Draft:2017 Ivanteyevka school attack
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Submission declined on 12 September 2024 by OhHaiMark (talk). The content of this submission includes material that does not meet Wikipedia's minimum standard for inline citations. Please cite your sources using footnotes. For instructions on how to do this, please see Referencing for beginners. Thank you. This submission is not adequately supported by reliable sources. Reliable sources are required so that information can be verified. If you need help with referencing, please see Referencing for beginners and Citing sources. Declined by OhHaiMark 2 months ago. |
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2017 Ivanteyevka school attack | |
---|---|
Location | Ivanteyevka, Moscow region, Russia |
Date | September 5, 2017MSK, UTC+3) | (10:00
Attack type | School shooting school violence |
Weapons | air rifle, cleaver, improvised explosive devices |
Deaths | 0 |
Injured | 4 |
Perpetrator | Mikhail Pivnev |
Motive | Columbine copycat crime |
The 2017 Ivanteyevka school attack occured in Ivanteyevka in the Moscow region on the morning of September 5, 2017. When ninth-grader Mikhail Pivnev entered the building of "Educational Center No. 1", where he was a student and opened fire from an air rifle, and then detonated homemade explosive devices. As a result of the attack, four people were injured - an IT teacher, whom the teenager hit in the head with a cleaver and shot in the face, as well as three school students who jumped out of the window of the educational institution.[1]
Pivnev was detained by law enforcement officers. A psychological and psychiatric examination established the teenager's sanity at the time of the attack. On February 15, 2019, the Ivanteevsky City Court of the Moscow Region, having found the "Ivanteevsky shooter" guilty of attempted murder of two or more persons and hooliganism , sentenced him to 7 years and 3 months of imprisonment in a correctional colony, and also imposed an additional penalty in the form of a fine of 20 thousand rubles. Among other things, the court satisfied the victims' claims for compensation for material and moral damages in the total amount of more than 2 million rubles.
The Ivanteyevka incident was the first time in Russian history that an attack on an educational institution was carried out by a copycat of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, the perpetrators of the Columbine High School massacre in April 20, 1999. The incident, as well as the fact that the attacker was inspired by the actions of American mass murderers, caused a wide public outcry and led to the emergence of a number of legislative initiatives: in particular, a federal law was passed banning “Columbine communities” on social networks and other Internet resources that incite children to commit suicide and commit crimes.[2][3]
Perpetrator
[edit]Mikhail Sergeyevich Pivnev was born in 2002[3], at the time of the shooting incident he was 15 years old and was a 9th "A" grade student at the municipal budgetary educational institution "Educational Center No. 1" in Ivanteyevka. According to media reports, Mikhail's father, Sergey Pivnev, was a major local entrepreneur, the founder of the company "Geosistema", specializing in services in the field of geodesy, his mother was an employee of the Ivanteyevka MFC; Mikhail was not the only child in the family - the Pivnevs also raised a daughter, who, like her older brother, studied at "Educational Center No. 1". The Pivnev family, according to law enforcement agencies, was prosperous, and the teenager himself, according to the children's ombudsman of the Moscow region, Ksenia Mishonova, had no problems with the police. An acquaintance of Pivnev's called his parents very strict: "No one I know had parents who kept such an eye on them as they did on him. He was not allowed to stay out late: he had to be home by eight in the evening. His mother was constantly calling him".
