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Sheriff: Student plotted TX college attack, fantasized about stabbings

Zarvan

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(CNN) -- The 20-year-old student accused in a stabbing rampage at a Texas college campus told investigators he had fantasies of killing people and had planned the attack, sheriff's officials said late Tuesday.
Dylan Quick, 20, was charged with three counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon after the stabbings, said Donna Hawkins, an official with the Harris County Prosecutor's Office.
"According to the statement the suspect voluntarily gave investigators, he has had fantasies of stabbing people to death since he was in elementary school," a statement from the Harris County Sheriff's Office said. "He also indicated that he has been planning this incident for some time."
Quick used "a razor-type knife" to stab victims at the Lone Star College's CyFair campus Tuesday, the sheriff office's statement said.
Fourteen people were injured in the attack, officials said. Two of them remained hospitalized in critical condition late Tuesday, said Kathryn Klein, a spokeswoman for the Memorial Hermann Texas Trauma Institute.
Witnesses of the attack at the campus northwest of Houston described a chaotic scene. Bleeding victims collapsed to the ground. Many students and teachers ran for cover. Some sprang into action, chasing after the suspect and helping the wounded.
Cassie Foe was in the school's nursing lab when she heard a scream coming from the hallway.
Moments later, the nursing student put her training into action, placing pressure on a wound in a stabbing victim's neck as an attacker went on a rampage at the Lone Star College's CyFair campus.
"It just seemed like he was just going around, basically getting whoever was more open and easiest for him to reach," Foe told CNN's Anderson Cooper on Tuesday.
Steven Maida said he saw so many people swarming that he thought it was a campus tour. Then, he saw them running and heard someone say: "My friend's been stabbed."
Maida said he saw blood on a stairway and several injured victims. One wounded woman had a hole in her throat, one had a hole in her cheek and another victim had a stab wound in the back of his head, Maida said.
"I just took off downstairs running," he said.
Finding the attacker was his goal, he said. Maida told CNN he was among a group of students that chased the suspect, tackled him and pinned him down until authorities arrived.
"I couldn't run the other way like everyone else was," he said.
Authorities could not be reached immediately to confirm Maida's account. Earlier Tuesday, Harris County Sheriff's Deputy Thomas Gilliland said authorities received an initial report that the suspect had been wrestled to the ground by a student before campus police arrested him.
Garcia said a call came in to 911 Tuesday morning describing a "male on the loose stabbing people" at the school.
At least one injured victim had what appeared to be the blade of a box cutter or an X-Acto knife sticking out of her cheek, student Melody Vinton told CNN affiliate KHOU.
Vinton said she had just left her chemistry class when she saw the attacker stabbing people, aiming at their necks and faces.
Soon, she was trying to help victims, ripping a paper towel dispenser off a bathroom wall to get enough paper to help stem the bleeding.
"I turned around and there was just blood. Just blood dripping down the stairs, all over the floor, all over everyone's towels on their necks, just a lot of blood," told KHOU. "There's no humanity in that. Just to see another human being do that was more traumatic than anything."
Another student, 19-year-old Maya Khalil, snapped photos of the chaos as it unfolded, posting pictures on Twitter that showed a bandaged student on a stretcher and police and paramedics swarming the scene.
"It was really scary," she told CNN.
Most of the victims had lacerations in their head and neck areas, said Robert Rasa, a spokesman for the CyFair Volunteer Fire Department.
"We were literally going from building to building, room to room, looking for patients, setting up triage," he said.
The school was on lockdown Tuesday afternoon while authorities combed the campus to ensure no other injured people or attackers were there, Harris County sheriff's spokesman Alan Bernstein said.
While authorities investigated, teachers and students huddled together in locked rooms, said Marianna Sviland, a teacher at the college who was in a faculty workroom at the time of the stabbing.
"Outside the window, I saw cops running around, I saw students running and I realized something was going on," she said. "It was scary."
By 2 p.m. (3 p.m. ET), students and staff were allowed to leave campus, Sviland said.
Details about the victim's injuries were unclear Tuesday afternoon.
Bernstein said it wasn't clear whether all of the injured people were stabbed.
"It's possible other people were running away" and became injured that way, he said.
Four injured victims "were in a dire enough situation that they were taken out on helicopters," Bernstein said.
"I do believe the confrontation was limited to a few (classrooms) or just one classroom -- not anybody roaming around and getting into a large number of areas," Bernstein said.
The school posted a warning on its website: "Stay away from the area. Seek shelter in a secure location until the incident is resolved."
The campus was scheduled to reopen for classes Wednesday morning. Officials said counselors would be speaking with faculty and students.
Tuesday's incident comes more than two months after three people were wounded in a shooting at a different Lone Star College campus -- the North Harris campus in Houston.
CNN's Dave Alsup, Chandler Friedman, Jason Morris, Ed Lavandera, Greg Botelho, Paul Caron, Chuck Johnston, Ashley Fantz and Jason Hanna contributed to this report.
Sheriff: Student plotted TX college attack, fantasized about stabbings - CNN.com
 
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American dream seems to be becoming American nightmare after the sexual revolution in USA.

