News and HeadlinesNational News

Actions

Police identify one of the victims in Southern California school shooting

Posted
and last updated

Police have identified one of the teenagers who died in a school shooting Thursday at Saugus High School in Southern California.

Police say Gracie Muehlberger, 15, was among those killed in the shooting. Santa Clarita authorities have not yet released the name of a second male victim.

Investigators say they still have no leads into the motive behind the shooting.

In the hours after the student opened fire just after 7:30 a.m. at the Santa Clarita high school, details began to trickle out about the suspect.

The shooting occurred on his 16th birthday, said Capt. Kent Wegener of the sheriff's department homicide bureau.

"The suspect was later identified as one of the victims who was found in the quad," Wegener told reporters. The captain later told reporters the shooting took just 16 seconds.

The gunman used a .45-caliber pistol, which was recovered at the scene, authorities said. The weapon was out of bullets.

Detectives reviewed surveillance video from the scene that showed the suspect in the quad, Wegener said. He took out a handgun from backpack and shot five other students before shooting himself in the head, the captain said.

The suspect is a resident of the city of Santa Clarita -- about 30 miles northwest of Los Angeles, authorities said.

His mother and his girlfriend were talking with detectives, according to Wegener.

Investigators did a cursory check of the suspect's home and were obtaining a warrant to search the residence, Wegener said.

Paul Delacourt, FBI assistant director in charge in Los Angeles, said there are no known additional threats and the motive for the shooting not known.

After announcing the death of the second student, Villanueva said, "With a heavy heart, we're going to move on with the investigation and figure out what went wrong.

"I hate to have Saugus be added to the names of Columbine, Parkland, Sandy Hook, but it's a reality that affects us all throughout the nation -- something that we're going to have to figure out."