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Huan
Yun XIANG
Classification:
Homicide
Characteristics: School
shooting
Number of victims: 2
Date of murders:
October 21,
2002
Date of arrest:
Same day
Date of birth: 1966
Victims profile: Xu
Hui "William" Wu, 26, and Steven Chan, 26(students)
Method of murder:
Shooting (five handguns)
Location: Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia
Status: Found not guilty because of mental illness
on June 17, 2004.
Transferred to psychiatric hospital
The Monash
University shooting was a school massacre that took place at
Monash University in Melbourne, Australia on October 21, 2002.
At 11:20am on
October 21, students on the sixth floor of the Menzies Building
on Monash's Clayton campus reported hearing gun shots.
Huan
Xiang, a commerce student at the university, armed with five
loaded handguns, had opened fire in a tutorial room. Two
students, William Wu and Steven Chan, were killed and others
seriously wounded.
When he stopped shooting and moved to switch
weapons, injured lecturer Lee Gordon-Brown and a student in the
room, Alaistair Boast, tackled him. Boast and fellow student
Bradley Thompson were helped by a lecturer from a nearby room,
Brett Inder, to restrain Xiang for fifteen minutes until police
arrived while student Andrew Swann and university administrator
Colin Thornby provided first aid.
Xiang was deemed by police to
be unfit for interview but wrote a note referring to William Wu
after his arrest saying "I finally ended WW's life."
Huan Xiang was
quickly reported to have 'struggled' with his classes, in
particular due to not having sufficiently good English skills to
succeed with his school work. The defence and prosecution in his
trial agreed that he suffered from a paranoid delusional
disorder.
On June 17, 2004 a jury found Xiang not guilty of the
murder of Wu and Chan and of the attempted murder of five other
people in the room because of mental illness. Justice Bernard
Teague ordered Xiang be transferred to the Thomas Embling
psychiatric hospital.
TheMonash University shooting
refers to a shooting in which a student shot his classmates and
teacher, killing two and injuring five. It took place at Monash
University in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia on October 21,
2002.
Events of October 21
At 11:24am on October 21,
Huan Yun "Allen" Xiang, a commerce student at the university,
armed with five loaded handguns, opened fire in room E 659 of
the Menzies Building on Monash's Clayton campus in an
econometrics class containing twelve students. People in the
classroom were initially confused by the noise and by Xiang
screaming "You never understand me" from the desk he was
standing on.
Xiang killed two
students in the room:
Xu Hui "William" Wu, an
international student from Hong Kong and neighbour of
Xiang's in Melbourne; and
Steven Chan, a student from
Doncaster.
Xiang wounded five others:
lecturer Lee Gordon-Brown, who
was shot in the arm and knee;
student Daniel Urbach, who was
wounded in the shoulder and arm;
student Laurie Brown, who was
wounded in the leg and abdomen;
student Christine Young, who
was shot in the face; and
student Leigh Dat Huynh, who
was discharged from hospital within a day.
When Xiang stopped shooting and
moved to switch weapons, Lee Gordon-Brown, the injured lecturer,
grabbed Xiang's hands as he reached into his jacket.
Gordon-Brown and a student in the room, Alastair Boast, a
trained kung fu practitioner, tackled him. Bradley Thompson
later entered the room and discovered other guns in a holster
around Xiang's waist, and removed two magazines from near his
left hip and a revolver from the base of his back.
After Gordon-Brown collapsed,
Boast and Thompson were helped by a lecturer from a nearby room,
Brett Inder, to restrain Xiang for fifteen minutes until police
arrived while student Andrew Swann and university administrator
Colin Thornby provided first aid. At least one injured student
reportedly left the room and sought help for his injuries from
security staff.
Xiang was deemed by police to
be unfit for interview but wrote a note referring to William Wu
after his arrest saying "I finally ended WW's life."
All classes in the
Menzies Building were cancelled for the rest of the day and the
university set up counselling stations.
Trial
Xiang pleaded not guilty
before his trial to two counts of murder and five of attempted
murder on account of mental impairment.
