Columbine High School Massacre Discussion Forum
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Columbine High School Massacre Discussion Forum

A place to discuss the Columbine High School Massacre along with other school shootings and crimes.
Anyone interested in researching, learning, discussing and debating with us, please come join our community!
 
HomeHome  PortalPortal  CalendarCalendar  Latest imagesLatest images  FAQFAQ  SearchSearch  MemberlistMemberlist  RegisterRegister  Log inLog in  

 

 Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?

Go down 
+2
Lunkhead McGrath
LPorter101
6 posters
AuthorMessage
LPorter101
Top 10 Contributor
LPorter101


Posts : 2745
Contribution Points : 147925
Forum Reputation : 2502
Join date : 2013-12-01
Location : South Florida

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSat Dec 02, 2017 4:17 am

Are Eric and Dylan at least partly to blame for his suicide?

...

Columbine High School's star basketball player committed suicide [on Thursday, May 4, 2000], stunning a community still struggling to heal from last year's massacre.

Greg Barnes, a 17-year-old junior and the Rebels' top scorer, hanged himself in the family's Jefferson County home. His father found him about 12:15 p.m.

Hundreds of neighbors, students and teachers brought baked goods, casseroles and hugs to the boy's parents, Mark and Judy, as they stood sobbing in their doorway.

Varsity basketball coach Rudy Martin met with his players at the Barnes home.

"I didn't know what to tell them," Martin said. "I don't know what to tell my own kids," who are 10 and 13. "For two years their hero has been Greg Barnes."

He said he had no inkling Barnes - described as a role model to younger students and a member of the student council - was suicidal. "He stopped in and talked almost every day." Barnes was "an outstanding player, but a better kid," he said.

Three Columbine athletic teams were forced to compete in playoff games Thursday despite asking for postponements.

"The kids really had a hard time handling it," said Robin Ortiz, coach of the varsity baseball team, which won its game 8-6 against Highlands Ranch.

Ortiz said he last saw Barnes on Wednesday. "He was bouncing down the halls with that great big grin on his face like he always did." Columbine sophomore Jamie Conwell said several students saw Barnes on Thursday after his third-period gym class about 11 a.m. and there was no outward sign of despondency.

"When is all of this going to end?" Conwell asked. "It seems like every time we start to get over things, something else happens. This is all so unbelievable."

Law-enforcement, emergency rescue and school authorities declined to say whether Barnes left a note. Mental health experts said that without knowing why Barnes committed suicide, the public should not assume a link to last year's shootings.

Barnes' is the second high-profile suicide since the April 20, 1999, shootings that left 15 people dead and two dozen others wounded. Carla Hochhalter, the mother of wounded student Anne Marie Hochhalter, who was left partially paralyzed, killed herself Oct. 22.

"We're really praying for his family," said Ann Kechter, whose son, Matt, was killed at Columbine and was good friends with Barnes. "We know how incredibly painful this is going to be for his family and what they're going to have to go through.

"It breaks your heart." Matt Kechter and Greg Barnes often studied together, and Barnes would drive Kechter home from school. Both boys had younger brothers.

A 6-foot-4 guard on the varsity team, Barnes scored 602 points this past season, averaging 26.2 points per game. He carried the Rebels to the quarterfinals.

Barnes was named last month to The Denver Post All-Colorado basketball team as one of the top five players in his school's classification in the state.

He was being wooed by colleges all across the country, coach Martin said.

Vanderbilt University had called Thursday morning and George Washington the day before.

"During tight games he would dive on the floor for the ball like it was an open gym," Martin said.

Before last year's shootings, Barnes had been in a creative writing class with Columbine killers Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold. In the class, Harris once wrote in an assignment that he was a shotgun.

"Maybe it was a warning sign," Barnes told The Denver Post two weeks after the shootings. "I didn't think anything about it then."

Bonnie Schweitzberger, an elementary school teacher whose daughter Sara attends Columbine, said students were reeling.

"(Sara) came home and told us what happened and said she didn't want to go back tomorrow,"

Schweitzberger said. "She doesn't think a lot of kids will be going. These Columbine kids have been through a lot."

