11/01/2008
from the Kennebec Journal
FAIRPOINT PLAN TARGETS DEBT
Wind project off Mass. meets strong resistance
Three bills seek tougher rules for petitioners
New rules for special education debated
Happy apples
AUGUSTA: Cuts to French curriculum run into opposition
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL: Hall-Dale drops MVC title game to Mountain Valley
HIGH SCHOOL HOCKEY NOTEBOOK: Different stakes in Gardiner-Winslow rivalry
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
'At the time ... he was psychotic'
Man answers door, is attacked with Mace and then robbed
FairPoint reorganization plan aims to slash company's debt
Concerns over special-education changes aired
FAIRFIELD: Clinton man, 21, arrested on rape, assault charges
Stun gun, arrest of suspect end high-speed, 2-town chase
HIGH SCHOOL HOCKEY NOTEBOOK: Gardiner, Winslow take to ice again
GIRLS BASKETBALL: Skowhegan wins KVAC A title game
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Morning Sentinel
STOCKTON SPRINGS — A school hostage situation ended peacefully Friday morning when the armed gunman who fled from police last week released 11 fifth-graders he had threatened in a classroom and surrendered to authorities.
“The kids are doing well. Obviously, it’s a stressful situation but they are doing well,” Maine State Police Lt. Gerard Madden said from outside the Stockton Springs Elementary School on Church Street in this small Waldo County town. “No shots were fired.”
He said the students were shaken by the incident.
The gunman, Randall Hofland, 55, of Searsport, had been the subject of a police manhunt for a week before he showed up at the school at approximately 8:30 a.m. Friday. Hofland had pulled a gun on a Searsport police officer on Oct. 23 during a seat belt safety check and fled into the woods near his home, which is located about a mile from the school. Police had not received any reports of sightings of Hofland since then.
Police said that a parent at the school first noticed Hofland in the cafeteria attempting to coerce two children into a restroom and immediately notified the school secretary.
The secretary told a bus driver, who went to the cafeteria and confronted Hofland. Upon being confronted, Hofland reportedly brandished a semiautomatic handgun and walked down the hall and entered the fifth-grade classroom. There were 11 pupils and at least one teacher in the classroom initially, but Hofland allowed two youngsters to leave. Police were not immediately sure why those two were released.
Madden said the school had a plan in place for such a situation and immediately locked down the school. The pupils who were not held hostage were ushered onto a school bus. Once the others were released, they too were put on the bus, and all were taken to Searsport Elementary School where they were reunited with their teachers and received counseling.
A school official said everything happened so quickly, there was no time to notify parents during the incident. But news of the gunman spread through the town like wildfire, and parents began showing up at the locked-down school. Police directed the parents to the Searsport school. Police said all parents were cooperative.
The school secretary notified the Waldo County Communications Center of the situation at 8:37 a.m. and police from all over the county rushed to the scene. The school, which houses 85 students and 11 teachers and staff, was surrounded and secured.
Nine students remained in the classroom with Hofland when state police Detective Jason Andrews began communicating with the gunman through the door from out in the hallway. Within minutes Hofland handed his loaded gun to one of the students in the classroom and walked out into the hallway where he was tackled by one of the waiting officers, according to police. Detective Andrews, Trooper Jonah O’Roak and Waldo County Sheriffís Deputies Scott Jones and Glenn Graef placed Hofland in custody at 9:08 a.m.
One officer at the scene said Hofland looked “scruffy and unshaven” and that his pants were ripped. Madden said Hofland had made statements to the arresting officers but declined to elaborate on what was said.
“He was saying lots of things; he was talking about different things,” Madden said.
Madden said police were trying to determine Friday afternoon where Hofland had been for the past week, how he got into the school, and what his intentions were there.
“To the school's credit, they had a plan and locked down the school,” Madden said. “Credit to the officers that arrived and credit to the school's safety plan.”
Stockton Springs Elementary School is clearly visible from Church Street, a spur off Routes 1 and 1A, and is situated in a residential area. Across the road from the school are a couple of houses and a church, and residences are on either side of it. A fence encloses the playground area of the school property. A sign advertising a pie festival scheduled for Friday afternoon after school was displayed prominently on the grounds. Specific details on the school’s security measures were not available Friday.
Although Hofland was known to area police, he had no criminal record in Maine until he displayed a handgun to a Searsport officer at approximately 10:50 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 23, when he was stopped at a safety checkpoint. After showing his weapon, Hofland drove off and turned into his driveway a few hundred feet from the checkpoint. Police shut down U.S. Route 1 between Searsport and Prospect, but were unable to locate him.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.




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