Georgia school 911 call: 'We're not gonna hate you, baby'

The 911 call from a Georgia school standoff was released. The Georgia school 911 call shows how one employee, school bookkeeper Antoinette Tuff, responded to a 20-year-old man armed with a AK-47 style rifle. 

Georgia school 911 call: A McNair High school staff member works on a welcome sign for Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy students on Aug. 21, a day after an armed suspect caused an ordeal at their school in Decatur, Ga.

AP Photo/Atlanta Journal-Constitution, John Spink

August 23, 2013

The 911 call from a Georgia school standoff shows how a school employee's calm demeanor and kind approach helped end the ordeal without any injuries.

Police said Wednesday that school bookkeeper Antoinette Tuff was heroic in how she responded after being taken hostage a day earlier by Michael Brandon Hill, a 20-year-old man with a history of mental health issues. Hill went to the school armed with an AK 47-style rifle and nearly 500 rounds of ammunition, police said.

On a recording of a 911 call released Wednesday, Tuff can be heard relaying messages from Hill to DeKalb County emergency dispatchers before convincing him to surrender. She tells the dispatcher that Hill said he wasn't there to hurt the children but wanted to talk to an unarmed officer.

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"He said, 'Call the probation office in DeKalb County and let them know what's going on,'" Tuff is heard telling the dispatcher. "He said he should have just went to the mental hospital instead of doing this, because he's not on his medication."

No one was injured, but police said the suspect shot into the floor and exchanged gunfire with officers who had surrounded Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy in Decatur, a suburb east of Atlanta. The school has 870 students in pre-kindergarten through fifth grade.

Dramatic television footage showed lines of young students racing out of the building with police and teachers escorting them to safety. They sat outside in a field for a time until school buses came to take them to their parents at a nearby Wal-Mart.

The exchange between Tuff and the suspect was captured on a recording of a 911 call made by school officials to dispatchers.

Tuff begins by telling Hill of her own struggles, including raising a disabled child and losing her husband. The bookkeeper reassured him by saying he didn't hurt anyone, hadn't harmed her and could still surrender peacefully.

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"We're not gonna hate you, baby. It's a good thing that you're giving up," Tuff says after having Hill put his weapons and ammunition on the counter. Tuff tells Hill she loves him and will pray for him.

Before he surrendered, Tuff took to the school's public address system to say Hill was sorry for what he'd done and didn't want to hurt anyone — although the lockdown remained in effect.

Hill is charged with aggravated assault on a police officer, terroristic threats and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Police declined to discuss what he told them when questioned.

"We have to make a reasonable assumption he was there to do harm to someone," DeKalb County Police Chief Cedric L. Alexander said.

The DeKalb County Public Defender's office said in a statement that it was representing Hill, calling him "a young man with a long history of mental health issues."

"Mr. Hill is being represented by members of our Mental Health Division and he has decided to waive his first appearance today," the statement said. "We are all very thankful that no one was hurt in this incident and that all of the children are safe."

One of the office's attorneys, Claudia Saari, wrote in an email that a preliminary hearing is scheduled for Sept. 5.

Tim Hill, the brother of the alleged shooter, told CNN's Piers Morgan on Thursday night that his brother was like a normal kid growing up, but began to change as a teenager.

"Once he started hitting his teenage years, something happened with him," Tim Hill said. "Everything just started changing after doctors started messing with his medicines here and there, and changing them up and putting him on a different one and institutionalizing him multiple times to correct his medicine. It just escalated from there."

Hill said his brother has had a troubled past. He said Michael Hill set fire to the family's home when eight people were in the house asleep, and at another point their mother awoke to find him standing over her with a butcher's knife.

"At one point my stepfather and mother ended up having to lock up...like all the knives in the trunk of the car, just to protect everybody in the home,' Tim Hill said.

Tim Hill also confirmed that his brother threatened his life on Facebook, prompting him to call police. He said he feared for his life.

The alleged shooter's brother also expressed frustration that authorities hadn't done more to deal with his brother's mental condition before Tuesday. He said he was appreciate for what Tuff did to defuse the situation Tuesday, but doesn't believe his brother would have harmed her or the schoolchildren.

"I don't think he was there to do that," Tim Hill said of his brother. "He's always had a problem with the cops."

Police said Hill got the gun from an acquaintance, but it's not clear if he stole it or had permission to take it. His motive is still unclear.

Law enforcement officers praised Tuff for helping to avert a potential tragedy.

"She was a real ally," Alexander said. "She was a real hero in all of this. She just did a stellar job. She was cool, she was calm, very collected in all of this, maintained her wherewithal."

Tuff told WSB-TV in Atlanta that she tried to keep Hill talking to prevent him from walking into the hallway or through the school building.

"He had a look on him that he was willing to kill — matter of fact he said it. He said that he didn't have any reason to live and that he knew he was going to die today," Tuff said.

In interviews with various media outlets, Tuff has maintained that her faith in God led to a peaceful ending of the situation.

During an interview with CNN's Anderson Cooper on Thursday, Tuff said President Barack Obama called her while she sat in the network's makeup room. She described the conversation as "awesome."

She also met DeKalb County emergency dispatcher Kendra McCray, who stayed on the phone with her as she reassured Hill that surrendering peacefully was the right thing to do.

Tuff told Cooper that she'd like to visit Hill and speak with him again.

"He's a hurting soul, and so if there's any kind of way I can help him and allow him to get on the right path — we all go through something," she said during the interview.

Hill was arrested in mid-March for making terroristic threats in Henry County, DeKalb and Henry County sheriff's officials have said. He was sentenced to probation.

A woman who said she served as a mother-like figure to him said he didn't seem to have any friends and rarely talked about his family or past during the months he lived with her and her husband several years ago.

He was quiet and didn't display anger or violent tendencies, said Natasha Knotts, the woman who took him in after he started coming to the small church where her husband is pastor and she is an assistant pastor.

Knotts told The Associated Press on Wednesday that Hill lived with them for about six months in his late teens.

"He was part of our family," Knotts said, though they were not related. She said her family was aware that "he had a mental disorder" before he moved in.

Hill told her that his birth mother was dead and that he didn't know his father. He also has brothers.

Knotts was shocked when she realized Hill had been taken into custody.

"This is something that's totally out of his character. This is not him. This is not the Mike that I know. For anyone that knew Mike, this was a total devastation," she said in an interview at her home in Lithonia, Ga.

She kept in touch after he moved out and said he'd recently been living with another couple who belonged to the church. Knotts last saw Hill about a month ago and he seemed fine.

Knotts said Hill called her sister Tuesday afternoon before the shooting to thank the family for all they had done for him and said he had a rifle. He did not say what he was planning to do.

Police released an undated photo of Hill posing with an assault rifle they believe is the one used Tuesday.

Knotts said she thinks Hill's actions were a plea for help.

"Unfortunately," she said, "he didn't know a better way to get it."