Man claiming to be survivor of Santa Fe High shooting wasn't there: School officials

The man identified himself to reporters as substitute teacher David Briscoe.

July 1, 2019, 8:10 PM

A man who said he survived a deadly school shooting in Texas is not who he claims to be, school district officials announced Monday.

The man, who previously identified himself to reporters as David Briscoe, told several news outlets that he was a substitute teacher at Santa Fe High School in Texas last year when a gunman opened fire, killing 10 people and injuring more than a dozen others.

He claimed he barricaded his classroom’s doors and waited in the dark with about a dozen students until officers came to rescue them. But officials with the Santa Fe Independent School District said Monday they had no record of him ever working there.

Santa Fe High School students were greeted by community members holding signs of support as they returned to class, May 29, 2018.
KTRK

“We are extremely disappointed that an individual that has never been a part of our school community would represent themselves as a survivor of the mass violence tragedy that our community endured on May 18, 2018,” Lindsey Campbell, a spokeswoman for Santa Fe Independent School District, told ABC News on Monday.

She called the situation a tragic example of “how easily misinformation can be created and circulated.”

“We appreciate the efforts of those working to correct this misinformation,” the statement said. “As a district our focus has always been and continues to be on supporting the needs of our students, staff, and community through the healing and recovery process."

People carry crosses made by Greg Zanis for the victims of the Santa Fe High School, May 21, 2018, in Santa Fe, Texas.
Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
Dimitrios Pagourtzis, 17, is the suspect in a deadly shooting at Santa Fe High School in Texas, May 18, 2018.
Galveston County Sheriff

The alleged hoax came to light on Monday morning when the Texas Tribune said it decided not to publish a story featuring the man’s account after interviewing him for about 30 minutes.

“CNN described his heroism as he ordered his students to ‘get down’ and kept them protected until police came; The Wall Street Journal relayed the blood-curdling screams he heard from students in the hallway,” the Texas Tribune reported Monday. “But after investigating some of his claims, the Tribune did not publish his account of the shooting — because it appears his entire story was an elaborate hoax.”

CNN, Time and The Wall Street Journal have all since issued updates to their stories, removing Briscoe's quotes from their coverage.

The May 2018 shooting left eight students and two substitute teachers dead. The alleged shooter, 17-year-old Dimitrios Pagourtzis, was arrested and charged with capital murder.

Pagourtzis allegedly admitted to carrying out the shooting and told police that he refrained from killing students that he liked "so he could have his story told," according to an arrest affidavit.