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The incident was the second school shooting in
less than a year in Finland, the other being the Jokela school
shooting in November 2007, in which nine people including the
gunman were killed. Before that, only one other school shooting
had taken place in the country's history, in Rauma in 1989,
leaving two people dead.
Shooting
A student in an adjacent classroom, Sanna
Orpana, said that her class had heard "shooting and a kind of a
rumble like tables falling down." Orpana believed at the time that
the noise may have been coming from a toy gun, and two other
students went to investigate the noise. Saari shot at them, and
the remaining students in Orpana's classroom hid under a table
before running upstairs. At some point between 10:45-11:00 a.m.
Saari ran down a corridor and threw a petrol bomb into a language
laboratory. He then shot out all of the windows in the school's
main corridor, that extended through the building. It was during
this time that he also took aim at Forsberg.
Having escaped the buildings in a variety of
ways (including through doors and out of windows), some students
found themselves impeded by a river that adjoined the school.
However, some were able to use rowing boats as a means of escape.
Saari started fires at several other locations within the school
buildings, and the fire in the exam room damaged some of the
bodies so badly that they had to be identified from DNA and dental
records.
Nine of the victims were found in the exam room,
and one in a nearby corridor. It was later ascertained that this
student had fled the burning classroom and then died in the
corridor. Eight of the victims were female students, one a male
student, and one a male member of staff. All of the students
killed were in their 20s, and the teacher was in his 50s. A 21-year-old
woman was shot in the head but had two operations in the days
after sustaining her injury, and was reported as being in a
satisfactory condition. A further ten students were treated for
minor injuries including sprains and cuts from broken glass. All
the victims were classmates of Saari's.
Firefighters extinguished the fires without any
major damage to the school. Saari remained at large for some time
in the school grounds after they had been evacuated. Two days
after the killings, a friend of Saari's, named Rauno, told 7
päivää that at 11:53 a.m. he received a call from Saari in which
he confessed to having killed ten people. Saari is claimed to have
spoken to Rauno in a calm manner, telling him that he wanted to
say goodbye. He was found alive by the police at 12:30 a.m.,
having shot himself in the head. He was taken to Tampere
University Hospital, where he was treated for his gunshot wound.
He died a short time later.
With a total of ten people killed, it was the
deadliest peacetime attack in Finnish history, surpassing the
previous highest count of eight in the Jokela school shooting. It
was the deadliest attack on a school campus since April 2007, when
Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people during the Virginia Tech massacre.
Saari had fired a total of nearly 200 shots, including towards the
air. The highest number of shots inflicted to a single victim was
twenty.
One former classmate, Susanna Keronen, stated:
"He was happy, a social guy –– there was nothing exceptional – and
he got along with people well and he was not lonely. He had
friends." However, Saari had a history of violence: he had been
thrown out of the Finnish Army in 2006, after being a member for
only a month, for opening fire in a woodland exercise, against
orders.
Police were also investigating whether a
copycat element was involved after it emerged that both Saari and
Pekka-Eric Auvinen, the gunman in the Jokela school shooting, had
bought their guns from the same store. Both gunmen had taken
photographs of themselves in similar poses, and Jari Neulaniemi,
the detective leading the Kauhajoki investigation, said that it
was "very likely" that the two men had been in contact at some
point. Both had been part of a group of people, who centred their
activities around YouTube and Finnish social networking site IRC-Galleria,
who were interested in school shootings. This community, which
included members from Finland, Germany, and the United States,
exchanged videos related to school shootings.
Police said after their preliminary
investigation (March 2009) that they were unable to determine the
underlying motives of Saari. They added that he had committed his
crimes alone: 200 people were interviewed during the investigation,
none of whom said they knew of Saari's plans. Contact with Auvinen
was also ruled out.
Saari listed his interests on YouTube
as "horror movies, guns, sex, beer and computers." YouTube
suspended the account, on which he called himself "Mr. Saari", as
soon as news reports linking him to the shooting emerged. A
spokesperson for YouTube commented that the site operated a zero
tolerance policy towards threats and incitement to violence.
Finnish police had been informed about the YouTube videos in an
anonymous tip-off on the Friday before the shooting. The police
talked to Saari and searched his home on the day before the
incident, Monday 22 September. They found no reason to arrest him
as he held a temporary weapons permit. In August 2008, Saari had
obtained a licence for a .22-calibre (5.6 mm) pistol. The police
said that Saari did not have a criminal record. However, a police
inspector was subsequently charged with dereliction of duty, and
his court case began in September 2009.
