logo
Anne Marie Hochhalter, Paralyzed in Columbine Shooting, Dies at 43

Anne Marie Hochhalter, Paralyzed in Columbine Shooting, Dies at 43

New York Times18-02-2025
Anne Marie Hochhalter, who spoke publicly about the long-lasting effects of gun violence after she was paralyzed in the 1999 mass shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado, was found dead on Sunday at her home in Westminster, Colo. She was 43.
The police said that officers had found Ms. Hochhalter after they were called for a welfare check. The Jefferson County Coroner's Office said on Tuesday that autopsy results were not yet available.
Sue Townsend, who became close to Ms. Hochhalter after her stepdaughter, Lauren Townsend, was killed in the shooting, said that Ms. Hochhalter had been dealing with lingering effects from her injuries, including a pressure sore and an infection.
Ms. Hochhalter was eating lunch with friends when two students opened fire at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., on April 20, 1999, killing 12 other students and a teacher before fatally shooting themselves.
Ms. Hochhalter, a junior who was 17, was shot twice — once in the chest and once in the back — and was paralyzed from the waist down. Her brother, Nathan Hochhalter, who was a freshman at Columbine, was trapped in the school for hours until a SWAT team arrived.
Six months after the shooting, their mother, Carla June Hochhalter, walked into a pawnshop, asked to see a gun, loaded it and killed herself. The elder Ms. Hochhalter, 48, had been struggling with depression and other mental health issues before the Columbine shooting, her daughter later said.
But her death was 'very much harder than what happened at Columbine,' Ms. Hochhalter told U.S. News & World Report in 2009. 'It shocked me because, you know, I was injured by a gun and the fact that, you know, she committed suicide with one was very hard to understand.'
As Ms. Hochhalter dealt with loss of her mother, she leaned on her faith to help her rebuild her life, emotionally and physically, she said. She became 'fiercely independent' and learned to maneuver in a wheelchair, to drive and to live by herself, Ms. Townsend said.
'She told me, 'I can do anything you can do, it just takes me longer,'' said Ms. Townsend, who said she and her husband, Rick, had considered Ms. Hochhalter 'our acquired daughter.'
After initially offering to help the family with Ms. Hochhalter's medical appointments, the Townsends formed a lifelong bond with her, spending holidays with her and taking her to Hawaii on a vacation, where she went into the ocean for the first time.
'She never thought of herself as a victim,' Rick Townsend said. 'She identified as a survivor.'
In 2016, when Sue Klebold, the mother of one of the Columbine shooters, released a memoir, 'A Mother's Reckoning,' Ms. Hochhalter wrote a note addressed to Ms. Klebold on Facebook, saying she felt no ill will toward her.
'Just as I wouldn't want to be judged by the sins of my family members, I hold you in that same regard,' Ms. Hochhalter wrote. 'It's been a rough road for me, with many medical issues because of my spinal cord injury and intense nerve pain, but I choose not to be bitter towards you. A good friend once told me, 'Bitterness is like swallowing a poison pill and expecting the other person to die.' It only harms yourself. I have forgiven you and only wish you the best.'
Ms. Hochhalter worked for a time at Bath & Body Works and counseled other people with disabilities, Ms. Townsend said. She also supported other victims of gun violence. In 2012, she attended a vigil after a gunman killed 12 people inside an Aurora, Colo., movie theater. Her message to survivors: 'It does get better. But it never goes away,' she told The Associated Press.
As she dealt with chronic pain, she was often reminded of the lingering effects of the Columbine shooting. Once, when checking out at a grocery store, a cashier asked her bluntly why she was in a wheelchair.
Ms. Hochhalter responded just as bluntly that she had been one of the students injured in the Columbine shooting. Then a man behind her in line said he had been part of a SWAT team that was not allowed to enter the school until hours after the shooting. He told her he was sorry he had not been able to get to her sooner.
'And I was able to tell him, 'It's OK,'' she told U.S. News & World Report in 2009. ''No one blames you; I don't blame you.' It was one of the greatest moments of my life.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Glendale police learn to prioritize students over themselves in active shooter training
Glendale police learn to prioritize students over themselves in active shooter training

Yahoo

time08-07-2025

  • Yahoo

Glendale police learn to prioritize students over themselves in active shooter training