During his two day trial,
prosecutor Sue Pullen presented evidence that Xiang felt the
killings were his destiny. Evidence showed that Xiang had joined
the Sporting Shooters Association of Australia in April 2002,
and gained a handgun licence in June 2002. One lecturer, Gael
Martin, told the court that she had expressed concerns about his
mental state a week prior to the shootings.
Evidence was offered that he
harboured delusional beliefs that William Wu was an agent of
evil and would destroy him academically, and that his actions on
October 21 2002 focused on fufiling a perceived destiny to kill
Wu.
The defence and
prosecution in Xiang's trial agreed that he suffered from a
paranoid delusional disorder. The prosecution asked the jury to
find him not guilty. On June 17, 2004 the Victorian Supreme
Court jury found him not guilty of the murder of Wu and Chan and
of the attempted murder of five other people in the tutorial
room due to mental impairment. Justice Bernard Teague ordered
Xiang be transferred to the Thomas Embling psychiatric hospital.
He may be held there for as long as 25 years.
Responses
Memorials
On October 22 2002, flags on
Clayton campus flew at half mast, and a graffiti artist wrote
"Life is short. Cherish your friends. Love one another.
R.I.P."on a campus billboard. On the first anniversary of the
shootings, October 21, 2003, a day of reflection was held on
Clayton campus.
William Wu and
Steven Chan were posthumously awarded honours degrees by Monash
University.
Media
Early media coverage focussed
on Xiang's limited English skills and resulting difficulties
communicating as possible contributing factors to his decisions.
There was also
editorial coverage arguing both for and against additional legal
restrictions on handguns being introduced in Australia.
Gun ownership laws
Australian Prime Minister
John Howard promised a review of Australian gun laws after it
was discovered that Xiang had had a gun licence and had legally
acquired his weapons. The Victorian State Government prepared
new laws doubling the punishment for misuse of handguns and
introducing new laws against trafficking in handguns almost
immediately after the shooting.
The National
Handgun Buyback Act 2003 was signed into law on June 30 2003.
New restrictions were put in place on maximum calibre and number
of shots for handguns and minimum barrel lengths for single-shot
guns, revolvers and semi-automatics. Victoria began its handgun
buyback scheme in August 2003.
Bravery
awards
Lee Gordon-Brown, Alastair Boast, Brett Inder,
Bradley Thompson, Andrew Swann and Colin Thornby all received
bravery awards for their part in restraining Xiang and helping
injured victims. The Royal Humane Society awarded Gordon-Brown
the 2005 Stanhope Gold Medal, the highest Commonwealth award for
bravery. In addition The Royal Humane Society of Australia (RHSA)
awarded him the 2004 Clarke Gold Medal of the RHSA and he was
awarded the Star of Courage, the second highest award for
bravery in the Australian honours system. The RHSA awarded
Alastair Boast the Gold Medal of the RHSA.
Wikipedia.org
Two die as gunman attacks his own class
By Padraic
Murphy, Misha Ketchell and Andrew Heasley - The Sydney Morning
Herald
October 22 2002
Two students were dead and a third was left
fighting for his life late yesterday after a disgruntled
commerce student opened fire with two handguns in a Monash
University tutorial.
The gunman, believed to be a fourth year
honours student, walked into the sixth-floor econometrics
tutorial about 11.20am, carrying two small hand pistols. He
opened fire, killing two Asian students in their 20s instantly.
A 30-year-old man was airlifted to the Alfred
Hospital suffering abdominal injuries and was last night in a
critical condition in the Alfred Hospital.
Four other students, all suffering gunshot
wounds, were taken to hospital. A woman was shot in the jaw and
others suffered multiple wounds, including one man in his 20s
who underwent surgery at St Vincent's Hospital to reattach a
finger shot off in the attack.
Thanh Huynh, sister of Lee Huynh, one of the
victim, said the attack was indiscriminate.
"He was in a tutorial room ... I think there
was meant to be a presentation by the gunman today," she told
Channel Nine. "I said 'What happened?' and he said the guy, the
gunman, just went berserk and started shooting everyone and he
was unfortunately one of the ones that got shot in the legs."
