Carmen de Patagones school shooting
Carmen de Patagones school shooting | |
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Location | Carmen de Patagones, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina |
Coordinates | 40°48′9″ S, 62°59′0″ W |
Date | September 28, 2004 7:35 a.m. (GMT-3) |
Target | Students and Classmates in room 1º B at the "Islas Malvinas" Institute |
Attack type | School shooting, mass shooting, mass murder |
Weapons | Browning Hi-Power 9mm pistol, hunting knife |
Deaths | 3 |
Injured | 5 |
Perpetrator | Rafael Solich |
Motive | Inconclusive, possibly schizophrenic delusions, homicidal ideation, or retaliation for bullying |
The Carmen de Patagones school shooting was a school shooting that occurred on 28 September 2004 at the "Islas Malvinas" Institute in Carmen de Patagones, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. The perpetrator, Rafael Solich, 15, killed three fellow students and wounded five more. Solich was not prosecuted for the crime, as he was under the age of criminal responsibility at the time.
Background
[edit]Rafael "Juniors" Solich (born 27 October 1988),[1] is the son of Rafael Solich and Esther Pangue. His father nicknamed him after the Buenos Aires football club Boca Juniors. His father was involved in the Argentine Naval Prefecture, and Solich took his gun to commit the shootings.[2]
Solich had one friend, Dante, and the pair communicated in English to keep private. Classmates said that the pair listened to Marilyn Manson and wore black, and would draw Satanic imagery such as inverted crosses.[3] The pair had recently gone to the cinema to watch Elephant, a film about a school shooting directly based on the Columbine High School massacre.[4]
Events
[edit]The morning of Tuesday 28 September 2004, in the middle school N°202 "Islas Malvinas" in Carmen de Patagones, Solich opened fire on his classmates in their classroom. The massacre took place at 7:35, the time at which classes started. Solich entered the institute in which around 400 students attended class, bringing a Browning Hi-Power 9mm pistol (which belonged to his father, subofficial of the Argentine Naval Prefecture), two full magazines and a hunting knife hidden in a military coat.
In the classroom 1° B, Solich stood up in front of the class, took the gun and discharged the entire magazine upon his classmates without saying a word. After emptying the magazine, he headed for the hall, loaded a second magazine and shot again, this time at the person in charge of the school buffet, whom he did not manage to injure.
He kept walking through the main hall until Dante Pena, one of his classmates and best friends, tackled him and removed his weapon. After the authorities were warned, he did not resist, was arrested and transferred to the port city of Bahía Blanca.
Because of the attack, three of his classmates died, aged between 15 and 16, and five other students were injured. The then-president Néstor Kirchner described the episode as "painful" and declared two national days of mourning.
In all the schools in the country, an event of reflection was held, where a letter sent by the Ministry of Education was read for everyone.
Victims
[edit]3 students were killed and 5 were injured during the attack in the classroom.
The victims were:[5]
Fatalities
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Injured
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Legal proceedings
[edit]Solich told a judge, "I remember some of it...no, I don't know. Actually, it went really quickly". He did not sleep the night before the attack, confessing that he was nervous. He did not show anyone his gun, but displayed his knife to Dante. Although he would not answer when asked for his motive, he revealed that he had been angry with his peers since kindergarten and had been planning an attack since the seventh grade: "They say that I am strange...they fuck with me because I have this spot on my nose".[2]
Solich was not criminally prosecuted due to his age being 15, which falls under the Argentine age of criminal responsibility of 16. His father was jailed for 45 days and made to relinquish his firearm.[6]
Aftermath
[edit]While in medical custody, he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and treated for a personality disorder.[1] He was kept in psychiatric care until 2007, when he was given liberty from the hospital in La Plata for a weekly ration of hours: first 24, then 48, then 96. As of September 2014, he did not work or study.[2] A female survivor of the attack saw him in the streets of the city, and subsequently suffered panic attacks and required therapy.[6] Before his location was discovered, Argentine media speculated on it.[7] As of 2022, he has one son.[1]
Solich's family were evacuated from Carmen de Patagones immediately after the attack.[7] Dante was deemed by the community to have had prior knowledge of the attack, and was ostracised, with parents threatening to not send their children back to school if he were there; eventually, he and his family were also moved out of town.[3]
The families of the victims sued the Naval Prefecture and the province's Schools Department for 12 million Argentine pesos.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Morosi, Por Pablo (2022-09-28). "Cuatro traslados, un diagnóstico de esquizofrenia y un hijo: la vida de Juniors después de cometer la Masacre de Patagones". infobae (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2024-08-14.
- ^ a b c "Cómo está Juniors, 10 años después de la Masacre de Carmen de Patagones" [How is Juniors, 10 years after the Carmen de Patagones massacre]. La Nación (in Spanish). 24 September 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2015.
- ^ a b Morosi, Pablo (22 October 2004). "Presionado, el amigo de Junior se va del pueblo con su familia" [Under pressure, Junior's friend leaves town with his family]. La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 October 2015.
- ^ Palacios, Por Rodolfo (2019-09-28). "A 15 años de la masacre de Carmen de Patagones: un adolescente a los tiros, muerte en el aula y el estremecedor relato de los sobrevivientes". infobae (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2024-08-17.
- ^ "Masacre de Patagones, a 15 años: el rastro fantasma de Juniors y un aula con tres ángeles" [Patagones massacre, 15 years: the ghost trail of Juniors and a classroom with three angels]. Patagones a Diario. 27 September 2019. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
- ^ a b c Morosi, Pablo (28 September 2013). "Patagones: a 9 años de la masacre, aún no se sabe dónde está Junior" [Patagones: nine years on from the massacre, still nobody know where Junior is]. La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 October 2015.
- ^ a b "El destino de Junior, un misterio" [Junior's fate, a mystery]. La Nación (in Spanish). 28 September 2011. Archived from the original on 2017-09-09. Retrieved 6 October 2015.
- School shootings committed by pupils
- Murder committed by minors
- 2004 murders in Argentina
- History of Buenos Aires Province
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- School shootings in Argentina
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- Mass shootings in Argentina
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