Tammy Theus' son, Tyrone Garrett, plays on the junior varsity team at Columbine and knew Barnes well.

"I just can't believe it," Theus said. "It's just another setback for the community. What's next?"

In addition to Carla Hochhalter's suicide, the community also suffered a setback in February when two Columbine students were killed in a Subway sandwich shop near the school.

Grief counselors cautioned against linking Barnes' suicide to other events.

"It's important that we recognize these things as separate incidents," said Tom Olbrich with the Jefferson Center for Mental Health. "We may need to stop and think and say, "Well, this could happen at almost any high school any place.' " And at any time, said Connie Michalik, mother of injured student Richard Castaldo.

While many people felt the community's pain would ease after the April 20 anniversary of the shootings, Michalik did not.

"Everyone thought "Oh, let's just get past the first year, and it'll be OK,' " Michalik said. "But I thought that was kind of a false marker. We're still struggling."

...

The only clue as to why Columbine High basketball star Greg Barnes cut short such a promising young life may lie in lyrics found playing over and over in his garage.

Barnes hanged himself there Thursday morning after setting a CD player to continuously play a song with the words, "I'm too depressed to go on."

Barnes had a bright future as a basketball player. As a junior, the shooting guard averaged 26 points a game and was named by The Denver Post to the All-Colorado team. He was a 17-year-old seen by rival coaches as probably the best high school basketball player in Colorado next year.

He was also a teenager who lost a close friend, Matt Kechter, in last year's massacre and witnessed the fatal shooting of Columbine teacher Dave Sanders that day.

Thursday morning, Barnes used an electrical cord to hang himself, according to teammate Dave Mitchell.

"Adam's Song," by the group Blink 182, was playing when Greg's parents found the body, Mitchell told The Associated Press. The lyrics include the phrases, "I never thought I'd die alone" and "I'm too depressed to go on. You'll be sorry when I'm gone."

Mitchell said he had seen no indication that his teammate was despondent.

And it appears Barnes left no note explaining the exact source of his depression.

"I talked to him the night before, and it didn't seem like anything was wrong," he said. "We talked about the usual stuff, girls."

Mental health experts cautioned against linking Barnes' death to the Columbine shootings without knowing why he committed suicide. But they also see the violent death of a close friend as an event that can elevate the risk of suicide, the third most common cause of death among young people ages 15 to 24.

"Certainly the risk is greater among the best friends of kids who've committed suicide," said Dr. David Shaffer, a teen-suicide expert at Columbia University. And among kids whose friends have been killed, "there is a very high likelihood of them developing depression, which can last a long time."

Students and adults who saw Greg Barnes at school this week say they noticed no signs of despondency.

"I can't explain it," said Columbine boys basketball coach Rudy Martin, who spent Thursday night with Greg's parents, Mark and Judy Barnes, at their request. "I'm trying to think of this and that, but there isn't anything."

At the Barnes home, Martin found "three giant notebooks of letters" from colleges seeking to recruit his young basketball star.

Vanderbilt, Iowa, Utah, Notre Dame, Ivy League schools - "some of them were schools I didn't even know he was corresponding with," he said. "Wichita State sent him handwritten notes."

Columbine athletic director Kevin Land was equally mystified.

"We're at a loss as to why this could happen," he said. "Certainly it was nothing we were hearing or a flag going up. . . . I'm kind of speechless."

Barnes' was the second highprofile suicide since the April 20, 1999, shootings that left 15 people dead and about two dozen others wounded. Carla Hochhalter, the mother of wounded student Anne Marie Hochhalter, shot herself to death in a pawnshop last October.

On Friday, hundreds of Columbine students elected to stay home.

"We're estimating that at least 30 percent - a third of the student body - did not attend school today," said Rick Kaufman, a spokesman for Jefferson County schools.

The day passed smoothly, considering the circumstances, but Columbine High was "very quiet and subdued," he said. "Obviously, students and staff are struggling through yet another tremor in the community."

Jefferson County Sheriff John Stone, whose own son hanged himself 12 years ago, said teenagers can hide suicidal thoughts even from their parents.

