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The sheriff's deputy assigned to protect Great Mills High stopped the Maryland school shooter in under a minute

Mar 21, 2018, 19:54 IST

Crime scene tape is used around Great Mills High School, the scene of a shooting, Tuesday, March 20, 2018, in Great Mills.Alex Brandon/AP

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  • Blaine Gaskill, a school resource officer assigned to guard Great Mills High School in Maryland, sprung into action to confront an active shooter at the school on Tuesday.
  • The local county sheriff's department praised Gaskill's efforts, saying his actions saved lives.
  • The shooter was killed, although it is unclear whether he died at the hand of Gaskill's bullet or his own. Two other students were critically injured.

Just before 8 a.m. on Tuesday, a 17-year-old student opened fire at Great Mills High School in Maryland, shooting two students who remain in critical condition.

That's when Blaine Gaskill, a 34-year-old sheriff's deputy assigned to guard Great Mills, sprung into action.

"Our school resource officer who was stationed inside the school was alerted," St. Mary's County Sheriff Tim Cameron said during a press conference. "He pursued the shooter, engaged the shooter. During that engagement, he fired a round at the shooter. Simultaneously, the shooter fired a round as well."

The shooter was killed, but it is unclear whether Gaskill fired the deadly shot or the shooter turned the gun on himself.

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Either way, the resource officer is credited with defusing the situation within a minute, Cameron said, potentially saving lives.

Gaskill, who left the scene unharmed, was widely praised for his action.

"It looks like the [school resource officer] did exactly what the SRO was trained to do," St. Mary's Schools Superintendent James Scott Smith said Tuesday, according to The Baltimore Sun.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan called Gaskill a "tough guy" who "took the right kind of action."

"I think while it's still tragic, [Gaskill] may have saved other people's lives," Hogan added.

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Not Gaskill's first heroic day

This undated photo provided by the St. Mary's Sheriff's Office, shows Deputy First Class Blaine Gaskill, a school resource officer who engaged a shooter at Great Mills High School in Great Mills, Md., on Tuesday, March 20, 2018.AP

This wasn't the first time Gaskill, who has been with the sheriff's office for six years, thwarted a potentially deadly situation.

In July 2016, the deputy arrived at a couple's home in response to a complaint about people arguing in a driveway, according to The Enterprise, a local newspaper in St. Mary's County, Maryland.

When Gaskill tried to intervene, the husband pointed a gun at him, at which point Gaskill calmly pleaded with him to drop the gun, The Enterprise reported. The man relented when his wife stood in the way and convinced him to disarm himself.

"In that split second, a decision has to be made," said Cameron, the county sheriff. "In this case, the officer used exemplary judgment."

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Gaskill's response on Tuesday stands in stark contrast to that of a resource officer who was excoriated last month for failing to confront the shooter at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, where 17 people were shot and killed.

On March 15, the Broward County Sheriff's Office in Florida released surveillance video showing deputy Scot Peterson waiting outside the building where 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz allegedly gunned down students and teachers. Peterson resigned in disgrace roughly a week after the shooting.

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