Sheriff: Army trainee from New Jersey arrested after hijacking school bus in South Carolina

An Army trainee from New Jersey has been arrested after authorities say he boarded a South Carolina school bus with a gun Thursday and held the driver and elementary students hostage before letting them off the bus.

Associated Press

May 6, 2021, 8:48 PM

Updated 1,315 days ago

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An Army trainee from New Jersey has been arrested after authorities say he boarded a South Carolina school bus with a gun Thursday and held the driver and elementary students hostage before letting them off the bus.
During a news conference, Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott said the incident started at around 7 a.m. near Fort Jackson, the U.S. Army's largest basic training facility, located in Columbia. The trainee, dressed in physical training clothes, “ran off post and escaped” with a rifle from the installation, Lott said. Deputies then started receiving calls about someone standing on a nearby interstate flagging down cars.
The trainee then went to a nearby bus stop where children were waiting to be taken to Forest Lake Elementary School, Lott said, and boarded the bus himself, armed with the rifle.
“He told the bus driver he didn't want to hurt anybody; he wanted him to drive him to the next town,” Lott said.
Some of the 18 children on the bus began using cellphones to call parents to let them know what was happening, Lott said. After some of the children asked repeatedly if the trainee planned to hurt them or the driver, the trainee “got a little frustrated” and ordered the bus stopped, allowing the driver and children to get off, Lott said. He then drove the bus several miles before abandoning it, with the rifle inside.
Click the photo below to watch the sheriff's press conference
Richland County Sheriff's Department News Conference
The man then “went through neighborhoods” nearby, Lott said, looking for clothes, was subsequently spotted by deputies and arrested without incident.
A spokeswoman for the Richland Two School District said the bus was transporting elementary school children. As a precaution, security at multiple area schools was increased and no one was allowed to enter or leave the buildings, she said.
“A very scary situation this morning,” Lott said of the incident, which he said lasted about an hour.
This is at least the second high-profile incident in recent weeks involving a soldier based at Fort Jackson. Last month, a Fort Jackson soldier was charged with third-degree assault and suspended after an online video depicted him accosting and shoving a Black man in his neighborhood.
Lott said the man in Thursday's incident was in his third week of basic training at the installation. During a news conference Thursday, Fort Jackson Commanding Brig. Gen. Milford H. Beagle Jr. said the trainee was 23 years old and did not have ammunition in his weapon, which had been issued as part of his training.
"He was a very quiet individual, hailed from New Jersey ... and we assessed that he was just trying to make an attempt to go back home," Beagle said.
Trainees were on a post-breakfast break when the man left the base. He likely grabbed his unloaded weapon because leaving it behind would have alerted supervisors that he was absent, Beagle said.
“There is nothing that leads us to believe ... that this had anything to do with harming others, harming himself or anything that links to any other type of nefarious activity,” he added.
Beagle said the incident had lain bare “a key failure in our accountability processes, that I will fix, going forward, because the outcome potentially could have been much worse.”
The trainee's name has not been released, and Lott said he would face charges including multiple counts of kidnapping. Beagle said the Army may also take disciplinary action of its own, including charges of being absent without leave and theft of a weapon from the base.