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A hero speaks against school shootings

When shots rang out in the Ohio high school, coach Frank Hall ran toward them instead of away, chasing the lone gunman out of the building
Preview: Shooting At Chardon High 00:39

Update: The 60 Minutes report "The Shooting at Chardon High" which aired on Feb. 23, 2014.

The Shooting At Chardon High 13:26
 The hero football coach who chased a teen gunman out of a school is calling for more to be done to prevent school shootings. Frank Hall, whose heroics at Chardon High School in Ohio could have prevented more deaths, speaks to Scott Pelley for a 60 Minutes report to be broadcast Sunday, Feb. 23 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.

Two years ago this week in Chardon, Hall confronted a teen gunman who had opened fire on the students he was monitoring in the cafeteria.  Six students were shot and three eventually died, but he chased the young gunman out of the building before he could shoot anyone else.  Such incidents are happening all too often says Hall.

"I remember when Columbine happened. Everybody in the world knew what Columbine was," says Hall.  "I can't sit here and tell you every school that's had a school shooting now. We need to find ways to secure our schools better. We need to make a stand right now that our schools need to be the most important thing we have in this country, not Wall Street, not Capitol Hill, our schools," he tells Pelley.

Hall takes Pelley through the entire incident that day in 2012, in which he escaped being shot by throwing himself behind a soda machine.  He says he then comforted the wounded kids as best he could before three of them died: Daniel Parmertor, Demetrius Hewlin and Russell King.  But he says he doesn't want to be known as a hero; he just wishes it never happened. "Sometimes I get mad about it...you know Scott, I wish you weren't here. I wish I was never on TV. I'd give anything for this not to be happening right now," says Hall.

Pelley speaks with another teacher in the school that day, Tim Armelli, and he talks to two of the wounded students.  Nick Walczak tells Pelley the bullet that hit him paralyzed him. He saw Hall running after the shooter, "He said as he's running by me, he said, 'Hang tight. I'll be back.'"

Nate Mueller was luckier, though he came within an inch of losing his life when a bullet hit his ear.  He remains grateful to Coach Hall.  "And for him to be a teacher and to put himself in harm's way to chase him out of the building, for kids that were just students in his cafeteria is amazing,"  he says.

The judge in the trial of the teen gunman wondered whether he had done his deed to make a name for himself; 60 Minutes decided not to use his name or picture in this story.

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