Second grade teacher, not student, called 911 to report school shooting, police say
Madison, Wisconsin, police said Tuesday that a second grade teacher called 911 to report a school shooting and not a student as they had initially said.

Corrections & Clarifications: This story was updated to correct inaccurate information provided by police about who called 911.
Wisconsin authorities said Tuesday that a second-grade teacher called 911 to report a school shooting that left two people dead and six others injured and not a second grade student as they had initially said.
"I'd like to provide an important clarification," Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes told reporters Tuesday afternoon before a news conference on the the deadly attack at Abundant Life Christian School. Actually, "the call came from a second grade teacher."
The mix up, Barnes said, came from police misreading the 911 dispatch notes.
"That was a mistake, that's my responsibility and I apologize," Barnes said.
Authorities arrived on the scene within minutes of the call and found a teenage student and teacher killed, Barnes said. The shooter had already shot herself and died on the way to the hospital, Barnes added.
Five students and one teacher were injured in the shooting. Two of the students were rushed to the hospital in critical condition but have stabilized. The others had non-life-threatening injuries, according to Barnes.
The shooting happened inside a study hall period with students from multiple grades, Barnes confirmed. Abundant Life is a K-12 school with around 390 students, according to the school website.
The shooter was identified as Natalie Rupnow, who also went by the name Samantha, Barnes said.
(This story was updated to add new information and because it contained an inaccuracy.)