34 South Main St., Attleboro, MA - Directions - (508) 222-7000
Home News Sports Features classifieds milestones services photos tvlistings cars jobs realestate subscribe
News

AHS grad finds scene of horror at Virginia Tech



Jonathan Skinner




When Virginia Tech student Jonathan Skinner went to bed Sunday night, he never could have imagined the carnage he would face Monday morning after a madman with a gun wreaked havoc on the placid and pretty campus.

Skinner, a student who serves as a volunteer Emergency Medical Technician, had three classes scheduled for Monday, but chaos took over when the lone gunman killed two people in Ambler Johnston Hall and then went on to slaughter 30 more in Norris Hall across campus.

At least another 26 were wounded.

Skinner, 22, a 2003 graduate of Attleboro High School, heard chatter on his police scanner about the first murder, as he awoke, although he didn't know it was a shooting. Then the rest happened.

"The radio pretty much exploded with shouting between the EMTs and police about what was going on," he said Monday in a telephone interview with The Sun Chronicle.
Skinner, who wasn't slated for EMT duty that day, didn't know exactly what was going on, but he knew whatever was happening was bad and went to the scene in his own car.

It was worse than bad, it was a nightmare.

"It was shocking," Skinner said. "I had never seen anything like it before."

Gunshots were still exploding when he arrived and the toll was painfully obvious.

But at first it didn't sink in that people, a lot of people, had been shot.

"I thought they were cut or had fallen or got injured," he said.

"But when they walked up to us we could see they had been shot, once, twice or three times," Skinner said. "They were shot everywhere. In the arms, in the legs in the back in the shoulders. It was kind of surreal."

Skinner said he didn't know if the shooting he heard was from the gunman or police, but at that point it didn't matter.

Neither he nor his fellow EMTs had time to think about the horror- they had to act.

Skinner, an Emergency Medical Technician with an Enhanced rating, along with the rest of the 40 or so members of the school's student staffed and run EMS organization who are trained to provide Advanced Life Support services, began to care for the wounded.
"I didn't think much about what was going on," he said. "You almost go on automatic pilot. You know what you have to do."

Most of the preliminary care was provided at the EMS station that was just a few hundred yards from Norris Hall where most of the killing took place.

At one point Skinner and a team had to go into the building to check for survivors and get them help.

The scene inside was horrendous.

"It was the worst thing you can imagine," he said. "There were bullet holes and casings everywhere, broken glass and then you see the bodies," said Skinner who compared it to something a combat soldier would see. "It's something you couldn't be prepared for."

He and fellow EMTs were on the job for about 12 hours and got help from communities in a 50 square mile area, he said.

And the job is not over.

Skinner is slated to work a 24-hour shift today.

"I don't know how I'm going to wake up (Tuesday), but I've got to get up and go in and work through it," said an exhausted Skinner.

Today's shift will end and he'll go home, but the memories of Monday will never be over.

"It's definitely something that's going to stick with me the rest of my life," he said.

GEORGE W. RHODES can be reached at 508-236-0432 or at grhodes@thesunchronicle.com.

 


*Member ID:
*Password:
  Forgot Your Password?
 
View Comments » No comments posted. « Hide Comments

Tragity wrote on Apr 17, 2007 3:16 PM:

" A real tragity. Innocent victims just starting out in life. Devastating the lives of family and friends. I'm sure Jonathan is troubled by this. I think before you judge and analyze what happened, do some soul searching and think what all are feeling. If anything or anybody should be analyzed, try starting with the shooter! "

LMM wrote on Apr 17, 2007 3:06 PM:

" Dear Sad - It saddens me that all you see of your classmates is their window dressing, the cover of the book if you will. We live in a society where the majority value possessions and status. Students struggle to fit into society by adapting to their surroundings. But, if you look beyond the veneer, the cover, you will find individuals of substance, of strong moral character, those who are kind and caring, those who have a "sense of duty" to each other, their families, their classmates, their community and the world at large. I encourage you to look behind the Coach bag, beyond the designer clothes and past the cell phones. It is unfair to judge them so superficially as in many ways it is an attempt to be accepted by society at large. "

Sad wrote on Apr 17, 2007 12:19 PM:

" To LMM - my view of today's youth is shaped by seeing them everyday at the high school I attend. Maybe I should have said the rest of "my" generation, but I try to distance my self from the "new cell phone every month", designer handbag set I attend class with every day. "

LD wrote on Apr 17, 2007 11:53 AM:

" LMM, I think you need to reread what was written by "Sad". "

anon wrote on Apr 17, 2007 11:06 AM:

" God bless them all aqnd give them the strength to get through this. "

LMM wrote on Apr 17, 2007 10:40 AM:

" I feel that your view of today's youth is very skewed by the media. It is the self absorbed, fashion-enslaved, over-tanned egotists that fuel our entertainment industry and does not reflect the wonderful, talented, hard-working and caring individuals that I am priveleged to teach at KP high school. Remember, what you see on TV is not reality but entertainment. The "real" students that I see daily don't make the headlines as they are not deemed newsworthy. In other words, they do not feed the stereotyed viewpoint that you have expressed. In my opinion, most of the teens that I work with would rise to the occasion should they be called to do so. Mr. Skinner should be commended for his actions and held up as a role model and not as foil for a bad stereotype. "

LD wrote on Apr 17, 2007 9:59 AM:

" To Sad: - Amen! "

Sad wrote on Apr 17, 2007 8:08 AM:

" A sense of duty that exemplifies the best in todays young people. It's too bad the rest of his generation has a reputation of being self absorbed, fashion-enslaved, over-tanned egotists "


*Member ID:
*Password:
  Forgot Your Password?
 
 or