Witnesses said the gunman, was wrestled to
the floor and disarmed by a lecturer and at least one other
student.
"The people on the floor at the time were
just unbelievable. They definitely saved lives. One of the men
in the class managed to disarm the gunman, secure the weapons,
and treat two of the patients," said Paul Howells, the first
paramedic to arrive at the scene. "Credit should also be given
to the attending ambulance officers, who did a superb job. The
death toll could have been much worse."
The gunman was arrested at the scene and
showed no resistance to police. Last night he was being
questioned by homicide squad detectives with the help of an
interpreter.
Victoria Police Superintendent Trevor Parks
confirmed the gunman was a student in the class, but would not
confirm his name. He said the tutor and a student were believed
to have wrestled the gunman to the floor, immobilising him while
others called the police. He said there were fewer than 10 key
witnesses.
"If the gunman hadn't been subdued at the
time it would have been a major disaster."
He described the alleged gunman as an Asian
male in his mid-30s. He said the wounded suffered gunshots to
legs, arms, backs and shoulders, with up to four of the victims
being shot more than once.
Fellow students said the gunman came to
Australia about four years ago from China to study commerce. He
had few friends and struggled with English.
"He would often become frustrated in
tutorials because no one could understand him," a university
classmate said.
Students at Monash said scenes in the 11-storey
building were chaotic immediately after the shooting, with
students jostling on to crowded escalators to escape. At one
stage, some thought the gunman was loose in the student union,
opposite the Menzies building.
"We were very concerned about the lack of
effective communication," said student newspaper editor Jesse
Macneal-Brown. "It was some time before everybody knew what was
going on."
Two students
killed in Australian university shooting
By Margaret Rees - WSWS.org
29 October 2002
Two fourth year honours commerce students
were killed and five other people wounded, when a student
suddenly opened fire in a classroom at Melbourne’s Monash
University on October 21. The tragedy occurred at the beginning
of an econometrics tutorial on the sixth floor of the Menzies
building at the suburban Clayton campus. It points to a growing
crisis within Australia’s tertiary education system, which is
creating profound social tensions that remain totally
unaddressed.
As bullets sprayed around the
room, Professor Lee Gordon-Brown, who was teaching the class,
leapt forward to grapple with the gunman. He was joined by one
of the final year students, Alistair Boast, and between them
they managed to overcome the assailant. Another professor from a
nearby classroom, Brett Inder, heard the shooting, and rushed to
their aid. Gordon-Brown was shot several times and collapsed.
Inder disarmed the gunman, who had a total of
five handguns, then stayed with him, trying to calm him down
until security arrived. At the same time he helped organise
medical assistance for the wounded to stop their bleeding.
Ambulance officers praised the quick thinking of the professors
and students, pointing out that their actions had prevented far
greater loss of life. The two students killed were Steven Chan,
26 and Xu Hui William Wu, 26, an overseas student from Hong Kong.
Those shot and wounded as well as Gordon-Brown were students
Laurie Brown, Daniel Urbach, Christine Young and Leigh Huynh.
Several received multiple gunshot wounds.
Police arrested the alleged gunman Huan Yun
Xiang, 36, and took him for questioning. Next day in Melbourne
Magistrates Court he faced two charges of murder and five of
attempted murder. Aided by a Cantonese interpreter, he did not
apply for bail and was not required to plead.
Xiang, a mature age student at Monash
University who has permanent residency in Australia, was known
to the students and lecturer in the class as a loner who always
sat somewhat apart. Inder told the media: “I can’t say much
about the allegations that have been made but I know the person
I was holding down. I know that he is a committed student, a
hard-working student, a very intelligent student. But there’s
probably also some deep concerns for his welfare that I would
have.”
Xiang was an honours student, about to
complete his fourth and final year. He lived close to the
university with his mother in a spartan block of flats. On the
morning of the shootings, he left behind a note about his
intentions, then proceeded to the tutorial where he was to
present an oral dissertation. He had evidently postponed this
until the last date possible before university classes ended and
final examinations began.
