my first thought is i picked up my brother who is a sophomore. my first thought is where is my brother, where is my family. you re a good brother. as soon as i called him and confirmed he was okay. i called my dad. i said turn on the news, i need to know what s going on, you ve got to keep me up to date so i can keep as many people safe as possible. i have a friend that retired out of the coral springs police department. i got on the phone with her and she was able to give me updates on where the shooter was. you re in the hallway? the other rotc rooms. we have two jrotc rooms. the second room is where we had the people we sheltered. you went out, after you made the phone calls, you decided you were going to help other students. correct. what did you do? i opened the door to the second rotc room, we let as many people into the classroom to make sure they were in the safe and out of harm s way. how many kids. 60 to 70 kids. colton, junior rotc, you want to be eit
you said you spent yesterday morning with him. yes, we walked in the office and talked for 20 minutes, talking about normal stuff, how is work, what are you doing after school today, how is football going, that kind of this inning. what s it feel like knowing coach feis is gone today? he s definitely in a better place now. i m glad he didn t suffer that much. it s not going to be the same without him at school anymore. that s for sure. football definitely won t be the same. we re definitely going to have to band back together as brothers and mourn his loss and pick up the pieces to try to rebuild our football team. when the school opens back up again, do you feel safe coming back here? probably going to be safe. probably. it will be safe. i m worried it s not going to be the exact same how it was before. it s never going to be the same. it will never go back to the way it usually was. colton, i wanted to ask you, finally, what s your message to the rest of the cou
this 19-year-old into their home. they said on new day this morning, they said they didn t notice any violent tendencies. they did notice depression, seeing that the gown man s mother died in november, but no signs of violence. now that we re picking apart the social media profile, it s maybe easy to see. it s not so sure those signs were readily apparent before the shooting yesterday. jessica schneider for us in washington. joining me is colton habb, a 17-year-old junior, a student who lived through this massacre. colton, thanks so much for being with us. first, i need to say this, we re so sorry, so sorry you had to go through this yesterday, but we re proud of what you managed to do, not just for your self-but for others. so explain to me what happened a little bit after 2:00 this morning. what did you hear? around 2:20 i heard a fire alarm go off. that morning around 9:30-ish, we had a fire alarm. that was a scheduled fire alarm.