Six injured in California school shooting as police search for suspect

Police chief says authorities are seeking at least one suspect but do not have anyone in custody

A California Highway Patrol officer lifts police tape to let parents and students leave a cordoned off area in Fountain Street following a shooting at a school campus in Oakland. Photograph: Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group/AP
A California Highway Patrol officer lifts police tape to let parents and students leave a cordoned off area in Fountain Street following a shooting at a school campus in Oakland. Photograph: Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group/AP

At least six adults were hurt in a shooting on a school campus in California, with some of the victims found inside the school, US authorities have said.

The shooting happened at about 12.45pm local time on Wednesday at Rudsdale Newcomer High School in Oakland.

The school serves recent immigrants aged 16 to 21 who have fled violence and instability in their home countries, according to the school’s website.

It is one of four adjacent schools located on a block in east Oakland.

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Officials have not said whether any of the victims might be students aged 18 or older.

“The victims were affiliated with the school, and we are determining the affiliation at this time,” Oakland assistant police chief Darren Allison said, although he declined to say whether any students or teachers were involved.

Mr Allison said police were seeking at least one suspect but did not have anyone in custody.

Three of the wounded were taken to Highland Hospital in Oakland, while the other three were taken to the Eden Medical Centre in Castro Valley.

Mr Allison said three people remained in hospital on Wednesday evening, two of them with life-threatening injuries, while one person had been released and two others were expected to be released soon.

John Sasaki, a spokesman for Oakland Unified School District, said in a statement that district officials “do not have any information beyond what Oakland Police are reporting”.

He said counsellors were being made available for students and could not say whether the schools at the site would be open on Thursday.

Television footage showed dozens of police cars and yellow tape on the street outside the school, and students leaving nearby campuses.

City council member Treva Reid said investigators told her the shooting may be tied to rising “group and gang violence”.

James Jackson, chief executive of the Alameda Health System, also noted an increase in violence.

“We’ve seen almost a doubling of the violent crimes victims that we’re seeing here at our facility (Highland Hospital), so something has changed,” he said.

City council member Loren Taylor, who was outside the school, declined to confirm any details about the incident, telling KTVU-TV: “Guns were on our school campuses where our babies were supposed to be protected.” – Associated Press