Police said that they believed Saari's videos were shot by someone
else, and that they were trying to identify who this person was.
The Chief Investigator of the case, Jari Neulaniemi, speculated
that the cameraman may have been the friend of Saari's who was
murdered.
On the day of the incident, a crisis meeting was held, with
government ministers, chairs of the parliamentary groups, and
police officials all in attendance. The Prime Minister Matti
Vanhanen described it as a "tragic day" and appealed for unity in
the hope "that events like these will not happen again." A
national day of mourning was declared for the following day, and
Vanhanen travelled to Kauhajoki to meet with students.
Within days of the shooting, the police said they had received a
sizeable number of tip-offs alerting the them to suspicious
photographs, videos, and comments on chat rooms. Finnish media
reported that several bomb threats and other threatening messages
were circulating among students nationwide in the few days after
the shootings as well.
A timeline of the events of Tuesday 23.9.2008
9:00
The principal of the Kauhajoki Vocational College Tapio
Varmola began an info session for first-year business and catering
students in an auditorium on the top floor of the building
students.
10:00
Varmola began a similar address to college staff-members,
discussing the new academic year.
10:00
2nd year students began a marketing exam in a ground-floor
classroom. There were around 20 students present and an
invigilator.
c. 10:40
A man with his face disguised under a ski-mask began
shooting in the classroom in the middle of the exam. He threw a
petrol-filled bottle-bomb into the classroom, which caught fire
immediately. The Principal heard shouts from upstairs.
10:46
The emergency response centre received the first call about
a shooting incident at the school. Several other calls followed.
Students escaped classrooms via the doors or by jumping out
of windows, but many found themselves as it were trapped by the
river that adjoins the college campus site. Students were later
shepherded to another college nearby. Minor injuries and cuts and
bruises to some of those escaping.
10:45-11:00
The gunman runs down a corridor and throws another lighted
petrol bomb into a language lab classroom, that burns partly
before the fire extinguishes itself. He shoots out all the windows
over the doors leading off the long corridor that extends through
the building. He fires in the direction of janitor Jukka Forsberg,
who escapes, ducking and weaving to avoid the shots.
c. 11:00
The first police party - two officers in a police van -
arrives on the scene. They are in the yard of the college when the
gunman fires towards them from the main doorway. The police take
cover and radio for backup.
11:45-12:00
Further police units arrive at the college and enter the
building. They make an assault on the main corridor, but are
hindred by the thick smoke emanating from the fires.
Minister for Health and Services Paula Risikko (National
Coalition Party), who is also the Deputy Principal of the
Seinäjoki University of Applied Sciences (of which the Kauhajoki
unit is a part), is made aware of the ongoing situation. A crisis
response group begins work.
15:00
The government expresses its condolences over the events in
Kauhajoki.
c. 15:30
Police confirm that the suspected gunman is 22-year-old
Matti Juhani Saari. After this, police surround and cordon off his
student apartment in a small block in the centre of Kauhajoki. The
apartment reveals a note connected with the actions of the morning
and a large number of empty boxes of bullets for his pistol.
16:46
Saari, who has shot himself in the head after the killings,
dies in Tampere University Hospital. A young woman with a gunshot
wound to the head remains in intensive care. She was later
operated on overnight and is reported to be in a stable condition.
The woman is the only victim of the incident to require hospital
care.
c. 17:00
A police crime scene unit is able to begin its work at the
school. A special forensics team is called into begin the process
of identifying the bodies of the victims.
c. 18:00
It is confirmed that eleven people, including the gunman,
have been killed in the incident. This is one more than earlier
figures have indicated. In the very early stages, police had
reported three deaths. Whether this number is of significance is
unclear. It may be that some of the bodies were not reachable or
visible in the early stages.
The victims died
as a consequence of being shot and from the effects of the fire
and smoke. Presumably post mortem examinations will determine the
actual cause of death in each case. The badly-burned bodies were
still being identified overnight.
On
Wednesday morning, it was reported that the majority of
those killed were women. Initial police accounts on Wednesday
suggest that two of the dead were male (not including the gunman
himself) and the remainder female.