"I didn't have a clue when it happened," he said of his son.

Stone said he knows too well the grief that Greg Barnes' parents must be enduring. His son Brian was an athlete, a topnotch swimmer at Chatfield High. When he died at age 15, he was listening to a tape similar to the one described by Greg Barnes' teammate, Stone said.

A child's suicide is something "you never get over," Stone said. "You look for answers, and sometimes they're not there."

Greg Barnes' funeral will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday, at St. Frances Cabrini Catholic Parish in Littleton.

...

If there was one kid at Columbine High you figured would get past what he'd seen and what he'd felt and what he'd heard, it was Greg Barnes.

He was the star of the basketball team, 6'4" and good-looking, a scrappy guard with shooting range that started just after he got off the bus. He scored more than 26 points a game this past season, his junior year, as he hauled the Rebels places they never should've gone. He was hands-down the best schoolboy player coming back next year in Colorado.

Greg was tougher than trigonometry too. In one playoff game George Washington High tried to bully him, throwing elbows and knocking him down. Barnes kept bouncing up off the floor and sinking his free throws. Columbine won 58-54, with Barnes getting 22 points.

When I interviewed him on April 21, 1999, the day after the shootings, he seemed openhearted and clearheaded. He was a terrific student, especially in math. He wanted to play for North Carolina. As one of his friends said last week, "Greg had plans."

But maybe inside, he was crumbling. Maybe when you're 16 and people--friends, teachers--are slain right in front of you, you find out you're not so scrappy after all. When I was 16, I don't think a single person I was close to had died. At 16, Greg and death got real tight.

Greg was looking out the door of a Columbine science room during fourth period, trying to find what was making those terrible pop! pop! sounds, when he saw girls' basketball coach Dave Sanders running wide-eyed down the hall, right in front of him. "I was standing there with my mouth open, watching," he told me. "The bullets were coming from the left side. I couldn't see him [the shooter]. The bullets must've gone parallel to me and hit Coach Sanders. He got hit [by] two shots in the back. Blood went flying off him, and he fell. There was shrapnel through his jaw."

Greg had the guts to kneel and pull Sanders in from the hallway. He took off his long-sleeved blue shirt, the one he got for Christmas, and it was used to try to stanch the bleeding until help arrived. But nobody came for 3 1/2 hours. Then the SWAT team made Greg and the other students in the science room leave Sanders behind, made them run down the hall and leap over dead classmates and pools of bright-red blood to get out. A half hour later Sanders was dead. That kind of stuff shows up on the back of your eyelids at night.

The next day Greg learned that two of his best friends had been slaughtered. One was sophomore football player Matt Kechter, who lived right down the street from him. They would walk to the bus stop together, study in the library before school. After Greg got his driver's license, he would take Matt home. "He was the most innocent person I ever knew," Greg said. Matt was mowed down in the library like a dog.

The other was his weightlifting partner, Isaiah Shoels. "He was small, but he was really muscular," Greg said. "He could bench 205!" Greg called Isaiah "Grasshopper," because when Isaiah would lift, his eyes would bulge.

This thing nailed Greg from every direction. Even the murderers--Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold--had been in Barnes's writing class. "Man," Greg said. "I'd give all my honors away, give away everything, if this didn't happen."

Over the past year he appeared to have put all the horror behind him. His friends said he didn't brood about the deaths, though he would talk about it if you asked him. He was playing well in off-season basketball leagues, doing well in school, had a great senior year ahead of him.

We were all wrong. Greg may have only been 175 pounds, but he must have been carrying a load of weight. Maybe there are some things you don't bounce back from.

As far as anyone knows, he didn't leave a note or a videotape or an E-mail. He just got up last Thursday, went to his first couple classes, went to third-period gym, waved and smiled at a friend in the hall at about 11 a.m., returned home around noon and hanged himself.

For five years my family lived a mile from Columbine High, and I still don't know what to make of all this. I'm out of silver linings and blame and tears. But I know one thing--I never want to hear about the 13 victims again.

It's fourteen.

...