There is limited knowledge of Xiang’s history.
It is not clear what his financial situation was, if he was
supported by his family or had worked before enrolling at
university. He shared an unfurnished, inexpensive, rented flat
with his mother but had found the money to buy seven handguns
obtained legally through a Sporting Shooters Association.
Ruwan Bandara, an overseas student living in
the flat below Xiang and his mother told WSWS that he was “very
surprised” to hear about the shooting. Xiang was “a very quiet,
friendly guy. When he talked he was smiling and friendly.”
Bandara noted, however, that Xiang had problems communicating in
English. “We spoke about pushing his car to the garage. We
couldn’t understand what he said.”
Other residents described him as very quiet,
but frustrated with his inability to make himself understood in
English, which was clearly preying on his mind.
Because of his language difficulties, Xiang’s
final oral dissertation was a high stakes requirement that he
had no chance of fulfilling. The almost certain outcome was
failure. For overseas students, failing a course can result in
deportation. For those with permanent residency like Xiang, it
can still mean personal disaster. There are few job prospects
for Asian workers with poor English language skills, except
unskilled factory work. Yet he would still be required to repay
his accrued university fees through HECS—the Higher Education
Contribution Scheme.
Whatever mental health and other problems
Xiang must have suffered—and which appear to have been
undiagnosed and untreated—the pressure associated with looming
failure seems to have been what caused him to snap.
Limited language assistance
Liz Thompson, from the Monash Students Association, spoke to
WSWS about the high number of students failed quite late in
their studies. “Somebody from the Student Association tries to
represent these students at the hearings where they appeal
against their exclusion from university. The great majority of
them are international students, and exclusion is almost always
over their English language proficiency.
“That’s who we see at exclusion hearings.
They are international students, who are extremely bright. But
with the oral presentations, that is when it is discovered that
they haven’t got the English language capabilities. Often they
are in the business/ economics faculty. It is often not getting
picked up until second or third year—and there are substantial
numbers.
“These students get a letter saying they’re
at risk of failing. Here at Monash, unlike at RMIT [Royal
Melbourne Institute of Technology] University, the letter does
not include any advice with the number of the student union
where they can get some representation. At RMIT there has been a
fight to make sure that advice is included in the letter. Here,
we’ve been looking at obtaining something similar for months.”
Asked about the provision of back up English
language facilities for students of non-English speaking
background (NESB) at Monash, Thompson indicated that while there
is a Language and Learning Service, the pressure on such
services had intensified enormously with the rapid increase in
the international student population.
The education of international students has
become Australia’s third biggest service industry in terms of
overseas income, increasing by an extraordinary 75 percent since
1996 and now worth close to $4 billion per year. By enrolments,
Monash is Australia’s largest university, with eight campuses,
including one in Malaysia and one in Johannesburg, South Africa.
International agents operate from China to countries such as
Fiji, aggressively seeking international enrolments. Of the
student body, 25.6 percent consists of overseas students, up
from 12 percent just two years ago. But support services,
including language facilities, have totally failed to keep up
with the influx.
The Sydney Morning Herald
reported in July that the federal government had been deluged
with complaints from academics that classes of students from
non-English speaking backgrounds had become almost impossible to
teach. The universities’ desperation for full fee paying
students had led to indiscriminate enrolments, regardless of the
capacity of students to understand or participate in their
classes. Business/Commerce and computing courses were the most
seriously affected.
Cutbacks in government
funding have made it impossible for the universities to provide
the necessary back-up facilities. Phong Nguyen, director of the
Indo-Chinese Association in Melbourne told ABC radio after the
shootings: “We have to look seriously at how our universities
support overseas students.”
He said that, out of “this tragic accident...
Monash University and all other universities that take a lot of
overseas students, and in fact rely on overseas students (for
funds) have to be seriously looked at. How much pressure are
they under to take overseas students regardless of their ability?
Then students are here, and the universities do not support them
enough. The universities take their money, but do not support
them.”