Conflicting information was published in the media regarding Pivnev’s character and the young man’s relationships with his classmates. The RIA Novosti news agency reported that Mikhail was described at school as a strange and withdrawn person. Some students at Educational Center No. 1 and their parents claimed that the teenager was bullied by his classmates, and that the school administration did not take any action to combat the bullying. In an interview with RT , one of the students at Educational Center No. 1 reported that Pivnev was “a very withdrawn guy”. A schoolboy named Ivan, who, according to RIA Novosti, knew Pivnev and studied in a parallel class, on the contrary, claimed that the shooter was not withdrawn, had friends and “nothing foreshadowed” the incident. The fact that Mikhail “was not an outcast” and stood out among other schoolchildren only by his style of clothing was reported, citing another student in a parallel class, by the publication “ Vesti.ru ”. “There was no signal, there were no complaints from the children to the teachers that something terrible was being prepared. "The boy did not show any signs of aggression. He never violated discipline, he was calm. “The relationship with the children was absolutely smooth,” noted the acting director of Ivanteyevka School No. 1, Natalya Reshetova, separately emphasizing that the student communicated with a psychologist “after a deterioration in his academic performance and behavior was recorded”.
Pivnev was actively interested in weapons. As Ksenia Mishonova noted, knowing about their son's hobby, Mikhail's parents themselves gave him an air gun, which the teenager later used in an attack on a school. An acquaintance of Pivnev's told RT that the schoolboy made homemade weapons, and sometimes went out into the street with his air rifle. Pivnev also showed interest in the topic of mass murders in educational institutions. On the social network VKontakte, he was registered as Mike Klebold; The nickname chosen by the young man referred to the surname of Dylan Klebold who committed the mass murder at Columbine High School in April 1999. On his page, Mikhail posted personal photos, including with weapons. On April 20, 2017, on another anniversary of the events at Columbine, he wrote: “If we don’t go into details, then as a result 13 students are dead. Here it is again that very day". "It doesn’t matter what is happening around, how they treat me, I wonder if I am needed here... life is beautiful, friends, but sometimes death is better. And maybe it would be better if I were in Eric’s or Dylan’s place... Now forget everything that is written here and move on with your life. Not everyone likes suicidal thoughts, right?”. Pivnev also imitated the Columbine shooters in his appearance: he wore a long raincoat, combat boots , and a military-style bag; a schoolboy friend said that Mikhail’s style of clothing was not to the liking of teachers. In particular, according to her, teachers forced the teenager to take off his combat boots at school, and Pivnev only came to school in a raincoat once—on the day of the attack.
Both his acquaintances and classmates knew that Pivnev was planning an attack on the school. In an interview with the online publication Meduza, two former students of Educational Center No. 1 said that the teenager openly announced his desire, like Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, to attack the educational institution. Among the reasons that prompted Mikhail to decide to commit the attack, in particular, were the conflictual relationships that developed between him and several classmates, as well as the computer science teacher - the student was ridiculed because of his appearance. Ombudsman Ksenia Mishonova claimed that students from grade 9A who studied with Pivnev reported their classmate’s plans to the school administration, but this warning was not taken seriously.[3]
Attacks
[edit]On the evening of September 4, 2017, one of Pivnev's acquaintances named Maria met the teenager at his home. Mikhail, who at that moment had a case with "something resembling a gun" on him, told his friend that he was going to "organize a terrorist attack" the next day, but the girl did not take these words seriously - she knew about the teenager's long-standing fascination with the topic of "Columbine" and mass murders in educational institutions.[3]
On the morning of September 5, Mikhail prepared for the attack: he packed a bag with a kitchen hatchet and homemade explosive devices, set the status “delete my life 09/05/17” on his VKontakte page, and, armed with an air rifle, headed to school. At 7:51 Moscow time , the teenager sent a message to Maria, saying that he had not joked about the terrorist attack the night before.[3]
Pivnev entered the building of Educational Center No. 1 at around 10 a.m., after the start of the third lesson. The young man carried the air rifle under his coat: as Meduza reported, citing the mother of two students at the school, the security guards at the entrance almost never searched the students. At the designated time, Mikhail's class of 9A was having a computer science lesson - some of the students were in a room on the second floor, and others were on the fourth; Pivnev, having previously asked his sister to leave the school as quickly as possible, proceeded to a room on the second floor, where 39-year-old Lyubov Kalmykova was teaching at the time. Upon entering the classroom, Mikhail got into a verbal altercation with Kalmykova, who reprimanded the student for his tardiness and appearance, and then escorted him out of the classroom. Some time later, the students heard the sound of a gunshot and the teacher's screams coming from the hallway: Pivnev hit Kalmykova on the head with a cleaver and shot her in the face with an air rifle; the teacher was subsequently hospitalized with a traumatic brain injury and underwent surgery.
