CASPER, Wyo. (AP) - A Wyoming community
college instructor killed in a grisly classroom murder-suicide was
hailed as a hero Saturday, with police saying he gave his students time
to flee by distracting and fighting off his son after the younger man
barged into his computer science class and shot him in the head with a
high-powered bow and arrow.
The arrow severely wounded
James Krumm, 56, but he managed to wrestle with son Christopher Krumm,
25, of Vernon, Conn., while students escaped the Casper College
classroom Friday.
Christopher Krumm had just stabbed to death his father's live-in girlfriend at the couple's home two miles away.
When police arrived at the
classroom after the bow-and-arrow attack, they found Christopher Krumm
bleeding from self-inflicted knife wounds and taking his last breaths.
James Krumm was dead, Casper Police Chief Chris Walsh said.
"I can tell you the courage
that was demonstrated by Mr. Krumm was absolutely without equal," he
said, adding that the instructor's actions could offer some measure of
comfort to those affected by the killings.
Walsh said police still
were trying to figure out what motivated Christopher Krumm to attack his
father and girlfriend, 42-year-old Heidi Arnold, a math instructor at
the college. Arnold died of multiple stab wounds.
After shooting his father
with the arrow, Christopher Krumm stabbed himself, then fatally stabbed
his father in the chest in a struggle in the classroom, Walsh said.
Authorities didn't say how many students were in the class when Christopher Krumm arrived, but they noted none were injured.
Police began getting
reports about the attack on Arnold soon after they responded by the
dozen to the campus attack. Authorities locked down the campus for two
hours while they scoured the grounds for any other attackers. They were
reassured that Christopher Krumm acted alone.
He had smuggled the
compound bow - a type much more powerful and effective for hunting than a
simple, wooden bow - onto campus beneath a blanket, Walsh said.
He said Christopher Krumm also had two knives with him, and the knife used was "very large."
Arnold's body was found in
the gutter of her street, and evidence suggested much of the attack
occurred outside the home, Walsh said.
Neighbor Heather Meier said
she came home from work Friday afternoon after picking up her
7-year-old daughter from school, and the two saw Arnold's body still
lying in the street.
"As soon as we got home, we
just shut the curtains," she said Saturday. "You know, tried to just
watch some TV, have some snacks, mind our own business."
Meier, who has lived in the
neighborhood for two years, said she met Arnold and James Krumm only
once a few months ago and described them as quiet and very private.
Casper College teacher Kevin McDermott said Arnold and James Krumm were well-liked on campus.
"I knew these people pretty
well, so it's hurting me. ... It's breaking my heart," said McDermott,
who teachers algebra and computer networking at the school. "They were
really good, kind-hearted people. People like Jim and Heidi are what
make Casper College such a great college."
McDermott described James Krumm as a "real kind and gentle-mannered guy" who was well-respected by his students.
"Computer science majors
took most of their classes from Jim. He was their adviser, and he had a
big impact on them," McDermott said.
He said Arnold was a great
teacher who "taught the tough stuff" and maintained a sunny disposition -
"a person who always had a smile on her face."
Chris Unruh, a student in
one of Arnold's pre-calculus classes this fall, said she was a kind
instructor who was excited about recently getting two dogs.
"She was a really, really nice person," said Unruh, 18. "She cared about her students. She wanted all of them to succeed."
Meanwhile, investigators
said Christopher Krumm had recently driven to Casper from Connecticut
and had been staying at a local hotel. He had no significant history of
encounters with police.
Police were uncertain what went awry in his relationship with his father.
"It's difficult to say. I don't think it was very close," Walsh said.
In Vernon, Conn., police
Sgt. Timothy O'Connor said officers executed a search warrant at
Christopher Krumm's last known address Friday to help investigators in
Casper. He didn't know what investigators were looking for or may have
found at the residence.
"Whatever was recovered will be turned over to Wyoming because it is an active investigation," O'Connor said.
Christopher Krumm's
previous addresses include one in the western Massachusetts city of
Springfield and others in the Colorado cities of Golden, Fort Collins
and Lakewood.
Casper, population 56,000,
is about 250 miles northwest of Denver and Wyoming's second-largest city
after the state capital, Cheyenne. Wyomingites refer to Casper as the
"Oil City" because it is a hub of the state's oil industry.
Casper College is one of
seven colleges in Wyoming's community college system. The campus was
mostly quiet Saturday morning. Fathers and sons shot hoops in the school
gym. A small group of drama students rehearsed a play in the school
theater just across the street from the attack.
The building where the
attack happened remained cordoned off by police tape that whipped in a
brisk wind. A security guard let students back in, one at a time, to
retrieve belongings they'd left behind.
Andra Charter, a
20-year-old sophomore, emerged with a coffee mug. She recalled hearing
screams outside her biology class before getting word about what had
happened.
"As we were walking out, there was a girl screaming, 'There's somebody stabbing Mr. Krumm!'" Charter said.
James Krumm was head of the
college's computer science department. He was born north of London and
also spent part of his childhood in Germany, according to the college
website.
He held degrees from Casper
College, a bachelor's degree and MBA from the University of Wyoming and
a master's in computer science from Colorado State University.
Arnold held a master's
degree in mathematics from the University of Oregon and a bachelor's
degree in math from University of California Davis.
The college planned a candlelight vigil and memorial service Tuesday.