Authorities described the student as a juvenile male but did not provide further identification or specifics pending an investigation
Wisconsin police shot and killed a student who officials say came to a local middle school with a gun. The student never got into the school, but as a precaution the entire district was put on a lockdown late Wednesday morning.
Students have since been reunited with their parents, some of whom waited up to five hours for their children to be dropped at a bus storage center in Mount Horeb, a village about 20 miles south-west of Madison, the state capital, according to WMTV 15 news.
No other students or staff were injured in the shooting, Josh Kaul, Wisconsin’s attorney general, said during a Wednesday news conference.
This was still a school shooting. Justified or not, a child was still murdered.
You must be confused about the definition of murder.
Here’s a hint: if it’s a justified shooting, it’s not murder. Murder requires premeditation.
Murder doesn’t require premeditation. That’s a specific kind of murder.
Murder is a specific kind of homicide which is defined as the “unlawful premeditated killing of one human being by another.”
And that’s just the Cornell Law School page. It’s actually much more complex than what’s linked above. You’re out of your element, son.
I was more so responding in regards to the original posters comment regarding the lack of justification as distinguishing this act from murder. If the police officers were allowed to kill him under the law, it is not murder. Murder, by my sources (which show the English-language definition) as well as yours (which show the legal definition), is a legal term that applies to a subset of acts of homicide.