DEKALB, Ill. -- A former graduate student armed with a shotgun and two handguns opened fire Thursday afternoon in a lecture hall at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, killing five students and wounding 16 others before shooting himself to death, authorities said.
The shooting occurred about 3 p.m. during a geology class in a large lecture classroom in Cole Hall, authorities said. The gunman, who CNN has identified as Steven Kazmierczak, entered through a back door and came through a curtain behind the stage before opening fire on the students.
"The assailant began firing into the assembled class from the stage," NIU President John G. Peters said at a news conference Thursday evening.
"Eyewitness accounts describe a very brief rapid-fire assault that ended with the gunman taking his own life."
Four of the victims who were killed were female, and one was male, Peters said. They were all undergraduate students. The wounded included 15 undergraduate students and one graduate student who was acting as a teacher's assistant, Peters said.
According to The Washington Post, four of the deceased have been identified as Catalina Garcia, 20; Julianna Gehant, 32; Ryanne Mace, 19; and Daniel Parmenter, 20.
Four, including the gunman, died at the scene, and three died later in a hospital, Peters said.
The gunman was a sociology graduate student who was enrolled in classes at NIU last spring but was not currently enrolled there, Peters said.
Authorities were not releasing his identity Thursday night but said they were not aware of any criminal history or violence in his past.
The gunman was found dead on the stage of the lecture hall, NIU Police Chief Donald Grady said. The shooter had a shotgun, a Glock pistol and one other small-caliber handgun, with ammunition still left in both handguns, Grady said. He said gun magazines were found "all over the floor."
"We believe there was only one shooter," Grady said. The shooting was "over in a matter of minutes," he said.
Peters said the motive for the "senseless tragedy" was unknown, but authorities had "no reason to believe" it was related to threats found on a bathroom wall on campus in December. The threats made reference to the 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech.
Classes will be canceled at least through Friday, Peters said. Students can go to any residence hall for counseling.
"We're advising them to remain calm, to seek counseling and support services," Peters said. He said the lecture hall remained an active crime scene Thursday night, with Illinois State Police, FBI and agents from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives all assisting DeKalb County authorities.
"We will be urgently tracing the firearms and learning the history of the weapons," said ATF Special Agent Thomas Ahern. He said agents will run the weapons through a national tracing center to "learn where they came from and how the shooter came to possess them."
Sophomore Geoff Alberti told his parents he was in the geology class when the gunman entered the auditorium-style classroom through an emergency exit. The gunman did not say anything before opening fire on the class, he told his parents.
"He said at least 20 rounds were fired," said his mother, Marilyn.
In December, the university was placed under a security alert through the end of the semester after police found threats on a bathroom wall that included a racial slur and references to the Virginia Tech shootings.
Two separate messages were found by a student on a restroom wall in the Grant Towers D complex that read that "things will change most hastily" in the final days of the semester, university officials said at the time.


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Was NIU a "gun free campus"? The students should thus feel perfectly safe there, as they should in Blacksburg.
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Okay, time to gear up and send our condolences, our love and our support to NIU!
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as of now 3 people, including the gunman is dead
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I live in Sycamore, IL and man. I can't even believe this would happen out here. Im really worried I have family that go there. Shell's right. Everyone send them love and support!
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According to the latest reports, this article is correct - 5 people, including the gunman, are dead. Shell is right, since no one can understand what NIU is going through like Tech can.
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All we can do is be there for them like many universities were for us. It is terrible that things like this happen and it is also unfortunate that non-Hokies like Ted would choose this particular time to call people idiots. Let's drop the immaturity and be there for NIU
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Perhaps, Ted, there is a lesson here in reserving judgement and not flaming, especially about these chaotic incidents. A bit hasty, and sometimes people make errors when there are conflicting reports.
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CNN: 5 shot dead including killer... that means 5, not 6. fix you numbers please.
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5 shot dead including killer means 6 total... learn how to add please.
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whats the point in calling people idiots? this is a tragedy and unfortunately something that the Hokie nation has already had to go through and whether it was 3 fatalities "including" the gunman or if its now 6 fatalities...its still something horrible that happened regardless of the accuracy of ever changing and updating news. As already said, just start supporting NIU just like they supported us.
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ted, did you ever think that maybe the numbers are coming from somewhere other than CNN? so far it looks like every time you've said they were wrong they ended up being right.
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After the fact though. I understand it's a tragedy, I'm not saying it isn't. I just want the CT to report it correctly and not post false info before it's been clarified by a university official or something.
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Lets please stop fussing with each other about inaccurate numbers in this article. At this point in time, we just need to support NIU and the Huskies like the nation supported us Hokies last year. Its a tough time and we all know this.....Keep NIU in your thoughts/prayers!!!!
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My heartfelt condolences and prayers go out to the Huskies right now.
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Our prayers and condolences go out to NIU and the NIU family. Please, President Steger and Student Government, with our own tragic lesson(s)-learned, couldn't we send some of our administrators and/or peer counselors as well as condolences? I am sure many caring, sensitive Hokies would be very willing to go and minister - especially after so many did so much for us. It is obvious that tangible support from our Tech community could be so valuable to reach out to the NIU campus, the survivors, and the victims' and survivors' families. Let's show the world we can give as well as receive in times of sorrow and crisis.
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Awful. I've never been so saddened by something as I was the VaTech shootings. To have the place/town I love be remembered always as the site of the massacre still hurts to think about. Now these kids, alumni and families will go through the same thing, and it's shame. My thoughts and prayers are with them all.
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Go here http://www.legacy.com/GB/GuestbookView.aspx?PersonId=000103435559 if you want to leave condolences for NIU. I can't believe this happened somewhere else. It's too horrible to comprehend.
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This is just impossible for me to comprehend. I graduated from VT in Spring 07, and was in class in Norris Hall on 4/16. Since graduation, I moved to Chicago, and to have this happen again, 65 miles away from me is dumbfounding. Still trying to get over the shock of what happened less than a year ago, I feel like I am in the middle of it all again. I can imagine this stirs up similar emotions in my fellow Hokies. I wish people would realize that everyone has problems. This is not the way to solve them, or make yourself a martyr, or whatever they are trying to accomplish. Please remember how much it helped out to have the outreach of so many people and schools, and on the other hand, what it felt like when people would nitpick little details and forget the 'big picture'. Being relatively close to NIU, I just want to be able to find a way to let my experiences help those who are now going through the same thing.
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The Huskie Nation was rocked yesterday, in an all to familiar way to us Hokies. Pray for the family, friends and victims. We need to band together once again, not for ourselves, but to help our fellow Huskies in their greatest time of need.
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Describe a time when you simply had too much to do and you needed help. ,
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