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After two people, Emily Jane Hilscher, a freshman, and Ryan Clark, the resident adviser whose room was nearby in the dormitory, were shot dead, the campus police began searching for Karl D. Thornhill, who was described in Internet memorials as Ms. Hilscher’s boyfriend.
According to a search warrant filed by the police, Ms. Hilscher’s roommate had told the police that Mr. Thornhill, a student at nearby Radford University, had guns at his town house. The roommate told the police that she had recently been at a shooting range with Mr. Thornhill, the affidavit said, leading the police to believe he may have been the gunman.
But as they were questioning Mr. Thornhill, reports of widespread shooting at Norris Hall came in, making it clear that they had not contained the threat on campus. Mr. Thornhill was not arrested, although he continues to be an important witness in the case, the police said.
At the time of the dormitory shootings, Col. W. Steven Flaherty, the superintendent of the Virginia State Police, said, “There was certainly no evidence or no reason to think that there was anyone else at that particular point in time.”
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 08:59 on April 18th, 2007
When a Story of this kind Hits the News stands ... We all feel sorry for the victims and familes involved ... but I often ask myself` Do we always see the Whole Truth !, This Story got my Flag because it told both sides of a story ... not Only the Sadness and Gore ... which seems to sell Newspapers these days` but it also tells us all how easy it is to follow the wrong Trail.
Like all bad event`s in life ... there are NO winners or losers ... They are ALL Victim`s of Crime.
The Victims and The Killers leave sadness and Fear for Everyone to deal with.