Baltimore Sun

2 boys, 11 and 14, die in Calif. school parking lot shooting

- By Kim Bellware

Two boys were found shot to death in the parking lot of a San Francisco Bay Area elementary school early Saturday, authoritie­s say, unsettling a community where homicides are rare.

The discovery came after multiple residents called 911 just before 1:30 a.m. Saturday to report hearing gunshots coming from Searles Elementary School, whose small campus is tucked in a residentia­l neighborho­od.

Police found an11-year-old and a14-yearold alone in a van, both with gunshot wounds, Union City, California, police said in a statement Saturday. The older boy was pronounced dead at the scene, while the younger child died while being taken to a hospital.

Gigi Erickson, who lives in the neighborho­od, told CBS San Francisco that she awoke to the sound of gunshots.

“All of a sudden, we heard this pop, pop, pop, pop, I mean it just kept going, it almost sounded like a machine-gun type, I mean it was just constant,” Erickson said.

Erickson wondered why the boys were in a van at the school so late at night and added, “I’m just so heartbroke­n that these kids had to go through that.”

Police said it was unclear why the boys were in the parked van so late at night or whether they had an adult with them.

Police were not releasing the names of the victims because they are minors. Late Saturday, police were still investigat­ing whether the boys were approached by one or more perpetrato­rs on foot or in a car and were searching for a motive.

Neighbors reported hearing between 15 and 20 gunshots — an unusual occurrence in what one resident described to CBS as a quiet neighborho­od.

The New Haven Unified School District confirmed late Saturday that the one of the victims was a student in the district, while the other was a former student.

John Thompson, superinten­dent of the school district, said in a statement that the district would have “support for our students and staff at the sites where these students attended when school resumes after the Thanksgivi­ng break.”

“We also work closely with the Union City Police Department to ensure that our schools are as safe as they can be,” Thompson said.

Police noted a nonfatal double shooting early Wednesday morning just a half-mile from the site of Saturday’s double homicide but said there is no evidence that the incidents are linked.

Homicides are rare occurrence­s in Union City: The city of roughly 75,000 people half an hour southeast of San Francisco has registered only one homicide per year since 2016, according to city data.

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