UPDATE (Jan. 6, 2024, 11:58 a.m. ET): Iowa authorities have identified the sixth-grader who was killed as 11-year-old Ahmir Jolliff. Authorities also said a total of seven people — four students and three school staff members — suffered injuries, including Principal Dan Marburger, who was shot and remains in critical condition.
A sixth-grader was killed and five other people were injured in a shooting at Perry High School in Iowa on Thursday morning, the first day of school after the holiday break, authorities said.
Four of the wounded are students and one is a school administrator, according to Mitch Mortvedt, assistant director of the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, who provided an update at an afternoon press conference. They are being treated at area hospitals.
Authorities said that reports of an active shooter at the school first came in at 7:37 a.m. local time, before classes began. When Perry police officers arrived at the scene, they saw students and faculty members either sheltering in place or running away, Mortvedt said. Officers found multiple people with gunshot wounds inside the school, including the suspected shooter, who was dead apparently from a self-inflicted gunshot.
Mortvedt identified the shooter as a 17-year-old Perry High student Dylan Butler. He was “armed with a pump-action shotgun and a small caliber handgun belt,” Mortvedt said, and had made social media posts “in and around the time of the shooting.”
Police also found an improvised explosive device while searching the school, and the state Fire Marshal and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms “rendered the device safe,” according to Mortvedt.
Fewer students were in the building than usual when the shooting happened because classes had not yet started for the day, Dallas County Sheriff Adam Infante said earlier at a morning press conference.
Mortvedt declined to speak about a possible motive but added that investigators are looking into the suspect’s background.








