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Assistant principal dies after gunman fires in Neb. school

A Nebraska school is closed on Jan. 6 after one administrator was killed and another wounded.

An angry online posting from the 17-year-old boy who opened fire at a Nebraska high school, fatally wounding an assistant principal before later killing himself, offers some clues about why the son of a police detective turned violent a couple of months after transferring there.

As authorities sort out what may have led to the Jan. 5 shooting, those who knew Robert Butler Jr. are struggling to reconcile his final actions with their memories of the fun, outgoing student who liked to make jokes and sometimes got into trouble for talking in class.

The gunman, who had attended Omaha’s Millard South High School for no more than two months, also wounded the principal before fleeing from the scene and fatally shooting himself in his car about a mile away.

“It’s just unreal,” said Robert Uribe, Butler’s stepgrandfather. Uribe said nothing appeared to be wrong when he last talked to Butler briefly a month ago. He said the polite young man he knew didn’t seem a likely gunman.

“I don’t know what would possess him to do that,” Uribe said.

Assistant Principal Vicki Kaspar, 58, died at Creighton University Medical Center the evening of Jan. 5, hours after the shooting. Principal Curtis Case, 45, was in serious but stable condition.

Butler posted a rambling message on Facebook shortly before the shooting about his unhappiness with his new school, but he didn’t supply many details. Instead, the expletive-laced note predicted Butler’s friends would hear about the “evil things” he was about to do.

He wrote that the Omaha school was worse than his previous one, and that the new city had changed him. He apologized and said he wanted people to remember him for who he was before affecting “the lives of the families I ruined.” The post ended with “goodbye.”

Butler had transferred in the fall from a high school in Lincoln, about 50 miles southwest of Omaha. A former classmate of Butler’s from Lincoln confirmed the Facebook post to The Associated Press and provided AP with a copy of it.

Conner Gerner recalled Butler as being energetic, fun, and outgoing. Gerner said Butler sometimes got in trouble for speaking out too much in class, but he did not seem angry.

“He just seemed like he had a lot of energy. He liked to talk to people. He was always moving,” Gerner said.

Another friend, Jacob Edward Rinke, said he and some others had exchanged Facebook posts with Butler the night before the shooting. The discussion was about cars and included what Rinke described as normal ribbing between friends.

“We were hazing each other about car stuff. He seemed fine and everything. He seemed happy,” Rinke said.

Rinke said Butler had lived up the street from him and they used to play sports and video games together.

“He didn’t seem like a kid who would go out and do this. When I first heard about this in school I didn’t believe it. I was pretty much in denial about it,” Rinke said.

Another acquaintance from Lincoln, 15-year-old Justin Reynolds, said he and his older brother used to hang out with Butler at a local skate park.

“He was always trying to make a joke,” Reynolds said. “No matter what mood someone was in, he was always trying to make them feel better.”

Lincoln school officials declined to provide details about Butler’s student record there, but they described him as a “fairly normal, average student.” Lincoln Southwest High School Principal Rob Slauson said Butler was involved in few, if any, activities.

Omaha Police Chief Alex Hayes provided no details on the weapon Butler used or how he obtained it. Butler’s father is a detective for the Omaha Police Department. Investigators were interviewing the seven-year veteran on Jan. 5 to learn more about what may have led to the shooting.

Authorities first received reports of the shooting around 12:50 p.m. The school was immediately locked down.

Sophomore Jessica Liberator said she was in the cafeteria when another administrator “rushed in to tell everybody to get in the back of the kitchen.”

She said she started to cry when students heard a knock on the kitchen door and a cafeteria worker yelled for everybody to get down. It was a false alarm. Nobody came in.

Within two hours of the shooting, students were being released in groups, and when the first group emerged from the school, parents began applauding. Some students smiled, raised their hands in the air and flashed a V for victory sign.

John Manna, who lives two blocks from the school, called Assistant Principal Kaspar a wonderful person who had worked as a counselor and teacher before becoming an administrator. Manna said he knew Kaspar because his older son graduated from high school with her son in 1996.

“I was just shocked. I can’t think of a nicer person. I can’t see how anyone would be cross with her,” Manna said of Kaspar before her death.

The school on the west side of Omaha has about 2,100 students. District officials said Millard South would be closed on Jan. 6.