2022-02-05
19 分钟Hey there.
I want to warn you, this episode includes descriptions of violence, specifically mass shootings at schools.
This is in conversation from Apple News today.
I'm Duarte Geraldino.
Every weekend, we're taking you deeper into the best journalism on Apple News.
When Maren Kogan was in the sixth grade, she went out one night to play mini golf with friends next door.
The kids, two grades older, were attending the eighth grade dance.
We had just started playing, and we heard what sounded like a bunch of balloons popping.
Maren and her friends didn't think much of the sound, that is, until they saw a bunch of 8th graders running out of the dance hall toward the golf course.
They were crying and seemed very upset.
Suddenly I heard that one of the eighth grade students who I knew had a gun and that he had shot Mr.
Gillette, who was an eighth grade teacher and also a student council advisor, in the leg.
Maren remembers a friend telling everyone to take cover.
My childhood best friend, on instinct, yelled, everybody get down on the ground.
So we all got down on the ground.
We were crouched together, just listening and waiting.
I remember the 8th grade students crying.
And then I remember every.
Eventually someone said, you know, they got him.
It's all clear.