Mike Puleston, a former university
language centre teacher, who wrote to the Melbourne Age
after Xiang appeared in court, explained to WSWS: “There are few
situations more stressful than that of being an overseas student,
trying to operate in a strange culture, with the heavy weight of
family expectation upon one.” He added: “I should mention too,
that the suicides of overseas students—usually caused by
unbearable stress—are rarely reported in the media.”
A similar tragedy occurred at Latrobe
University, another Melbourne campus, three years ago when an
honours student started shooting in a campus restaurant. The
restaurant manager, who had earlier fired the student from a
part-time job, was killed and other patrons wounded before the
young man was overwhelmed.
Over two thousand students attended a
memorial ceremony at Monash University last Friday, where the
families of Steven Chan and Xu Hui William Wu were posthumously
presented with their sons’ honours degrees. The overwhelming
reaction was grief, combined with a sense of concern over what
could have caused such a tragedy.
But the response of the mass media and
politicians has been entirely different. Ignoring any of the
social and educational issues so obviously involved, they have
immediately focused on law and order: strengthening guns laws,
limiting availability of hand guns, reviewing security
procedures on campuses, etc. The official establishment would
prefer to avoid any probing into how and why contemporary
Australian society has become a breeding ground for the type of
insanity involved in such indiscriminate acts of violence.
Monash murder accused 'mentally
impaired'
TheAge.com.au
June 15, 2004
A Melbourne honours student on
trial for murdering two fellow students and wounding
five other men, should not be found guilty because
of mental impairment, the prosecution told the
Supreme Court today.
Sue Pullen, for the Crown, told
the jury the prosecution acknowledged that at the
time of the shooting rampage at Monash University on
October 21, 2002, all the evidence pointed to 38-year-old
Huan Xiang being mentally impaired.
She said the Crown would not be
calling any witnesses to the shooting and three
psychiatrists would testify as to Xiang's mental
state.
The court heard that Xiang was
armed with five loaded handguns when he opened fire
at an economics tutorial.
Xiang killed fellow students
William Wu and Steven Chan, both 26, and badly
wounded five others, including a lecturer.
The court heard that police found
a typewritten note taped to a wardrobe door at
Xiang's home in Welling Road, Clayton, which "focused
on killing William Wu", who was also referred to as
"WW".
The note said: "Just pick up a
gun, kill all those WW's until there is no more WW
in the world anymore".
"To kill WW's is the
responsibility defined in my destiny."
Ms Pullen said the jury would
hear that Xiang suffered from a paranoid delusional
disorder and in that state he believed Mr Wu was
going to kill him.
Asked before the trial started
how he pleaded, Xiang answered: "Not guilty because
of mental impairment".
He is charged with two counts of
murder and five counts of attempted murder.
Monash gunman not guilty
By Jewel Topsfield -
TheAge.com.au
June 18, 2004
A commerce student who killed two
classmates, wounded four others and shot a lecturer
during a bloody rampage at Monash University, was
yesterday found not guilty of murder and attempted
murder because of mental impairment.
A Supreme Court jury delivered
its verdict after a two-day trial in which both the
defence and prosecution agreed that Huan Yun "Allen"
Xiang was suffering from a paranoid delusional
disorder when he opened fire on his econometrics
tutorial on October 21, 2002.
The tragedy precipitated a $118
million national handgun buyback. Tougher laws for
obtaining and keeping a gun were also introduced
last year after it emerged that in the six months
before the shooting rampage Xiang became a licensed
gun owner and amassed an arsenal of seven firearms.
Justice Bernard Teague yesterday
ordered Xiang, 38, to be detained for up to 25 years.
He said Xiang should go into the
custody of the Thomas Embling Hospital, a high-security
hospital for people with mental illness, but "regrettably"
a bed was not available for several weeks.
"It is getting to the stage where
politicians will have to consider that we are
housing in prison too many people suffering from
mental illness," Justice Teague said.
Students William Wu and Steven
Chan, both 26, were killed in the shooting rampage.
Lecturer Lee Gordon-Brown - who
was lauded as a hero for restraining Xiang before
police arrived, despite being severely wounded - was
shot in the arm and the leg.
Xiang pleaded not guilty to two
counts of murder and five counts of attempted murder
because of mental impairment.
Outside court, Dr Gordon-Brown's
parents, Oxley and Joan Gordon-Brown, expressed
relief that the trial was over.
"I just hope the experts got it
right and he (Xiang) is not smarter than them," Mr
Gordon-Brown said.
He spoke of his pride in his son,
who had returned to lecturing within weeks of the
tragedy. "He still has a bullet in him. He'll
remember it for the rest of his life," Mr Gordon-Brown
said.
Acting Vice-Chancellor of Monash
University Alan Lindsay said yesterday's verdict
would provide a degree of closure to this tragic
chapter for the university community.
"Nothing will replace Steven Chan
and William Wu, two exceptionally bright Monash
honours students whose lives were cut short,"
Professor Lindsay said.
At 11.15am on October 21, 2002,
Xiang, who was described as an excellent student,
was sitting quietly reading a newspaper at the back
of a lecture room on the sixth floor of the
university's Robert Menzies building.
As the class of 12 students began
to revise for an exam, sharp bangs were heard and
students began screaming and diving to the floor in
panic.
Xiang was seen standing on a desk
with his arms outstretched pointing a black object
and yelling: "You never understand me."
In court, forensic psychiatrist
Dr Douglas Bell said Xiang believed his victims were
plotting to destroy him academically and have him
killed. He said Xiang described student William Wu
as the "Godfather" of Monash University and believed
he was the representative of all evil across the
world.
"He saw it as his responsibility
to do what he could to get rid of the William Wus of
the world and then to kill himself," Dr Bell said.
The psychiatrist said paranoid
delusional disorder was difficult to diagnose and,
despite his mental illness, Xiang was able to
continue operating at a high level academically.
Students and staff at the
university could not have known Xiang was severely
mentally ill or predicted the terrible tragedy that
unfolded, Dr Bell said.
Xiang will be remanded in custody
until a bed becomes available at the Thomas Embling
Hospital in two to three weeks.
Killer sent to psych hospital
SMH.com.au
June 17, 2004
An honours
student who shot dead two people
and wounded five others in a
class at Melbourne's Monash
University will spend up to 25
years in a psychiatric hospital.
Huan Xiang,
38, was found not guilty of
murder on the grounds of mental
impairment by a Victorian
Supreme Court jury.
But Justice
Bernard Teague ordered Xiang be
transferred from jail to the
Thomas Embling psychiatric
hospital as soon as a bed became
available.
Xiang was
armed with five loaded handguns
when he opened fire at the
university in Melbourne's south-east
at 11.24am on October 21, 2002,
the court heard.
He had
arrived before his fellow
students and had taken his usual
seat at the back of the class.
Witnesses
heard Xiang say "you never
understand" as he opened fire
with a black CZ 9mm handgun.
Students
William Wu and Steven Chan, both
26, were killed instantly.
Despite being
shot in the thigh and arms,
econometrics lecturer Lee Gordon-Brown
and student Alistair Boast
subdued Xiang when he stopped
shooting and reached inside his
jacket for another weapon.
Mr Boast,
student Bradley Thompson and
associate professor Brett Inder,
who ran to the scene when he
heard the shots, restrained
Xiang for about 15 minutes until
police arrived.
Student
Andrew Swann and university
administrator Colin Thornby
provided first aid to the
wounded.
All five
later received bravery awards.
At the start
of the two-and-a-half day trial,
prosecuting counsel Sue Pullen
told the jury the prosecution
agreed with the defence that at
the time of the shootings, Xiang
was suffering from a paranoid
delusional disorder.
The jury took
just half an hour to bring in
verdicts of not guilty due to
mental impairment on two charges
of murder and five counts of
attempted murder.
Earlier, Ms
Pullen told the court Xiang was
found to be carrying three
handguns on a gun belt under his
jacket, with a fourth tucked
down the back of his trousers.
She said
Xiang was deemed unfit for
interview on the day of the
shooting but wrote a one-sentence
statement referring to Mr Wu: "I
finally ended WW's life."