According to authorities, the son of a Leon County Sheriff’s deputy went on a school frenzy and gained admittance to his mother’s gun, killing two people and injuring six people on Thursday.
Phoenix Ikner, a 20-year-old man, was shot by officers and taken into custody before being taken to the hospital, according to authorities. He is alleged to be an FSU learner. The sheriff’s department assigned his mother to defend a nearby public school.
Six of the victims, who were receiving treatment for their injuries in a hospital, were not quickly identified by police. The two people who were killed did not attend the university as kids, according to authorities during a press conference on Thursday evening.

Lawrence Revell, the police chief in Tallahassee, did not identify a cause for the killing. However, Leon County Sheriff Walter McNeil claimed that the sheriff’s department was aware of the gunman because he was a part of the youngsters advisory council of the organization.
It’s hardly surprising to us that he had access to weapons because he has been deeply connected to the Leon County Sheriff’s community and has participated in a number of training courses, McNeil said.
Around noon, the attack, which erupted among students and sent police rushing to the school’s Panhandle college, occurred. In response to rumors of gunfire near the student union, police reportedly sprayed the school’s Panhandle college with weapons drawn. In the libraries and schools, kids hid.
An FSU student shared a video of an armed man square away and shooting at least three pictures as citizens ran and screamed with the Miami Herald on a film that was captured behind the bushes and was shared with the Miami Herald.
Laptops, towels, packs, and bottles of water were scattered in a lush place close to the shooting area before being abandoned in a moment of panic.
When the carnage started, 19-year-old rookie Raiden Paniagua was eating Chick-fil-A on a school lawn and declaring,” Everyone was running.” ” I was thus afraid.”
By 3:17 p.m., Tallahassee Police claimed to have secured the campus, but they were still treating the student union and the surrounding region as a crime scene. A spokesperson for Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare said six patients were receiving treatment at the doctor, including one who was in critical condition.
The Florida Capitol, which was dimly locked up, received word of the shooting’s impact all the way to Washington.
President Donald Trump made the remarks to writers from the Oval Office on Thursday, calling it “horrible that stuff like this happen.”
Everyone is enraged, right?
The university’s emergency alert system first reported reports of a killing on campus at 12:02 p.m.
The school advised students to” continue to seek shelter and wait for further recommendations.” Be prepared to get more protective measures, lock all doors and windows, and stay away from them.
Victor Alonso, a 19-year-old scholar from Florida, was in his state group inside the HCB Classroom Building, right next to the student coalition, when his mobile rang out with alerts.
An active shooter was on school, he read the message. He pondered,” There’s no way.”
Moments later, his school experienced stress. De and other individuals frantically blocked the entrance. He sounded gunshots, and aircraft started to circle behind.
Shortly after officers yelled directions and arrived at the entrance. De told the Herald in an interview from his bedroom room,” They made us get down the hall with our arms up.”
He claimed that law enforcement was constantly relocating them across school.
He claimed that they eventually forced us to flee to various houses, probably four or five times.
He once hid in an AC repair facility before moving on to a patio. About two hours after the initial update, he was suddenly permitted to return to his bedroom.
Everyone is enraged, De said. ” I just don’t know how this may happen; it’s disgusting.”
When she overheard the gunshots, Raeleen McDaniel, 26, was watching a movie about Vietnamese record in a class.
In an interview with the Herald, McDaniel said,” At primary we thought it was the picture, but then we realized it was true shots.”
McDaniel recalls seeing students run in the corridor before stumbling to the ground. Her school was close to the scholar organization.
She said,” People go there to examine,” and a friend comforted her as she muttered. She was clearly distraught. What had happened was also ebbing in the air after almost two hours since the firing had been reported.
She said,” I never thought it would happen because it is so popular, but I knew it was something that could occur.”
Local and state police responded immediately to the incident, since did FBI officials in Jacksonville.
Students walking with their arms raised as soldiers ran with weapons drawn immediately after the first report of the shooting were initially portrayed in videos posted on social media. Eventually, videos showed police calming down students as they walked them through the school.
Officers searched the campus, clearing rooms, and using the word” Seminole” to inform students that leaving the area was safe to do so. Students were instructed to get in touch with their people by the Tallahassee Police. They were given trips to the Donald L. Tucker Civic Center, which was established as a family reunion facility.
The remainder of the week’s lessons were canceled.
Officers made the information public.
The weapon used in the incident was his mother’s past service weapon, and she was permitted to purchase it for her own use, according to police. Police confirmed that the 20-year-old even had a gun.
” We have not confirmed everyone was shot with a gun, but that could change,” said FSU Police Chief Jason Trumbower. Trumbower stated at this stage of the research that he did not believe the pistol had been used.
McNeil stated that the sheriff’s deputy had not been suspended, but that a detailed investigation may be conducted.
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