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How to survive a mass shooting

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The only guaranteed way to avoid becoming a casualty of a disaster is to be somewhere else when it strikes.

Such a mentality is easy to apply to disasters with advanced warning, such as a hurricane. But mass shootings don’t fit into that category.

The horrific school shooting last December in Newtown, Conn., that killed 20 children and six adults, took place six months after a gunman in Aurora, Colo., killed 12 and wounded 58 at a late-night screening of “The Dark Knight Rises,” and a white supremacist killed six and wounded four at a Sikh temple in Racine, Wis.

Closer to home, a gunman in February 2008 walked into a Northern Illinois University lecture hall and opened fire, killing five and wounding 21. That shooting took place barely a year after the worst mass shooting in U.S. history, when a gunman at Virginia Tech University killed 32.

Other recent mass shootings include the 2009 mass shooting at Fort Hood, Texas, and the 2011 shooting in Tucson, Ariz., in which U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords was shot.

People with McHenry County ties were among the casualties at NIU and Aurora, Colo.

After the Colorado shooting, agencies such as the Houston Department of Emergency Management released and promoted education materials in an effort to teach people how to escape mass shootings. The Northwest Herald through this article will do the same.

This article is not a between-the-lines commentary on gun control, concealed carry, violence in mass entertainment or other hot-button issues. Its sole purpose is to give you the best chance of survival should you find yourself in what law enforcement calls an “active shooter” situation.

Situations differ based on location, and whether you are alone or have the compounded nightmare of having family members with you whom you have to protect. But the general rule to remember is this:

Run and get away. If you can’t get away, hide. If you’re found, fight.

Run

The moment you start hearing shots, get away. Don’t take time to think whether the noise you heard was, in fact, shooting.

Leave your possessions behind. Your life is far more important than anything that you own.

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