The Glendale Police Department hosted an active shooter training within Deer Valley High School to teach officers how to navigate an unfamiliar campus when a shooter threatens the safety of students. 'Every officer's got to be ready for this, especially our school resource officers and our patrol officers," said Glendale police Sgt. Trevor Goode, who led the training July 1. "They have to be ready to respond to this terrible situation that could occur." Glendale schools are not immune to gun violence. In 2016, two 15-year-old students were killed with a gun in a murder-suicide at Glendale Union High School District's Independence High School. All officers, sergeants and lieutenants in the Glendale Police Department are required to undergo active shooter training, but this was the first training many officers had conducted on school grounds, according to Officer Jude Soine. 'The last time we did training like this was years ago, shortly after Columbine," said Soine. "So it was totally different and slower-paced than what this is. This was much more aggressive." Unlike the Glendale Police Department's training facility, which officers know well, using Deer Valley High School for training allowed police officers to interact with an unfamiliar layout, much like they would in a real active shooter situation, Goode said. To recreate a realistic scenario, classroom doors were locked randomly, and hallways included trip hazards. At the beginning of some training scenarios, an officer would fire a weapon from somewhere within the school, and actors would scream for help and sprint from the scene. Officers would then try to locate the shooter using indicators, such as running crowds, gunshots, gunsmoke and shell casings. The training was supposed to evoke a high-risk, high-stress environment, Goode said. Officers were taught how to safely make their way down school hallways during a lockdown and enter a classroom potentially containing the shooter using a technique called 'the rabbit and the hero,' where an officer enters a room quickly to draw fire while a second officer trails them to take the shooter down. 'We have to be able and willing to drive into the threat to face that gunman down,' said Goode. 'I do want my officers coming in as fast as they can. I do want them to risk a lot to save a lot because there's kids in here that are completely innocent.' Throughout the training, Goode told officers that what was being taught was not the safest way to handle the situation, but the fastest, prioritizing the lives of students over their own, and that it may feel "foreign." 'When we respond to something, we're trained to keep ourselves safe, but also preserve life, protect property,' said Sgt. Moroni Mendez, a Glendale police spokesperson. 'But when we have an active killing, an active threat, that kind of goes out the window.' Prioritizing speed over officer safety is in large part a response to criticism of police response to past school shooter incidents, such as Uvalde, Texas, in 2022, where law enforcement officers faced criminal charges for failing to intervene promptly, according to Sgt. Brian Hoskin. In Uvalde, 19 elementary students and two teachers were killed. Nearly 80 minutes passed from the time the shooter began firing until he was killed by police. "We're training this so that people have it in the back of their minds just in case we ever have to come across this," said Hoskin. While the training was conducted within a school, the benefits translate to any populated area, Mendez said. 'It's really impactful," he said. "It has been for my career because it paints a vivid, clear and realistic picture of what I could potentially face when that threat is present at one of our schools, one of our malls, one of our public areas or spaces." Coverage of education solutions on and in The Arizona Republic is partially supported by a grant from the Arizona Local News Foundation's Arizona Community Collaborative Fund. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Why police were training inside a Phoenix-area high school

Ex-camp counselor arrested after allegedly threatening violent revenge on Christian camp over firing
Ex-camp counselor arrested after allegedly threatening violent revenge on Christian camp over firing

Fox News

time26-06-2025

  • Fox News

Ex-camp counselor arrested after allegedly threatening violent revenge on Christian camp over firing

A former camp counselor was arrested last weekend after allegedly threatening to "create the next Columbine shooting" if children at the Texas summer camp were to "piss him off." Authorities arrested 23-year-old Mario Bernal, of Vernal, Utah, on Sunday over "terroristic threats" made to Christian Camp Cho-Yeh in Livingston, the Polk County Sheriff's Office said in a Facebook post on Tuesday. Bernal, who was reportedly facing termination over cruel behavior and mistreatment of children, allegedly repeated his threat to recreate the 1999 Columbine High School incident – which left 12 students and one teacher dead – if the camp fired him, according to Fox 26 Houston, citing an arrest warrant affidavit. The former camp counselor reportedly said he would "clock himself out" if terminated, and "not go down by himself" if the camp "came at him legally," the outlet added. The camp fired Bernal after at least one camp worker said they saw him locking up a group of children in a hot room and refusing to let them leave as a form of "discipline," the local TV station reported. Police received reports of the threats and nabbed Bernal near the camp entrance after spotting him in a vehicle, the Livingston Police Department said on Sunday. "Threats to this community, especially involving our children, will always be taken seriously," Livingston police Chief Matt Parrish said in a statement. "I commend the quick and thorough investigation by the Sheriff's Office, as well as the response by our officers." Polk County Jail online records show Bernal remains in custody and is being held on a $250,000 surety bond.

Ex-Christian camp counselor threatened to 'create the next Columbine shooting' if kids 'piss him off'
Ex-Christian camp counselor threatened to 'create the next Columbine shooting' if kids 'piss him off'

New York Post

time25-06-2025

  • New York Post

Ex-Christian camp counselor threatened to 'create the next Columbine shooting' if kids 'piss him off'

A former counselor at a Texas Christian camp threatened to 'create the next Columbine shooting' if his kiddie campers were to 'piss him off.' Cops arrested Mario Bernal, 23, on Sunday after he allegedly made the threats to campers attending Camp Cho-Yeh in Livingston, according to Fox 26. A witness reported the threats to cops. Bernal, of Vernal, Utah, allegedly told the witness he would 'clock himself out' if the Christian camp fired him while threatening to carry out an attack inspired by the deadly 1999 school shooting that left 12 students and one teacher dead, the outlet reported. And if the camp 'came at him legally,' Bernal allegedly said he would 'not go down by himself.' 3 Mugshot of Mario Bernal, 23, who allegedly made the threats to campers at Camp Cho-Yeh in Livingston, Texas. Polk County Sheriff's Office 3 Police officers arrested Bernal on Sunday after he allegedly made the disturbing threats. Livingston Police Department Camp Cho-Yeh describes itself as 'a place where both youth and adults have grown in their faith and character, while having fun, and helping people grow deeper in their relationship with Jesus Christ,' on its website. Bernal was working at the camp with his girlfriend, according to Fox 26. 3 Bernal was arrested on Sunday after a witness reported his disturbing statements to officials. Livingston Police Department Bernal is also accused of locking children in a hot room as a way to 'discipline' them,' staffers said. He was fired from the camp after his colleagues said they observed the cruelty. Cops nabbed the ex-counselor after spotting him at the camp's entrance sitting in his car, the Livingston Police Department said in a Facebook post. 'Threats to this community, especially involving our children, will always be taken seriously. I commend the quick and thorough investigation by the Sheriff's Office, as well as the response by our officers,' Livingston police Chief Matt Parrish said in a statement. The former counselor was charged with a terror threat impeding public service and is being held on a $50,000 bond.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store