiritual conclusions. I only say that as we enter into this service, many of us were thrust into service today.”

It was an ordinary afternoon for Jayden D’Onofrio, who was spending time with a friend at their apartment complex when they received a text that made their blood run cold.

An active shooter was on campus, and their friend was hiding in the library.

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Without a second thought, they ran to her.

A perfect, sun-drenched Florida spring day had suddenly descended into horror when a gunman began firing at victims near Florida State University’s student union building, marking the next chapter in America’s grim epidemic of gun violence.

“That is one of the most gutting feelings possible, to not know if your friends are okay
 and if they’re going to make it through that moment,” D’Onofrio told CNN.

“There’s no words to sort of describe that feeling and that experience.”

Another college campus – and thousands of students – are now scarred by the lasting trauma of gun violence, transforming the once-idyllic lawns, where students usually gather with books and coffee, into a dreadful reminder of where innocent lives were taken.

Two weeks before the semester’s end, just as seniors were gearing up for graduation, two people were killed and five others injured when the suspect, a student at the university and the son of a local sheriff’s deputy, police said, opened fire.

D’Onofrio is no stranger to the reality of how gun violence can tear a community apart. Thursday’s shooting comes seven years after the bloodbath in Parkland, Florida, when a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School killed 17 people and wounded 17 others, ripping the community apart.

He was in his 7th grade English class when he got the phone notification that there was a shooting 15 minutes away from his school. Following the massacre, D’Onofrio had school shooting drills every month growing up, he says, “and this is just another chapter of that.”

Video below: "It was complete chaos": Florida State University student reacts to the shooting

Scrambling to dodge bullets

As the university went into lockdown, students and staff received emergency alerts urging them to shelter in place. Inside the buildings, students crouched beneath desks, texting loved ones in fear. In one classroom, they piled desks against the door in an attempt to barricade themselves.

Sam Swartz, a senior at the university, was forced to rely on his high school training for responding to school shootings. He hunkered down with other students in the basement of the student union during the attack, hoping to “hide it out.”

Swartz and his group quickly pushed trash cans and plywood into place, stacking them into a low barricade. The makeshift barrier was a deliberate tactic Swartz remembered from high school.

“The best thing to do is to try and deter the shooter,” he told CNN’s Omar Jimenez. “Their goal is always just to try and (shoot) as many people as possible, so if you can try and delay that, you’re going to be pretty good.”

Another senior, Will Schatz, was also inside the student union during the shooting.

“I heard commotion before, but it didn’t really register until I saw a bunch of people just running to the exit. And while some stayed behind to seek shelter, I ran outside the building as well,” Schatz told CNN.

Holden Mamula told CNN he was in his calculus class when he heard sirens in the distance and an active shooter alert sounding on campus. “I saw this police officer with an assault rifle, and I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is real,’” he said.

The political science and statistics major texted his parents and sat on his knees, preparing to run, as classmates hid behind desks and turned off the lights.

Video below: FSU student speaks after shooting: 'I really didn't know what to do ... I was scared'

“It’s insane to me how we keep having these incidents, after incidents, after incidents, of just mass shootings,” Mamula said, describing the experience as traumatizing. “I don’t think you feel the emotion until you’ve been through that.”

A video taken by a student who hid behind a bush during the attack captured someone’s body lying still in the grass as others frantically scrambled to dodge bullets, their screams filling the air while gunshots rang out, one after another.

McKenzie Heeter was leaving the student union when she saw an orange Hummer parked nearby on a service road. She then saw a man next to the car holding “a larger gun,” when he “let off a shot” in her general direction, where other people were also walking.

She witnessed the man turn around and pull a handgun out of the car, turn toward the student union and shoot a woman wearing purple scrubs in the back.

“When he turned to the woman and shot her, that’s when I realized, there was no target. And that it was anybody he could see,” Heeter said. “And I took off.”

She started running until she made it back to her apartment, around a mile away. For the first 20 seconds, she heard continuous gunfire. “It was just shot after shot after shot,” she said.

Meanwhile, ambulances and a swarm of police vehicles sped toward campus, their sirens swallowing the calm that had existed just moments before. Students lounging on the lush lawns of the university’s sprawling Tallahassee campus were sent fleeing for their lives, abandoning their shoes and backpacks in the grass.

Taking shelter at a church

Many of those fleeing ran to the Co-Cathedral of St. Thomas More, a church across the street from Florida State University, where the priest was helping terrified people find shelter.

Father Luke Farabaugh was attending a staff birthday party when he heard pops, which gave him a bad feeling, he said. People started pouring into the cathedral with “a fear that I had never seen before,” Farabaugh said. “It was surreal to be thrust into a life-and-death situation.”

Once the all-clear was issued hours after the shooting, streams of students, some with their hands in the air, were evacuated from campus buildings and brought to safe locations, where many were seen collapsing into hugs and breaking down in tears.

“You go to school to get your degree, make friends, you make memories, not to go to school to experience stuff like this,” FSU student Garrett Harvey told CNN from a building where he had been evacuated to with hundreds of other students.

D’Onofrio shared the sentiment, saying he managed to get his friend — who was in shock — to safety.

“This isn’t normal. It keeps happening, again and again,” he said. “It’s depressing, and there’s no real action being taken to change it, especially here in Florida.”

FSU itself is no stranger to such tragedies.

In late fall 2014, a gunman opened fire just after midnight at the school’s Strozier Library, which was packed with hundreds of students studying for finals. Three people were injured, including a student who was left paralyzed. The gunman, who had graduated from FSU nearly a decade earlier, was shot and killed by campus police after firing at officers.

Gun violence in the U.S. has turned into a relentless crisis, claiming lives daily and leaving shattered communities to pick up the pieces every time. There have been 81 mass shootings in the United States so far this year, according to the

As students returned to collect the belongings they’d left behind while fleeing the gunfire, evidence markers dotted the lawn near the student union building, where shell casings lay scattered in the grass.

On the night of the shooting, a mass was held at the church where people fled for safety. What was meant to be a joyous time for the community as Easter approaches, Farabaugh said, turned into tragedy.

“We will be entering into this Holy Week in a different way this year,” Farabaugh added. “I don’t have any spiritual conclusions. I only say that as we enter into this service, many of us were thrust into service today.”