BAILEY, Colo.-
Investigators were piecing together evidence Friday to try to determine the motive of the gunman who held six girls hostage in a high school classroom, sexually assaulting some before killing one and committing suicide.
Authorities said they knew of no connection between Duane Morrison and the hostages he held for four hours Wednesday after bursting into a college prep English class at Platte Canyon High School.
“A male high school student was approached by a suspect (Wednesday) and asked about the identity of a list of female students,” Sheriff Fred Wegener said Thursday, later adding that he wasn’t sure if it was a written list or names rattled off by Morrison.
It was not disclosed whether the list included 16-year-old Emily Keyes, whom Morrison shot in the head as a SWAT team broke through the classroom door in a rescue attempt.
KCNC-TV in Denver reported that video from cameras outside the school showed Morrison sitting in his Jeep in the school parking lot for about 20 minutes and then mingling with students as classes changed, nearly 35 minutes before the siege began.
Wegener said the Colorado Bureau of Investigation spent much of Thursday examining an apparent roadside campsite about a mile north of the school, where a resident found trash and an assault rifle.
The sheriff said it was too early to know if the rifle was connected to Morrison.
Investigators said the 53-year-old Morrison was a petty criminal who had a Denver address but apparently had been living in his battered yellow Jeep.
Morrison walked inside the school with two handguns and a backpack that he claimed contained a bomb. Investigators did not say what was in the backpack.
During the siege, Morrison released four hostages. While still holding two girls, he cut off contact with deputies and warned that “something would happen at 4 o’clock,” authorities said.
About a half-hour before the deadline, a SWAT team used explosives to blow a hole in a classroom wall in hopes of getting a clear shot at him. When they couldn’t see him through the gap, they blew the door off the hinges to get inside, said Lance Clem, a spokesman for the state Department of Public Safety.
Morrison fired at the SWAT officers, shot Keyes as she tried to run away and then killed himself, authorities said. During the gun battle, police shot Morrison several times, they said.
Classes were canceled for the rest of the week as the community tried to come to grips with the bloodshed, which evoked memories of the 1999 shooting rampage that left 15 dead at Columbine High School, less than an hour’s drive away.
Louis Gonzalez, a spokesman for the Keyes family, said the girl’s father was among the parents anxiously awaiting word from their children during the standoff. John Keyes had just bought Emily and her twin brother cell phones for their 16th birthday.
“How are U?” a volunteer text-messaged Keyes on her father’s behalf.
At 1:52 p.m., she messaged back, “I love U guys.”
“In memory of Emily we would like everyone to go out and do random acts of kindness, random acts of love to your friends or your neighbors or your fellow students because there is no way to make sense of this,” Gonzalez said. “It’s what Emily would have wanted.”
Student Chelsea Wilson said she was in the classroom when the gunman came in and told the students to line up facing the chalkboard.
“All the hairs on my body stood up,” she said. “I guess I was somewhat praying it was a drill.”
One by one, the gunman started letting students go. Chelsea, a tall brunette, said she was the first to leave. Her mother, Julia Wilson, said she thinks the gunman selected the blond, smaller girls. Keyes’ yearbook photo shows a smiling blond girl with blue eyes.
Chelsea said she heard what might have been a gunshot after she left the classroom.
“He’s a pervert,” she said. “I’m not sure of motivation. I just knew it wasn’t good.”
Residents of this mountain town of about 3,500 gathered Thursday at the Platte Canyon Christian Church for support. Others stopped by the Cutthroat Cafe, where Keyes had worked for about two years.
“It’s very sad here. You know, the family lost their daughter but as a community, we lost a child,” said Bobbi Sterling, a waitress and cook. “We’re just sitting here, numb and in shock. We’re all just kind of stunned.”
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Associated Press writers Chase Squires in Bailey; Don Mitchell, Dan Elliott, Sandy Shore and Pat Graham in Denver contributed to this report.
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