Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

  

share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
Peter Mucha / Staff Writer
A teenager shot and wounded another youth on a school bus taking students to a disciplinary high school this morning, police said. The gunfire erupted in the back of this bus around 8 a.m. on Pine Street, near 57th Street.
RELATED STORIES
 
Police ID Brewerytown shooting victim
 
A Phila. effort to counter the departed Dad Vail
 
CityCenter raises stakes on the Vegas Strip
 
Killer of Officer Chuck Cassidy sentenced to die
 
Court: District can ban Christmas carols
 
N.J. suspends flu-shot mandate for tots
 
Get started collecting your family stories
 
Tragic mystery: How did John Lewis become a killer?
 
Nepal begins a ritual in blood
 
Claims against VA up to $58 million
 
Coroner: Boxer's death accidental
 
Obama picks Penn president for bioethics panel
 
Body of missing N.J. fisherman found in N.C.
 
Your life, by personal historians
 
Comcast's holiday show is a breakout in 3-D
 
School mourns crash victims
 
Beach repairs at risk in some towns
 
Wyeths' work up for auction
 
Sports talker opening comedy club
 
Boxer's organs to be donated
 
Sports Authority, Nintendo team up to sell Wii Fit as fitness equipment
 
Holiday train shows take Obama homes on board
 
23-year coma victim talking, or no?
 
Boat owner's body found
 
John Lewis was unlike many killers, but in prison he'll slip into a familiar pattern
 
Officer Cassidy's killer sentenced to die; defendant asks forgiveness, is rebuffed by widow
 
Parade taking a new route
 
Boxer dies in Philly bout
 
Camden again ranks worst on crime list
 
Brinkley renews NFL quest
 
Shooter cop had been investigated for multiple complaints


Teen shoots another on school bus in W. Phila

A teenager shot and critically wounded another youth on a school bus headed to a high school for troubled students in West Philadelphia this morning, police said.

Police later arrested the 15-year-old suspect with a .25-caliber handgun nine blocks away.

The 17-year-old victim suffered a head wound that left him in critical but stable condition at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, as of early this afternoon.

Police said the shooting stemmed from an earlier confrontation, but would not elaborate.

Law enforcement sources said the gunman may have retaliated for an earlier incident of bullying.

The gunfire erupted in the back of the bus around 8 a.m. on Pine Street, near South 57th Street, a residential neighborhood of gabled rowhouses.

The shooter shoved a gun in the driver's face and jumped off the bus through the front door, fleeing toward 60th Street, officials said. Police later caught him at South 61st and Cedar Streets.

Officials at the scene originally said it appeared the victim had suffered only a graze wound, but it was determined after he arrived at the hospital that a bullet had entered his head behind the ear.

The bus was en route to Community Education Partners, a program for students with behavioral problems at 43d Street and Westminster Avenue in West Philadelphia.

About a dozen students were on the bus when the shooting erupted and half of them had left and walked to school by the time police arrived, officials said.

"The ease of these kids to get guns is something that troubles us on a daily basis," said Deputy Commissioner Kevin Bethel.

The suspect, not immediately identified because he is a juvenile, was taken for questioning at Southwest Detectives. Police also were interviewing the students who stayed with the bus.

Fernando Gaillard, spokesman for the School District, quoted bus system manager John Lombardi as saying he had never seen anything like this in 30 years.

 


Contact staff writer Peter Mucha at 215-854-4342 or pmucha@phillynews.com.

 

  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Rentals
 
SEARCH JOBS
Spotlight Deal
Center City 19107
Spotlight Deal
Southwark 19147
SEARCH REAL ESTATE
Spotlight Deal
East Norriton 19403
Spotlight Deal
Manayunk 19127
SEARCH RENTALS
Daily Headlines
Subscribe now! Daily Headlines Newsletter

Philly.com news columnists