Columbine High School’s boys basketball coach has resigned after 14 years, saying his heart is no longer in the game since the suicide of one of his star players.

Rudy Martin said Monday there were many reasons for his decision to step down, but that the death of junior guard Greg Barnes this spring weighed the most heavily.

“It opened my eyes to the personal things in my life,” Martin told the Denver Rocky Mountain News. “Time is short. We’ve had one-in-a-million happen twice, and I want to spend more time with my family.”

Barnes, who averaged 26.2 points a game last season and was poised to be one of the best players in the state his senior year, hanged himself at his home May 4.

The suicide came two weeks after the anniversary of the April 20, 1999, shootings at Columbine. Barnes, 17, lost one of his best friends and saw a teacher die in the bloodbath at the Littleton school.

Plans to Stay on Staff

Martin’s life has revolved around basketball. But while coaching Columbine’s summer team, Martin realized how much losing Barnes sapped his enjoyment of the game.

“For our program, we require enthusiasm and hard work. I just didn’t feel in my heart that I could bring those two things to the court. And if I’m not going to practice what I preach, then I should quit,” he said.

He plans to remain on the Columbine teaching staff.

Martin leaves with a career record of 226-79. His teams never had a losing season, and the Rebels won the state championship in 1997.

Barnes’ suicide was one of four deaths that kept the community grieving during the year following the massacre at the school, when two seniors fatally shot 12 students and a teacher before killing themselves.

Last October, the mother of a wounded student shot herself to death, and in February, two Columbine sweethearts were found dead after a shooting at a sandwich shop near the school.

_________________
Why does anyone do anything?
Back to top Go down
LPorter101
Top 10 Contributor
LPorter101


Posts : 2745
Contribution Points : 147925
Forum Reputation : 2502
Join date : 2013-12-01
Location : South Florida

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSat Dec 02, 2017 4:26 am

[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]


PostSubject: Re: The fourteenth (and fifteenth) victims? Thu Jan 14, 2016 8:20 pm Select/Unselect multi-quote Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post




Columbine High basketball coach Rudy Martin stood in the shade on a quiet suburban street Thursday afternoon, struggling to find the right words to describe the indescribable.

He was talking about his star player - Greg Barnes, a 17-year-old junior who set the school scoring record this past season, a lanky kid who some believe was the best high school basketball player in the state. And he was trying to understand why Barnes, who worked hard in the gym and the classroom, had taken his own life early Thursday.

``It's hard,'' Martin said softly, a vacant look in his eyes. ``We're all in shock right now.''

The popular student's death sent another tremor of sadness reverberating through a community that's seen more than its share of heartache in the past 13 months.

``Columbine has suffered through so much, and to go through something like this is devastating,'' said Gary Osse, who recently stepped down as basketball coach at rival Chatfield. ``I'm just so sorry.

``Enough is enough on the tragedies they've had over there.''

Jefferson County authorities were called to the family's home around lunchtime Thursday. By late afternoon, they confirmed that Barnes had taken his own life. The cause of death wasn't released, but officials said a gun was not involved.

Barnes is survived by his parents, Mark and Judith Barnes; and a younger brother, Doug.

The scene outside the Barnes family home was somber Thursday afternoon. Teen-agers, neighbors and family friends came and went, some walking arm-in-arm, others hugging and wiping away tears.

Martin, who saw Barnes blossom on the basketball court and grew very close to him and his family, was asked what he'd want others to know about the youngster who worked just as hard in the classroom as he did in the gym.

``I would want them to know he was an outstanding player, but more importantly, he was a great human being,'' Martin said. ``He was just a great kid.''

Those who crossed Barnes' path couldn't help but like and respect him.

``This is really sad - such a nice, nice young man,'' said John Bailey, who runs the Red Shield all-star games. ``As adults, we have to stand up and get involved with what is going on.

``We have to talk about this. This is more than tragic.''

Barnes wasn't born a great player, but he made himself one with relentless hours spent in the gym, honing his skills.

``Basketball,'' junior Richard Hoover said, ``was his life.''

