My teacher dad saved lives during Columbine massacre 25yrs ago – now those he saved want selfies of me with their kids

IT was one of the first mass school shootings to shock the world.

The Columbine killings resulted in the deaths of 13 people before the two killer teens, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, turned their guns on themselves.

Killer teens Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold turned up at school with a semi-automatic pistol, a pump-action shotgun and other weapons hidden beneath their trench coatsGetty – Contributor

Computer and business teacher Dave Sanders, 47, was fatally shot after guiding children away from Harris and KleboldAP:Associated Press

APDave’s daughter Coni now helps troubled young people[/caption]

Now, 25 years on, a daughter of one of the heroes who saved hundreds of pupils at the US high school has spoken out.

Computer and business teacher Dave Sanders, 47, was fatally shot after guiding children away from Harris and Klebold during their 15-minute killing spree.

Since then, survivors have shown their love for Dave by visiting his daughter, Coni, and introducing her to their own children — who would not have been born had the two killers’ plan to murder hundreds of students not been thwarted.

He was a teacher for 24 years and his influence went far beyond the walls of the classroom and the bounds of the playing fields that he coached in

Coni, Dave Saunders’ daughter

Speaking to The Sun, Coni, 50, reveals: “I didn’t realise it until I was at the memorial a few years ago and these people walked up to me and handed me their baby.

“Like, ‘Why am I holding your baby? I don’t know who you are’. And they said, ‘Can we have a picture?’

‘His influence went far beyond the classroom’

“I’m thinking, I have no idea what’s going on right now. And they said, ‘This baby exists because of your dad,’ and I almost dropped the baby.

“But you know, it was then that I really started thinking — generations from now, they’ll never know they exist because of what he did.

“He was a teacher for 24 years and his influence went far beyond the walls of the classroom and the bounds of the playing fields that he coached in. He has left a mark on the world.”

The softball coach wasn’t even supposed to be in school when Harris, 18, and Klebold, 17, started their deadly assault.

Coni reveals: “It was my grandmother’s birthday. He was supposed to go to lunch with my mom, my aunt and my grandmother.”

Instead, before lunch the killers turned up at school with a semi-automatic pistol, a pump-action shotgun and other weapons hidden beneath their trench coats.

A pipe bomb they threw into the car park and the huge explosives placed in the cafeteria all failed to detonate.

Undeterred, the pair started firing at pupils, first killing 17-year-old Rachel Scott as she lay on the ground.

Dave and two janitors told the students to leave the dining area and began to secure as much of the school as possible.

But as the teacher walked down the hallway giving instructions, Harris fired bullets into the father-of-four’s head, neck and torso.

From there the shooters headed to the library, where most of the pupils were killed, including disabled 16-year-old Kyle Velasquez.

He has left a mark on the world

Coni

Just after noon, with armed police teams outside the school, Harris and Klebold took their own lives.

Injured Dave was in a classroom bleeding heavily from his wounds.

As he lay there he proudly showed students pictures of his family that he kept in his wallet.

Realising the situation was desperate, teachers and pupils placed a sign in the window telling those outside someone was “bleeding to death”.

But the police feared it was a trick by the shooters and it wasn’t until 3pm that a paramedic reached Dave. By that time he was dead.

Dave, who coached girls’ basketball and softball teams, wanted to give a final message to his four daughters.

Coni says: “His last words were, ‘Tell my girls I love them.’

“That could have meant so many things. It could have meant his athletes. It could have been my mom and my sisters.”

There was a lot of anger within the community about the slow response of the police — but Coni doubts her father would have wished to live with the injuries he had sustained.

She says: “After talking to the coroner, he was not going to live a good life based on his injuries.

“One went in through his shoulder and out through his mouth. He would not have lived a life coaching and teaching.

‘Your brain is just stuck like it was yesterday’

“So I almost feel like it was the right thing to happen, that if he survived it would not have been a survival that would have been good for him.”

Hero teacher Dave pictured with his kids – who later admitted to ‘anger’ at their dad running towards dangerSUPPLIED

AP:Associated PressThere was a lot of anger within the community about the slow response of the police, but Coni doubts her father would have wished to live with the injuries he’d sustained[/caption]

ReutersColumbine killer Dylan Klebold[/caption]

In the immediate aftermath, Coni admits she felt annoyed that Dave had put himself in harm’s way.

She says: “We had some anger towards him, like, how could you do that — run towards danger?’

“And over the years, we’ve come to determine that he was in the right place at the right time.”

That’s because he saved so many young people — but his absence still weighs heavily on the family.

Coni, who works as a therapist, reveals: “It’s interesting to think about the past 25 years because it feels like just yesterday.

“There’s something we refer to as trauma time where you can remember, at this minute, what I was doing the last time that I saw him.

“Your brain is just stuck in that like it was yesterday.

“The last time I saw him, he told me that he loved me, and to be nice to my sister.

“He hugged me and I think I looked back at that as it was so bizarre.

“I remember thinking at the time, wow, that was a hug. Because it was always kind of the coach’s pat.”

The last time I saw him, he told me that he loved me, and to be nice to my sister

Coni

The senseless slayings shocked the world, with countless books and documentaries made in an attempt to understand the killers.

Many issues have been blamed, from the shoot-’em-up video games the pair played to the bullying they reportedly experienced.

None of the theories have done anything to stem the tide of fatalities in the United States.

So far in 2024, alone more than 200 people have been killed in mass shootings, while 4,994 in total have died from gun violence — 355 of children or teens.

Earlier this month the Colorado House of Representatives passed a bill to ban the sale or transfer of assault weapons — but there are doubts it will pass through the state’s Senate.

Banning the kind of automatic weapons wielded by Harris and Klebold has so far been prevented by the US consitution’s Right to Bear Arms.

It was, though, illegal to sell the high school students weapons because they were underage and Mark Manes, who provided much of the arsenal, was sentenced to nine years in prison.

Two years ago the US President Joe Biden increased restrictions on gun ownership nationally by bringing in tougher background checks on anyone aged under 21 wishing to buy a gun.

Coni is doing her bit to stem the tide of hate and misery that has gripped America for so long.

She studied psychology and spent seven years working in a mental health hospital on low pay before being able to dedicate herself to helping disaffected young people.

Inspired by her father, she now works in the same justice system ‘diversion program’ that Harris and Klebold had been placed on.

The pair had both been arrested prior to the attack for breaking into a van and were given anger management sessions as part of the scheme.

Coni, who lives in Littleton not far from Columbine High School, reveals: “I’ve even had some clients come in and said, like, ‘man, if I had a gun, I would have shot up my school.’

“You know, like, because there’s just so much pain and grief in adolescence.”

She concludes: “And so this is how I carry on his legacy.”

ReutersEric Harris joined Klebold in the senseless massacre before the pair turned their guns on themselves[/caption]

AP:Associated PressMum Fran Allison and daughter Brooke at the Columbine massacre scene[/caption]

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