BOWIE, Md. -- A 13-year-old boy was shot and critically wounded as his aunt dropped him off at school Monday, bringing fresh terror to the Washington area where a sniper killed six people last week.\nAnxious parents streamed in to retrieve their children from the school, and police in neighboring Montgomery County hunting for the serial sniper rushed to the scene. Officials stressed that no link to the Montgomery shootings had been established.\n"Whether they're connected or not, the fear has ratcheted up quite a bit," Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan said.\nSharon Healy had just sent her 12-year-old son, Brandon, to school on his bicycle when she heard of the shooting shortly after 8 a.m. outside Benjamin Tasker Middle School. She said she ran there and pulled him out of class.\n"You think you're safe, but you're only as safe as your next step," Healy said.\nSaid her son: "I was scared."\nThe victim sustained a single gunshot wound to the chest. He was undergoing surgery and was listed in critical but stable condition, Jacqueline D. Bowens, a spokeswoman for Children's Hospital in Washington, D.C. The victims in last week's shootings also were felled by a single shot.\nThe shooting happened well before classes were scheduled to begin, so there were not a lot of witnesses, Prince George's County Police Chief Gerald Wilson said. A gunshot was heard, and the boy slumped over and told his aunt he thought he had been shot, Wilson said.\nHis aunt took him to a small hospital in this suburb northeast of Washington, and then he was transferred by helicopter to Children's Hospital.\n"The child is suffering from extensive blood loss," said Mark Brady of the county fire department.\nPolice cars surrounded the school and officers put up crime scene tape and searched the campus.\nOthar Haskins, 13, standing outside the school with his mother, said he was a friend of the wounded boy.\n"He's funny, he's always around friends," Othar said. "He helps you out when you need it. He's a good friend." Othar cried and put his head on his mother's shoulder as he spoke.\nOn Wednesday and Thursday, five people were shot to death by a sniper in a 16-hour span in Montgomery County. A sixth victim was killed Thursday in Washington, D.C. On Friday, a woman was shot and wounded in Virginia.\n"All of our victims have been innocent and defenseless, but now we're stepping over the line," Montgomery County Police Chief Charles Moose said. "Shooting a kid--it's getting to be really, really personal now." At one point, tears streamed down his face.\nBut he stressed that it was too early to know whether Monday's shooting was related to the earlier ones.\nWhite House press secretary Ari Fleischer said federal authorities--the attorney general, Treasury Department and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms--have been "very involved on the ground and have lent support and equipment."\nAsked if there was any evidence of terrorism, Fleischer replied: "I've not heard anything like that, but the fact of the matter is that people are trying to determine who the shooter is, or shooters are, and we continue to help local officials in that endeavor."\nMontgomery schools had planned a normal schedule with extra security, but after the Prince George's shooting, officials initiated a "code blue" alert, keeping students inside during recess and lunchtime, Moose said. Prince George's schools and some other schools in the region took similar steps.\nMeanwhile, police and FBI agents pored over maps and put together a psychological profile to hunt down the sniper killer. They also stepped up patrols Monday.\nIrene Kelly, 60, who was visiting her daughter in Rockville from Pennsylvania, spent part of Monday morning running errands. She said she had "big concerns, very big concerns."\n"I'm more aware of what's happening," she said. "I try to get in and out and get home. You have to be aware of your surroundings."\nAs investigators struggled, families and friends gathered together at funeral services, trying to find some good in the midst of such seemingly random violence.\n"There's one bad man, but there's so many good people who are showing their blessings and prayer," Saroj Isaac said at the funeral of her brother-in-law, Prem Kumar Walekar, described by relatives as a quiet, hard-working cabbie.\nSarah Ramos, a 34-year-old woman slain while sitting on a Post Office bench, was being laid to rest after a private service. Lori Ann Lewis-Rivera, a 25-year-old nanny shot while vacuuming her van at a service station, was to have a wake Monday before her body was flown back to her native Idaho.\nInvestigators said they had thousands of tips, but they conceded it would take time to track down a suspect.\nPolice began to use a geographic profile submitted by investigators that uses crime locations to determine where the killer feels comfortable traveling and may live. Moose said police also were awaiting an FBI psychological profile of the shooter.\nGeographic profiling is a fairly new investigative tool, used first in 1990 in Canada, said Kim Rossmo, who compiled the latest profile and is director of research for the Police Foundation, a nonprofit research organization.\nThe five victims were all gunned down in public places: two at gas stations, one outside a grocery, another outside a post office, another as he mowed the grass at an auto dealership, and the sixth, a 72-year-old man, killed on a Washington street corner. Each victim was shot once from a distance. There were no known witnesses.\nTests confirmed that the same weapon was used to kill Walekar and three other victims.\nBallistics evidence also linked the Maryland slayings with the wounding of a 43-year-old woman Friday. She was shot in the back in a parking lot at a Michaels craft store in Fredericksburg, Va., and was in fair condition Monday at INOVA Fairfax Hospital.
Child hit in school shooting
Boy shot in chest, remains in critical condition
Get stories like this in your inbox
Subscribe