
These
are the first pictures of the victims who died in a shooting rampage
when a ‘deeply disturbed’ gunman went classroom to classroom at a
Connecticut school.
Ana
Marquez-Greene, seven, was killed when the shooter opened fire on
children and teachers at 9.30am on Friday at Sandy Hook Elementary
School. Twenty-six people died in the mass shooting.
The
little girl and her older brother had attended Linden Christian School
nearby, before moving with their parents to Newtown in July and
enrolling at Sandy Hook. Both children were inside the school when the
shooting began.


Ana
Marquez-Greene’s father is Canadian jazz musician Jimmy Greene. The
distraught father told MailOnline today that he couldn’t find the words
to express the loss of his daughter Ana.
Neighbors
said that the family had only arrived in the affluent neighborhood two
months ago and they hadn’t had the chance to get to know them.
The
number of cars outside the family residence suggested that the grieving
family had been joined by loved ones since yesterday’s tragic shooting.
Another victim has been named as six-year-old Jesse Lewis. His father Neil Heslin told the New
York Post that he dropped his son off at school that morning and
planned to return in the afternoon to join parents in the holiday
tradition of making gingerbread houses.

Grace
McDonnell, six, who was also killed, has been described as ‘utterly
adorable’ and ‘full of life’. She had blue eyes and hair that was so
blonde that friends thought she looked like a ‘little doll’.
Her parents are going through ‘indescribable’ pain, MailOnline has learned.
In
a chilling twist, Lynn McDonnell, 45, a housewife, and Christopher, 49,
a business executive, live in a $500,000 detached home in Sandy Hook,
Connecticut that is just one street away from where alleged shooter Adam
Lanza lived.
Grief-stricken
members of the community tied white balloons to the sign for Sandy Hook
school today in honor of all those who lost their lives.
Outside
Saint Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church in Newtown, Connecticut,
mourners left teddy bears, flowers and lit candles for victims.




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Passion: Victoria Soto, 27, was killed by the gunman after she threw herself in front of her students to save them
Law
enforcement sources said today that the bodies of the deceased have all
been identified after being removed from the school in the middle of
the night.
Over
the course of the evening, parents were led into Sandy Brook Elementary
school and asked to identify the bodies, sources said.
Further details from the medical examiner were expected later today.
The three teachers murdered at Sandy Hook Elementary School all died heroes trying to save their students from the gunman.
Principal
Dawn Hochsprung, 47, school psychologist Mary Sherlach, 56, and
27-year-old Victoria Soto, a first grade teacher, as three of the eight
adults found dead on Friday.
Twenty-eight
people died in the shooting rampage, including 20 young children
between the ages of five and ten, alleged gunman Adam Lanza, who took
his own life, and his mother, who was shot before the school massacre.
MailOnline
can now reveal that Miss Soto sacrificed herself to save her students –
throwing her body in front of the young children.
When
Lanza began started firing at the school in suburban Newtown,
Connecticut, some teachers dived under tables – but the Mrs Hochsprung
and Mrs Sherlach never hesitated.
They
ran into the hallway to confront the danger – and were murdered
execution-style as a result . The New York Times reports that Mrs
Hochsprung buzzed Lanza into the school, bypassing the newly-installed
security system – recognizing him as the son of Nancy Lanza. It’s
unclear what Nancy Lanza’s connection to the school was, if she had one
at all.
Little
did she know that Adam had already killed his mother at the home they
shared nearby. He took three of her guns and used her car to drive to
the school.



Hero: Vicki Soto, 27, was trying to shield her first grade students from the gunman when she was shot
Diane
Day, a school therapist, told the Wall Street Journal that she and
several other teachers were in a meeting with Mrs Hochsprung and Mrs
Sherlach when the shooting began.
‘We were there for about five minutes chatting and we heard, “pop pop pop,”‘ she said. ‘I went under the table.’
The
principal and the school psychologist had other ideas. They jumped out
of their seat and ran toward the sound of the gunfire.
‘They didn’t think twice about confronting or seeing what was going on,’ Ms Day said.

Killer: Adam Lanza shot dead 26 people, among them 20 children, at a Connecticut school on December 14
Rabbi Shaul Praver told MSNBC that Mrs Hochsprung and Mrs Sherlach were killed execution-style.
Tributes
for all educators poured in on Friday night. A deeply distraught
10-year-old boy is a former student of Miss Soto, who had taught at the
school five years, said she was ‘really nice and funny.’
The
woman’s cousin, Jim Wiltsie, told ABC News that police said the
27-year-old was trying to shield her students and usher them into a
closet when she came face to face with the gunman.
‘She put herself between the gunman and the children and that’s when she was tragically shot and killed,’ Mr Wiltsie said.
‘I’m just proud that Vicki had the instincts to protect her kids from harm,’ he continued.
‘It brings peace to know that Vicki was doing what she loved, protecting the children and in our eyes she’s a hero,’ he added.



Jacob
Riley told MailOnline Miss Soto liked to chew gum in class – something
is not usually allowed for teachers. He said he often teased her about
her habit – and she playfully teased him back.
She was popular with all the students, the young boy said.
Former school superintendent John Reed told the Connecticut Post that Mrs Sherlach was warm and cared deeply for her students.
‘If
there ever was a person, by qualifications and personality, to work
with children, to be a school psychologist, it was Mary,’ he said.
She
was married and had two grown daughters in their 20s and enjoyed
gardening, reading and the theater, according to her school biography.
Mrs Hoschspring was happily married to her second husband and tweeted
dozens of pictures of her school.

Friends and neighbors said it was immediately clear to everyone she knew that she loved her students and her school.
‘I don’t think you could find a more positive place to bring students to every day,’ she told a local newspaper recently.
Another tale of heroism came from an eight-year-old student who said a teacher pulled him from the hallway as bullets rang out.
‘I
saw some of the bullets going down the hall that I was right next to
and then a teacher pulled me into her classroom,’ the boy told CBS News.
‘It sounded like someone was kicking a door,’ he said of the piercing sound of the gunfire.
His relieved mother agreed, saying that the teacher saved her son’s life.

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