Barnes had dabbled in baseball when he was younger. But by high school, basketball was a year-round sport for him. During the Columbine off-season, he played in a league.

``Some kids would play three sports,'' said junior Brian Deidel, 17. ``He just played that one. All the time.''

Practice, Deidel said, ``made him what he is.''

Last season, he averaged 26.2 points a game, led Columbine to the quarterfinals in the state tournament, and attracted attention from colleges around the country. He also was the school's top rebounder.

A 6-foot-5 shooting guard, he was chosen this year by the Denver Rocky Mountain News to the All-Colorado team, made up of the five best basketball players in the state.

Osse, the former Chatfield coach, said Barnes may have been the best player in the state heading into his senior year.

``It's just hard to understand why a young man with all his talent would do something like this,'' he said.

Barnes' death came a little more than a year after the April 20, 1999, attack on Columbine High school.

Barnes was looking out a science room window that day when he saw bullets cut down Dave Sanders, the popular teacher and coach at Columbine who probably saved hundreds of lives as he ran through the school, warning students.

``I was standing in the science room, looking out the window (in the door leading to the hall),'' Barnes told Sports Illustrated's Rick Reilly last year. ``Then I saw Coach Sanders turn around, take two shots, right in front of me.''

Barnes was touched by the tragedy in other ways. He was good friends with Matt Kechter, a Columbine football player who was murdered in the school library. And he had taken a writing class with the two killers, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold.

His coach said the events of last April 20 affected him tremendously. But he didn't dwell on it, Deidel said Thursday.

``He would talk about it,'' Deidel said. ``He was okay with it. He remained normal and everything.''

Deidel saw no signs that Barnes was upset when they played basketball Sunday.

``We were talking about how good our team was going to be next year,'' Deidel said.``We were both excited about next year's basketball.''

Wednesday, the two ran into each other in the hallway at the school. Barnes asked Deidel whether he had completed a vocabulary exercise. That was all.

``He was upbeat and looked normal,'' Deidel said.

None of those around Barnes saw any signs that he was struggling with life.

``This is a shock to them,'' Martin, his coach, said of the boy's parents. ``They can't believe it.''

Columbine Principal Frank DeAngelis informed parents about the suicide Thursday with a phone message. Jefferson County Schools spokesman Rick Kaufman said a new phone system purchased last month should have delivered the message to the school's 2,000 students homes' Thursday night.

Classes will be held as scheduled today. Half a dozen extra counselors were on hand at the school Thursday and will be there again today, Kaufman said.

Thursday, those who knew Barnes clung to happy memories. Barnes was a honor student, and particularly good in math. He could be quiet until he got around his friends.

Columbine girls basketball coach Dean Roberts remembered high-fiving the boy in the hallway, and how Barnes would always take the time to cheer on the girls team.

``Of all the kids, he was one of the kids holding everything together,'' Roberts said. ``I thought he was one of the nicest kids in school.''

Deidel, who had known Barnes since elementary school, recalled the way his friend was awed by the dunks of the Toronto Raptors' Vince Carter.

On the basketball court, Barnes wore a rubber band around his wrist for good luck.

Last weekend, Barnes and Deidel went to prom, then spent the night at the home of another friend.

Thursday, Deidel heard the news that his friend was gone. Then he rushed to Barnes' house before heading to a baseball game at Highlands Ranch High School.

``The baseball team was really, really upset,'' Deidel said later.

``Everybody was just crying.

``It was tough.''

******* CORRECTION PUBLISHED MAY 20, 2000 FOLLOWS: ******
A May 5 story on Page 5A (4A cq) about the death of Columbine High Schol basketball standout Greg Barnes mistakenly said he had been in a class with Eric Harris and Dylan Kelbold (Klebold cq). An older student with the same name took a writing class with the killers.

_________________
Why does anyone do anything?
Back to top Go down
Lunkhead McGrath




Posts : 476
Contribution Points : 75386
Forum Reputation : 225
Join date : 2016-11-03

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSat Dec 02, 2017 6:10 am

I remember his suicide was the subject of a "Life Of Reilly" Rick Reilly Sports Illustrated column right after it happened.