After the attack on the teacher, Pivnev returned to class. Mikhail's classmates barricaded themselves in a utility room of the classroom, and the shooter himself, as a source of the TASS agency in law enforcement agencies reported, at that time shouted threats and began to detonate explosive packages; according to eyewitnesses, Pivnev also shouted that he had been waiting for the attack for three years and "came to die". Three students (two girls and one boy), fearing for their lives, jumped out of a second-floor window, resulting in fractures and bruises; later, the injured schoolchildren were also hospitalized.
Pivnev, who was heading to the fourth floor of the school, where the second half of class 9A was having a lesson, was detained by police and Rosgvardia officers who arrived at the scene. A video recording showing two law enforcement officers in full gear and helmets leading the shooter in a light T-shirt with his hands behind his back out of the school building was published by an eyewitness on Instagram.
By the time the shooter was detained, about 300 people had been evacuated from the school building. According to NTV , the first reports of the attack appeared in the media at 10:18 Moscow time, and according to TJ , at approximately 11:00. The head of Ivanteyevka, Elena Kovaleva, stated that what happened was not a terrorist attack, and that the events at the school were the result of the actions of a student who had a conflict with a teacher. The head of the security department of the Ivanteyevka administration, Sergei Chuklov, called the attack a domestic conflict.
Investigation
[edit]The study was conducted inpatient at the V. P. Serbsky State Scientific Center for Social and Forensic Psychiatry. The examination established that at the time of the attack, the young man was sane and understood the nature of his actions.
On July 27, 2018, it became known that the investigative actions in the criminal case of the attack were completed, and the defense began to familiarize itself with the case materials, which amounted to about six volumes. According to Pivnev's lawyer, the young man filed a motion for joint and separate familiarization with the case with the defense attorney and legal representative.
Trial
[edit]Pivnev's trial began on November 28, 2018, in the Ivanteevsky City Court of the Moscow Region. Mikhail Pivnev's defense petitioned for the trial to be held behind closed doors, and this petition was granted. At the first hearing, the state prosecutor read out the indictment, after which the defendant partially admitted guilt, stating that he did not plead guilty to attempted murder.
During the consideration of the case, the victims and witnesses in the case were questioned, and various pieces of evidence were examined. “Dozens of victims are coming to the hearings on the case. It is expected that they will not only give testimony, but also file civil claims for compensation for moral and physical harm,” noted the RIA Novosti agency, which called the trial of the “Ivanteyevka shooter” one of the most anticipated trials of 2019.
At the debate stage, the state prosecution requested that Pivnev be sentenced to 9 years and 6 months of imprisonment, to be served in a correctional colony. “It should be noted that, according to Russian law, an accused under 18 cannot be sentenced to more than ten years; in other words, the state prosecution requested practically the maximum sentence for the teenager,” Kommersant emphasized.
During the debate, the defense insisted on leniency for Pivnev and a suspended sentence. As noted by the publication Kommersant, Pivnev's defense attorney Viktor Zaprudsky drew the court's attention to the fact that the defendant did not intend to kill anyone and partially admitted guilt. The teenager's lawyer also argued that Pivnev's actions should be seen as evidence of crimes such as threatening to kill and causing moderate bodily harm, thus challenging "the correctness of imputing attempted murder". "He poses no danger to society," Zaprudsky stated, while emphasizing that during his time in the pretrial detention center, his client came to understand what had happened. On February 14, Pivnev made his final statement in court.
On February 15, 2019, the court handed down a guilty verdict against Pivnev: the teenager was sentenced to imprisonment for 7 years and 3 months, to be served in a correctional colony. "He was found guilty under two articles of the Russian Criminal Code: attempted murder of two or more persons committed in a generally dangerous manner, hooliganism with the use of explosives," Anna Tyurina, press secretary of the Moscow Regional Court, told the Russian Agency for Legal and Judicial Information . The victims' claims for compensation for material and moral damages totaling more than 2 million rubles were partially satisfied: according to Pivnev's defense attorney, one of the claims was not satisfied and sent "for consideration within the framework of civil proceedings". As an additional punishment, the court sentenced Pivnev to a fine of 20 thousand rubles.
Defense attorney Viktor Zaprudsky told Kommersant that he considered the verdict unfair and the punishment excessively harsh. The lawyer expressed the opinion that there were grounds for appealing the verdict, but the issue of filing an appeal should be decided together with Pivnev's parents after studying the entire text of the verdict, which was 73 pages long.
Reactions
[edit]Reaction of officials
[edit]The Chairperson of the Federation Council Valentina Matviyenko, answering a question about the need to improve the mechanism for ensuring security in Russian educational institutions after the incident in Ivanteyevka, expressed the opinion that "the family and the school missed the child." "When the child had obvious problems, the family and the school did not stand by him, did not try to listen to him, understand him, support him psychologically - this is the main problem of security," she emphasized. Matviyenko also pointed out that the safety of students in any educational institution is "the primary task and responsibility of school management".[4]
The Commissioner for Children's Rights under the President of the Russian Federation Anna Kuznetsova, like the Speaker of the Federation Council, placed the responsibility for what happened on the parents and teachers who did not listen to the teenager who committed the attack: "The child himself literally followed everyone and said: "Look!" He literally approached everyone and waited for them to stop him. I have this feeling when I look into this case. Neither the school management, nor the teacher, nor the parents woke up in time." At the same time, the ombudsman spoke out against introducing new measures to ensure safety. "I know that these measures are there for show. Unfortunately, sometimes it happens that after major events, mass events begin and with the number of participants in them we close our eyes to large reports and, including, to ourselves, to the situation itself," she noted.[5]
The Minister of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, Olga Vasilyeva, called what happened in Ivanteyevka a tragedy and further confirmation of the need to return the mechanism for providing medical records of students to schools as soon as possible, and also called for serious consideration of returning the positions of school psychologists.
In connection with the shooting in Ivanteyevka, Federation Council member Elena Mizulina drew attention to what she believes is the acute problem of children's fascination with computer games, particularly those in the shooter genre , which foster cruelty and form an aggressive model for resolving conflicts, citing GTA as an example . "The state should not turn a blind eye to this, we need to create the same computer games, but with the right, safe content, invest in the creation of good films and cartoons. Otherwise, we will simply lose this generation," she said.
Perception by the media
[edit]Researcher from the Rostov State University of Economics, candidate of pedagogical sciences O. I. Gorbatkova, analyzing the problems of media interpretations of school violence in the Russian media, considers the attack on the Ivanteyevka school and the perception of this incident in the press as one of the examples. “The information, which shocked the public with its cruelty, received wide publicity in the media. On the day of the event, various media reported on this news,” the scientist writes.
Having studied the publications of a number of editions ( Komsomolskaya Pravda , Moskovsky Komsomolets , Novaya Gazeta , etc.) about the attack, Gorbatkova notes that Russian mass media often “freely report personal data,” in particular, the names of students, teachers, and school numbers, which, in her opinion, is a violation of ethical and legal norms. Thus, in the publication of Komsomolskaya Pravda (“The schoolboy who opened fire at the Ivanteyevka school warned of a planned attack on a social network,” published on September 6, 2017), the researcher pointed out the inclusion in the article by the author of the most unpleasant details of the incident, many details that provoke readers to want to independently imagine what happened, as well as a mention of the existence of visual content “demonstrating the situation that happened,” which, in her opinion, further fuels reader interest. “The abundance of details of violence in such media texts also seems unacceptable,” the researcher concludes.
Candidate of Medical Sciences, Associate Professor N. D. Uzlov in his work “Phonosemantic Analysis of Texts on Violence and Mass Murders in Russian Educational Institutions” focuses on the use of the word “shooter” by the media when covering the attack on the school in Ivanteyevka and other similar incidents, both separately and in phrases (for example, “Ivanteyevka shooter”). “In a broad sense, a shooter is someone who knows how to shoot a weapon, a person who uses firearms. In the mass consciousness of Russians, the word “shooter” has both a negative ( sniper , hired killer ) and a positive connotation, being associated with justice ( Stanislav Govorukhin’s film “ Voroshilov Shooter ”),” the scientist notes.
Consequences
[edit]As V. O. Karpov, a researcher at the Herzen State Pedagogical University of Russia, points out, there have been more than a dozen attacks on educational institutions worldwide by followers of mass murderers Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold (dubbed the Columbine effect). The Ivanteyevka incident was the first attack of this kind in Russia, although there had been high-profile school shootings in the country before; attacks by teenage copycats of the American killers followed on January 15, 2018, with the 2018 Perm school stabbing and on January 19 of the same year at School No. 5 in the suburbs of Ulan-Ude. In all of the above cases, the perpetrators were interested in the Columbine school massacre, and their social media pages contained posts from thematic communities dedicated to “school shooters”. On October 17, 2018, 20 people were killed in a mass murder at the Kerch Polytechnic College. “The crime was reminiscent of the Columbine murder (use of explosives, imitating the appearance of one of the Columbine school shooters, suicide in the library, etc.),” Karpov emphasizes, describing what happened in Kerch.[6]
Researchers O. I. Samosvat, T. S. Brezhneva and E. R. Shmeerova noted that as of September 2017, there were 10 groups on social networks dedicated to the “Columbine” theme, with a total of about 1.5 thousand participants; however, after Mikhail Pivnev’s attack on the school in Ivanteyevka and the widespread coverage of this incident in the media, the number of such communities increased to 45, and the total number of their participants amounted to 8,756 accounts.
On May 18, 2018, it became known that Deputy Speaker of the State Duma Irina Yarovaya had submitted a bill for consideration aimed at protecting children from so-called "Columbine communities" on social networks; it was in such groups, in particular, that the attackers from Ivanteyevka, Perm and Ulan-Ude were members. The draft amendments to the federal law " On information, information technology and the protection of information " proposed a mechanism for extrajudicial blocking of access to these communities. "By protecting children from being drawn into a criminal community, we solve a dual problem: firstly, we do not allow the child to become a criminal, to be induced to commit crimes, and secondly, we protect the child by not allowing him to become a victim of a crime," the deputy noted. The law was adopted by the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation and signed by President Vladimir Putin on December 18, 2018
References
[edit]- ^ Новости, Р. И. А. (2017-09-05). "Подросток открыл стрельбу в школе в Ивантеевке". РИА Новости (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-04-18.
- ^ "Подросток в школе в Ивантеевке выстрелил в учителя после того как она выгнала его с урока". ТАСС. 2017-09-05. Archived from the original on 2019-09-24. Retrieved 2021-03-10.
- ^ a b c d e "Ивантеевский стрелок все лето тренировался стрелять и взрывать". Вести.ру. 2017-09-05. Archived from the original on 2021-03-14. Retrieved 2020-09-09.
- ^ "Матвиенко: семья и школа недоглядели за подростком, устроившим стрельбу в Ивантеевке". ТАСС. 2017-09-08. Archived from the original on 2019-07-23. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
- ^ "Матвиенко: семья и школа недоглядели за подростком, устроившим стрельбу в Ивантеевке". ТАСС. 2017-09-08. Archived from the original on 2019-07-23. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
- ^ "Crimea mourns victims of school massacre". TheNational.ae. 19 October 2018. Retrieved 20 October 2018.