American dream used to be , wife, children and a job, now it's wh0re, ,bastards and debt.
 
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True this country is undergoing moral decay.
Interesting observation sir.

Just a quick query, If Incidences of violence, indeed is used to depict moral characteristics of a society... what does the society of pakistan amount too given it's rampant violence of a much larger scale?
 
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Interesting observation sir.

Just a quick query, If Incidences of violence, indeed is used to depict moral characteristics of a society... what does the society of pakistan amount too given it's rampant violence of a much larger scale?

Well if you look at Pakistan, Pakistan is facing an extremist, violent, armed insurgency of insurgents and terrorists from the broader region. Much of the "rampant" violence which accounts for most of Pakistan's violence in recent years has come from this insurgency. It's not the common people or mainstream society of Pakistan themselves which are involved in the "rampant violence". You don't see young Pakistani children going into schools and killing their classmates or someone else's children. What you do see is a violent extremist multi-national/multi-ethnic insurgent group attack schools, the difference is clear.
 
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Well if you look at Pakistan, Pakistan is facing an extremist, violent, armed insurgency of insurgents and terrorists from the broader region. Much of the "rampant" violence which accounts for most of Pakistan's violence in recent years has come from this insurgency. It's not the common people or mainstream society of Pakistan themselves which are involved in the "rampant violence". You don't see young Pakistani children going into schools and killing their classmates or someone else's children. What you do see is a violent extremist multi-national/multi-ethnic insurgent group attack schools, the difference is clear.

Interesting that you mention that, so the difference you want to point here violence from "mainstream society of a nation", will define the changing dynamics of moral character of a society.

So on one hand you have a society that is so radically polarized that the modern/mainstream society has already disassociated themselves with their fellow countrymen who are termed "extremists". A society which has seen widespread killings based of religious disagreement, political motivations, separatist rebellion, communal hatred, still holds a higher moral ground based on the actions a substantial minority demographics of what you term as the "MAINSTREAM SOCIETY".

WHEREAS
A society which is all inclusive, multi ethinic, multi racial, and has a constitution which doesn't differentiate between it's own citizens based on religions affiliations, a society that doesn't see separatism, nepotism, domestic terrorism, political violence, is still facing a "Moral decay", based on the violence committed by an extremely minuscule unaffiliated set of mentally derrainged individuals.

With all due respect, I am a little confused by the benchmarks of your comparison sets.
 
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Well if you look at Pakistan, Pakistan is facing an extremist, violent, armed insurgency of insurgents and terrorists from the broader region. Much of the "rampant" violence which accounts for most of Pakistan's violence in recent years has come from this insurgency. It's not the common people or mainstream society of Pakistan themselves which are involved in the "rampant violence". You don't see young Pakistani children going into schools and killing their classmates or someone else's children. What you do see is a violent extremist multi-national/multi-ethnic insurgent group attack schools, the difference is clear.
Yes, it is much preferable in Pakistan where young children are indoctrinated early into religious discipline so they can kill more efficiently at an older age after recruitment into said 'insurgency'. Much better.
 
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Yes, it is much preferable in Pakistan where young children are indoctrinated early into religious discipline so they can kill more efficiently at an older age after recruitment into said 'insurgency'. Much better.

Here children are indoctrinated to kill, in US children kill for no reason......see the difference?
 
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Yes, it is much preferable in Pakistan where young children are indoctrinated early into religious discipline so they can kill more efficiently at an older age after recruitment into said 'insurgency'. Much better.

It's not Pakistani children involved for the most part, vast majority are Afghans, Tajiks, Uzbeks, and other ethnicities/nationalities. Arrest records, passports confiscated, interrogations, all show this.
 
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It's not Pakistani children involved for the most part, vast majority are Afghans, Tajiks, Uzbeks, and other ethnicities/nationalities. Arrest records, passports confiscated, interrogations, all show this.

That is not what this recent study on Lashkar-E-Taiyyaba says:

The Fighters of Lashkar‐e‐Taiba: Recruitment,Training, Deployment and Death

Most of them are from Pakistani Punjab, avg age 16 years and a few months. Do you want to read it in detail?
 
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One thing which is becoming common in all these mass shooting incidents is that the guy was introvert and shy and no one believed he would do such a killings ever. :coffee:
 
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