The Lives That Were Lost
The true cost of the April 20 bloody massacre at Columbine High School may never be fully known. Among the victims were young people who had aspirations ranging from the religious to the athletic.
Here is a look at those who died in the tragedy.
Cassie Bernall: Occasional Poet
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The New York Times reports that, during the massacre on April 20, one of the gunmen cornered her in the school library and asked her if she believed in God. After a pause, Cassie answered deliberately: "Yes, I believe in God." She was then shot.
At her funeral, her minister hailed her as a martyr.
Matthew Kechter: Ace Football Player
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Matt was shot in library after he tried to reach friends hiding in an adjacent video room.
Daniel Mauser: Just Back From Paris
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Daniel ran cross-country and was a member of the debate team.
He recently returned from a two-week trip to Paris with his French club.
William 'Dave' Sanders: Teacher And Coach
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Sanders, a grandfather of five, was shot twice in the chest and mortally wounded while hustling students to safety in the cafeteria. Though the students tried desperately to stop his bleeding with no medical supplies on hand, they were unable to do so.
Gently, they say, they pulled out his wallet and held it open so some of his last sights would be the picture of his wife and daughters. His dying request: "Tell my girls I love them."
Rachel Scott: Drama Student
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"Rachel was vivacious, the center of attention wherever she was at," says her grieving father. "She was on the drama team. She had a starring role in her high school play. She Â… had a lot of aspirations to be a drama writer or an actress. And we're just going to miss her."
Rachel's stepbrother, Craig Scott, 16, was in the library and survived the massacre only because he played dead in a friend's pool of blood. He later helped lead blood-spattered and frightened classmates to safety.
Isaiah Shoels: Music Lover
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Isaiah dreamed of becoming a music executive. He had suffered health problems as a child and had heart surgery twice. Due to graduate in May, Isaiah wanted to attend an arts college and become a music executie.
He was small in stature, but he lifted weights (he could bench-press twice his weight), played football and wrestled.
"My son, Isaiah, was a very outgoing student," said his father, Michael Shoels. "He was everybody's friend. He had no enemies Â… He was that kid that everybody wanted to be."
John Tomlin: 'A Great Kid'
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John liked to go four-wheeling in his beat-up Chevy pickup down roller coaster dirt roads in the nearby Rocky Mountains. But he also worked after school at a local tree nursery and belonged to a church youth group.
Last year, he went on a missionary trip to Mexico with family and built a house for poor people. Two years from now, Tomlin planned to enlist in the Army.
"He was a great kid, really happy, going to school, getting good grades," said his father, John Tomlin. "He knew what he wanted to do. He had everything planned."
Lauren Townsend: Volleyball Captain
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Lauren was to have been the valedictorian in May at her class graduation ceremony.
Daniel Rohrbough: "A Good Guy"
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In fact, he was such a good guy that he held the oor open so his classmates could flee the scene of the massacre. He was shot in the back and died calling for his mother.
Corey DePooter: Sportsman
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Kelly Fleming: Artist
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Kyle Velasquez: Sincerity And Heart
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| Kyle Velasquez |
He enjoyed helping his parents with the lawnwork and gardening, and he often helped his father with such other chores as washing the family car.
One of the last purchases Kyle made was a glass vase, to hold flowers for his mother.
Steven Curnow: Star Wars Fan
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| Steven Curnow |
And, like many other boys before him, he dreamed of becoming a U.S. Navy "top gun."











