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School shootings

Eleven hurt, suspect killed in 'terrifying' Ohio State attack

John Bacon
USA TODAY
Law enforcement officials are seen outside of a parking garage on the campus of Ohio State University as they respond to an active attack in Columbus, Ohio.

A Somali-born Ohio State student crashed his vehicle into pedestrians on the Columbus campus Monday, then slashed students with a butcher knife before being fatally shot by a university police officer, authorities said.

Eleven people were rushed to hospitals and one was in critical condition, according to university Police Chief Craig Stone. The incident is being investigated by the FBI, although no confirmed information has surfaced yet as to whether the attack was terror-related.

The drama began shortly before 10 a.m. ET, when the suspect deliberately drove over a curb and began his attack, Stone said. He said the officer arrived about a minute later and engaged the suspect.

"We are very fortunate that an OSUPD officer was there and took quick action," Stone said.

Monica Moll, the university's public safety director, identified the assailant as Abdul Razak Ali Artan, a student at the school. Multiple media outlets including NBC News and the Associated Press, citing sources who requested anonymity, described him as a 20-year-old native of Somalia living in the United States as a legal permanent resident.

He was shot by Officer Alan Horujko, 28, who has been on the university force for almost two years, Moll said.

Columbus Police Chief Chief Kim Jacobs, whose officers also responded to the attack, said terrorism had not been ruled out. "That's why our federal partners are here and helping," she said. "I think we have to consider that it is."

Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said that while the bloodshed is still under investigation, it "bears all of the hallmarks of a terror attack carried out by someone who may have been self-radicalized."

"Here in the United States, our most immediate threat still comes from lone attackers that are not only capable of unleashing great harm, but are also extremely difficult, and in some cases, virtually impossible to identify or interdict," he said.

The SITE Intelligence Group, a Bethesda,-Md.-based company that tracks online activity of potential terror organizations, said the attack mirrors some the instructions that ISIS has issued.

"Though Artan’s motive has yet to be confirmed, his method of attack — involving both a vehicle and knife — resemble attack methods suggested by IS in recent months via a video from its Raqqa Province in Syria and issues of its “Rumiyah” magazine," SITE said in a statement. "These media releases have included detailed guides on how to perform knife attacks and reap mass casualties in vehicular attacks, among other matters."

“While past Islamic State media releases have focused on who to kill, recent media from the group has shown a strong focus on how to kill,” SITE Director Rita Katz said.

Homeland security adviser Lisa Monaco briefed President Obama on the incident, White House press secretary Josh Earnest said. He said FBI agents in Columbus were assisting with the investigation.

The Associated Press reported that Ohio State's student newspaper, The Lantern, ran an interview in August with a student named Abdul Razak Artan, who identified himself as a Muslim and a third-year logistics management student who had just transferred from Columbus State in the fall.

He said he was looking for a place to pray openly and worried about how he would be received.

"I was kind of scared with everything going on in the media. I'm a Muslim, it's not what media portrays me to be," he told the newspaper. "If people look at me, a Muslim praying, I don't know what they're going to think, what's going to happen. But I don't blame them. It's the media that put that picture in their heads."

In recent months, federal law enforcement officials have raised concerns about online extremist propaganda that encourages knife and car attacks, which are easier to pull off than bombings.

"Buckeye Alert: Active Shooter on campus. Run Hide Fight. Watts Hall. 19th and College" the university's emergency management agency tweeted within minutes of the attack. "Run hide fight" is emergency protocol used to warn people to flee if possible, hide from the shooter and, if all else fails, fight for your life.

Stone said it did not immediately appear that the attacker used a gun. The alert, however, apparently was sent after the suspect was fatally shot.

A short time later, the agency tweeted a warning to "Continue to shelter in place in north campus area. Follow directions of Police on scene."

A SWAT team, K9 and bomb squad units and scores of law enforcement officials descended on the sprawling campus. Less than two hours after the first alert, university police said the shelter-in-place order was lifted and the "scene was secure." Classes were canceled for the rest of the day.

"We prepare for situations like this, but we hope we never have one," school President Michael Drake said.

Student Harrison Roth tweeted a picture from inside a classroom, with chairs stacked up to block the door.

"I'm safe in a barricaded room," he said in the tweet. "If you're on campus, get in a room and stay safe."

Freshman Meredith Johnson, 19, was in a psychology class when the university alert popped up on her teacher's power point screen. The teacher and students thought it might have been a scam, she said.

"Three or four minutes later we got the text," Johnson said. "Stay indoors. Active shooter. That's when I started freaking out."

Peterson Pierre, a junior biochemistry major, said he woke up to the campus alert. He and his roommate decided to go outside and see what was happening.

"We saw a body covered with a white sheet," Pierre said.

Other students hunkered down in their apartments, waiting for the threat to pass.

"It's honestly kind of terrifying because I was at home and away from my phone at the time,” said Jenny Chen, who stayed in her apartment about two blocks from Watts Hall, listed on the school's website as a Materials Science and Engineering building.

“I got flooded with messages ... asking me if I was safe and I didn't even realize this was happening,” said Chen, a senior. “Now I'm just scrambling to make sure that people I know are safe as well.”

Victoria Morishita, a senior studying logistics management student, said she was off campus, but her phone quickly loaded with texts from people near the scene.

"I was scared because it happened near our CBEC and business building and a lot of my friends were there," she said.

Facebook activated its safety check, entitled “The Violent Incident in Columbus, Ohio,” allows those in the area to mark themselves “safe,” “unsafe” or “outside the affected area” with the click of a button. Users can also invite friends to mark their safety status.

Twitter filled with well-wishes from federal, state and local officials.

".@TeamTrump watching coverage of what has transpired @ Ohio State - Thoughts & prayers are with the students & administration at this time," tweeted Dan Scavino, social media director for President-elect Donald Trump.

"Ohio's thoughts and prayers go out to the Ohio State community," Gov. John Kasich tweeted. "Be safe, listen to first responders."

Tweeted Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio: "Everyone stay safe — Monitoring this situation closely. Thoughts and prayers with everyone on campus."

"We are all Buckeyes. Our thoughts are with all of @OhioState and Columbus today," tweeted the Cleveland Cavaliers basketball team.

Ohio State’s 1,764-acre campus  is located about 2.5 miles north of Columbus. The school, founded in 1870, is the third-largest campus in the U.S. with about 45,000 undergraduates and 13,000 post-graduates.

Contributing: Walbert Castillo; Tinae A. Bluitt; Gregory Korte; Sophia Tulp; Cincinnati Enquirer

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