Yeah, I say why not partially blame E & D.
Back to top Go down
Guest
Guest




Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSat Dec 02, 2017 7:19 am

This ties into the post I had previously made about the trickle down suicide effect of those directly involved with Columbine. Sad
Back to top Go down
Screamingophelia
Other Crimes Moderator & Top 10 Contributor
Screamingophelia


Posts : 6417
Contribution Points : 192899
Forum Reputation : 1317
Join date : 2017-08-25
Age : 42

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSat Dec 02, 2017 11:02 am

It's the ripple effect. You have kids who grow into adults and live with what they did everyday. I imagine the effects are long lasting and effect people who were not even involved. There was an interview with Devon and she said she has an issue trusting people, you have kids with PTSD to this day...

_________________
"And you know, you know, you know, this can be beautiful, you say you're numb inside, but I can't agree. So the world's unfair, keep it locked out there. In here it's beautiful."
Back to top Go down
Jenn
Forum & Discord Server Owner
Jenn


Posts : 3128
Contribution Points : 118020
Forum Reputation : 1004
Join date : 2013-03-13
Location : A place where it always snows.

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSat Dec 02, 2017 2:54 pm

I remember this story. I've been a Blink 182 fan for a long time and I remember reading about this and how the kid had "Adam's Song" playing. I didn't realize it was a Columbine student until I got into Columbine.

Within the past 2 years (around May, 2015) I started really getting into Nirvana and I read how Blink 182's song "Adam's Song" had response lyrics to lyrics in Nirvana's song "Come As You Are". And I had never known that. It's kind of sad when I started thinking about that as I think Blink 182 made the song more as an anti suicide song after Kurt Cobain's suicide, but yet here was this kid killing himself while listening to it. It's just weird how it all ties in together.


_________________
"I’ll see you in Heaven if you make the list"
Zachary Patrick Bowen (March 7, 1995-November 5, 2021).
I miss you little brother.
Back to top Go down
Littlelo

Littlelo


Posts : 1210
Contribution Points : 65753
Forum Reputation : 90
Join date : 2017-04-26

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSun Dec 03, 2017 7:55 am

I agree with those that say it was a ripple effect.

I read the SI article about Greg where he said he saw Dave Sanders get shot and searched for a while looking for any testimony by him in the 11k. The only things I could find were his mom saying he wasn't available for interview and him saying he had a writing class with E&D. It looks like that was corrected in the article above and he was mistaken...
Back to top Go down
Rebbie556




Posts : 475
Contribution Points : 91281
Forum Reputation : 225
Join date : 2017-01-30

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSun Dec 03, 2017 7:01 pm

This reminds me of 9/11 where the eyewitness suddenly began to die mysteriously .
That’s some final destination shi* going on .
Back to top Go down
Littlelo

Littlelo


Posts : 1210
Contribution Points : 65753
Forum Reputation : 90
Join date : 2017-04-26

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSun Dec 03, 2017 7:03 pm

I feel for Greg and his family, but as some have suggested, many had to deal with the after-effects of Columbine. Not all of them felt that death was the solution. There must have been some other indicators there as well. Regardless, it is a tragic story.
Back to top Go down
LPorter101
Top 10 Contributor
LPorter101


Posts : 2745
Contribution Points : 147925
Forum Reputation : 2502
Join date : 2013-12-01
Location : South Florida

Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitimeSun Apr 21, 2019 9:03 pm

I bump, therefore I am.

_________________
Why does anyone do anything?
Back to top Go down
Sponsored content





Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Empty
PostSubject: Re: Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?   Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim? Icon_minitime

Back to top Go down
 
Greg Barnes: Eric and Dylan's fourteenth victim?
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1
 Similar topics
-
» Eric and Dylans shirts
» Eric and Dylans reaction if?
» Eric and Dylans equipment?
» Question about Eric and Dylans positions at Blackjack's Pizza
» Dylans symbols

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
Columbine High School Massacre Discussion Forum :: Columbine High School Massacre Discussion Forum :: Thoughts on the Shooting-
Jump to: