Tuesday, September 30, 2008

JYY HERO OF THE WEEK (9-30)

Heroes: Day-Care Drama A man with a gun, a roomful of screaming children -- and a mom who wouldn't back down.

Louise Zoller thought it was awfully quiet at the day-care center in Cape Coral, Florida. Planning to celebrate her mother's birthday that afternoon, Zoller, 33, had arrived 45 minutes earlier than usual to pick up two-year-old Hannah, with her 11-year-old, Morgan, in tow.

As mother and daughter approached the entrance, the center's director swung open the door and hurried them inside. Zoller overheard snippets of a cell phone conversation: "Yes, there's a man outside. I believe he has a gun." But the words didn't quite register. Entering Hannah's classroom, Zoller could see her daughter and several other children huddled with their teacher, Christine Dunn, in a bathroom.
"Mommy," Hannah called out. Morgan went to her sister as Zoller asked Dunn what was going on.

"We're just taking precautions," Dunn told her calmly. "There's somebody outside." Throughout the seven-classroom day-care center, teachers had gathered the children into bathrooms for safety.

"Is it true he has a gun?" Zoller asked.
"We think so, but we're not sure," replied Dunn.
Zoller spotted a teacher and more children in another bathroom. Seeing the fear in the kids' eyes, she gave them some toys to keep them occupied. As she turned back to join Hannah and Morgan, a man walked past her. At first, she thought he was a staffer.
Then she saw the gun.

It was military green and appeared to be plastic. "It didn't look real," says Zoller, who has no experience with firearms.

"Where is [she]?" the man demanded.
"I don't know who you're talking about," Zoller replied. Still thinking the gun was fake, she tried to steer him away from the children. "Why don't you follow me, and we'll try to find her," she said.
Suddenly the intruder turned toward the bathroom where Hannah and Morgan were-and Zoller realized it was Hannah's teacher, Christine Dunn, he was hunting. In that same instant, she saw the man step into the bathroom and extend his arm. A shot rang out, followed by the sound of screaming children.
Zoller grabbed the man's arm. "Please stop," she cried. "You're scaring the children." He shoved her to the floor. As Zoller got up, she again saw the man raise his arm. Again the gun went off.
Over the gunman's outstretched arm, Zoller saw Morgan's anguished face as she cried out, "Mom!"

"Everything else became blank," Zoller recalls. "There was nothing else around, just her face."
Zoller grabbed the man's arm with both hands and pulled him into the hallway. As they fell to the ground, she knocked the gun from his hand, then grabbed it and tossed it toward the front lobby. Standing, the man thrust his arm at Zoller's chest. "Where's my gun?" he shouted.
Zoller told him it was in a reception area off the lobby, in the opposite direction from where she'd thrown it. The man fell for the trick and ran off.
Zoller raced to the lobby, scooped up the pistol, and ran outside-straight into a phalanx of police officers, their weapons trained on her. "I have it, I have it," she shouted, throwing the gun to the ground.

The officers rushed into the building, where they found Dunn in the bathroom. She was dead. Her two-year-old, Allyson, was found unharmed.
Outside, Zoller waited anxiously for her children. Hannah came out first, carried by another parent. Zoller grabbed her and held her close. She wasn't hurt. Less than a minute later-"It felt like forever," says Zoller-Morgan walked out, with a child holding each hand.
Today, recalling Morgan's composure, Zoller can't conceal her pride. "After seeing what she saw, she was smiling at them and telling them it was going to be okay."
As other children emerged from the building, Zoller saw that some were covered in blood. "That's when I realized it was real," she says. Miraculously, none of the children had been harmed.
The police arrested Robert Dunn, the victim's estranged husband, at the scene. Angry about his impending divorce and frustrated because he was unable to see his daughter without supervision, he had bought the gun at a pawnshop, according to the police.
Dunn, indicted on a charge of first-degree murder, pleaded not guilty in March. Christine Dunn's parents are now caring for her daughter.
In recognition of Zoller's actions that day, Cape Coral mayor Eric Feichthaler awarded her the keys to the city. "That kind of heroism is very rare," he said. Zoller has a slightly different take. "I was just being a mom," she says. (From Reader's Digest - June 2008)
For her heroic act, Louise Zoller is the JYY Hero Of the Week!!

2 Comments:

At October 2, 2008 at 9:59 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

that is crazy. i dont know if i would have been able to do that. I think i would have ran and hid in the bathroom with the teachers and the childern

someone is with her,someone very special.

 
At October 24, 2008 at 3:01 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

what about the man with the gun -- what was his story? why did he think it was ok to carry a gun in there? crazy?

 

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