AbstractThis paper analyzes the case of Seung-Hui Cho, who killed dozens at Virginia Tech in 2007. The paper examines Cho’s background, his mental illness, the way in which reports of the investigation and incident were changed to hide the inept responses of administrators and police. The paper also examines changes that were made to protocol following the massacre and discusses lessons that can be learned from this incident and how institutions can better prepare themselves to ensure that this kind of tragedy is prevented in the future.
Keywords: Seung-Hui Cho, school shooting, mental illness student
Revisions to On and Off Campus Reports
As Urbina (2009a) notes, “during the worst campus shooting spree in American history, Virginia Tech officials locked down some administrative offices and warned their own families more than an hour and a half before the rest of the campus was alerted, according to revisions made in the state’s official report on the rampage.” Notification delays were longer than originally reported both on and off campus, and the manner in which students were protected was slipshod at best: for example, “students who were initially locked down at West Ambler Johnston residence hall, where the first two victims were killed, were later released from the building by the police and allowed to attend their 9 a.m. classes. Two of those students then went to class in Norris Hall, where they were killed by the gunman” (Urbina, 2009a). Likewise, University officials failed to notify the family of Seung-Hui Cho’s first victim, even though she was taken to the hospital where she survived for more than two hours before succumbing to her injuries. Virginia Tech’s delay meant that the victim’s family never got a chance to see her one last time alive. Instead, the University was more focused on locking down administrators—like the workers in the University’s president’s offices, where a warning was given a full half hour before a formal warning was made to students (Urbina, 2009a). Police also took a half hour longer in responding to the alert than was originally stated in the initial report (Urbina, 2009a).
Seung-Hui Cho’s Background
Seung-Hui Cho was born in South Korea and raised there until he and his family emigrated to the U.S. when he was eight. His life had never been easy, and in South Korea, his family had lived in a poor tenement dwelling “in a Seoul suburb in a rented basement apartment—usually the cheapest in a multi-unit building” (Chang, 2007). From Seoul, the family moved to Detroit then to the Washington, D.C. region to be among the South Korean community there. As a teen, Cho was diagnosed with severe anxiety disorder and major depressive disorder, for which he was prescribed treatment (Lyttle, 2012). Having to learn English in a new country without a strong support system undoubtedly had a negative impact on him, especially as he found it difficult to express himself. As he grew, he exhibited more and more disturbing patterns of behavior and held animosity towards his parents’ Christian religious beliefs, though...
Conflict Resolution: Analysis of the Virginia Tech Shootings This paper examines the horrible tragedy that struck Virginia Tech on that took place on April 16, 2007. This paper goes on to examine things such as the delays of reporting the correct information of the shooting at its early stages to the poor security that was put in operation. It also explores the life of disturbed student and what possibly led up
Virginia Tech Killings Crime and delinquency in the Virginia tech massacre A shooting took place on the campus of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University which is located in Blacksburg Virginia, on the 6th of April in 2007. In this shooting 32 people got killed. Later on this incident was called the Virginia Tech massacre. Even today this incident is thought of as the deadliest incident that took place in U.S. There
Violence on College Campuses Virginia Tech could probably have avoided the terrible massacre of 2007 had its officials taken more timely and effective action with Seung Hui Cho. He had a very long record of mental illness dating back to middle school, including fantasies of violence and murder, and he had received psychiatric treatment in the past. His behavior at Virginia Tech was so disturbing to students and faculty that a
shooting of Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, writers Michael Grunwald and Jay Newton-Small asked an important question: How could Jared Loughner, the shooter, be considered too dangerous to attend community college but not too dangerous to buy a gun? Grunwald and Newton-Small (2011) point out that gun control continues to be a hot topic in the United States, despite the fact that the Arizona shooting occurred after the horrors of
Those that oppose the allowing of firearms on campus also assert that there are other ways to make college campuses more secure. For instance, the development of campus wide alarms, email and text alerts have been implemented at college campuses throughout the country (Magnusson, 2008). In addition opponents argue that tighter laws governing the mental health status of students should be examined so that people who have a history of
As a result, both handguns and long guns are available in many states, with more than half of American households owning one or more firearms. This perpetual access to deadly weapons is the primary reason that completely eliminating school shootings may be impossible. Schoolyard bullying, low self-esteem, dysfunctional families and troubled teens who fantasize about lashing out violently will always be factors in the educational institution environment, despite continual efforts
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now