Santa Fe shooter seen calmly participating in traditional Greek dance just DAYS before massacre

Video has emerged showing the accused Texas school shooter calmly performing a traditional Greek dance just days before the massacre that left ten dead.

The chilling images show Dimitrios Pagourtzis, 17, dancing at the Clear Lake Greek Festival, which was held just 17 miles from Santa Fe High School the weekend before the mass shooting on Friday.

Pagourtzis had been involved with traditional dancing for several years through his local Greek Orthodox church, and both church officials and his family have said that they saw no warning signs before the horror shooting.

The Clear Lake Greek Festival has taken down its website and Facebook page in the aftermath of the tragedy, and organizers could not be reached for comment. 

New images show accused school shooter Dimitrios Pagourtzis (center) dancing at a Greek cultural festival the weekend before the horror shooting at Santa Fe High School

Pagourtzis had been involved in traditional Greek dancing for several years through church

Pagourtzis had been involved in traditional Greek dancing for several years through church

Pagourtzis (circled) is seen dancing at the festival on Sunday, five days before the attack

Pagourtzis (circled) is seen dancing at the festival on Sunday, five days before the attack

The festival, which has been held annually for 25 years, is a celebration of Greek culture and heritage featuring traditional food, music and dancing. 

Father Stelios Sitaras of Assumption of the Virgin Mary Greek Orthodox Church in Galveston, Texas, said he met Pagourtzis when the young man danced with a group as part of an annual festival in October. 

He said the Pagourtzis family are members of a nearby parish and he saw no signs of trouble from the teen. 

‘He is a quiet boy,’ the priest said of Pagourtzis. ‘You would never think he would do anything like this.’ 

Pagourtzis’ father was born in the Greek village of Magoulitsa, a small town of 540 residents in western Thessaly. 

The guns used in the shooting, a shotgun and a .38 caliber revolver, were legally owned by the father, but an attorney for the family says the father doesn’t know how Pagourtzis got hold of the weapons.

Meanwhile, a possible motive emerged in the case, after the mother of one of the teen girls slain in the shooting said the girl had rejected and publicly humiliated the accused shooter.

Shana Fisher, who turned 16 just days before she died in the attack, had been fending off advances from Dimitrios Pagourtzis for months, the teen girl’s mother Sadie Rodriguez said on Saturday. 

Shana Fisher

Shana Fisher

Shana Fisher, (left and right) who turned 16 just days before she died in the attack, ‘had 4 months of problems from this boy’ the teen girl’s mother said

Shana's mom Sadie Rodriguez says Pagourtzis pursued the girl for months before the shooting

Shana’s mom Sadie Rodriguez says Pagourtzis pursued the girl for months before the shooting

Santa Fe High School students gather at a mekeshift memorial during a community dinner put on by volunteers to help residents begin healing on Saturday

Santa Fe High School students gather at a mekeshift memorial during a community dinner put on by volunteers to help residents begin healing on Saturday

‘He continued to get more aggressive,’ Rodriguez said in an interview aired on ABC 7 . ‘She finally stood up to him and embarrassed him.’

It is the first indication of a motive in the Friday attack on Santa Fe High School, which killed ten, though the theory has yet to be confirmed by either prosecutors or lawyers for 17-year-old Pagourtzis. 

Pagourtzis, whose family describes him as ‘quiet’ and ‘sweet’, continued to become more aggressive with Shana until finally she rejected him publicly in class, the mother said. 

The alleged romantic rejection took place just a week before the attack.

Nicholas Poehl, a lawyer for the Pagourtzis family, said he hadn’t heard about any such interaction between Pagourtzis and any of the victims and therefore couldn’t comment. 

He cautioned that he’d spent much of the day disputing false rumors about the teen’s personal life.

According to charging documents, Pagourtzis confessed to the shooting and told investigators he had left students he liked alive so he could ‘have his story told’.  

Pagourtzis

Pagourtzis

Pagourtzis (left and right) was romantically rejected by one of the teen girls killed in the shooting, the girl’s mother says in a possible indication of motive in the case

Law enforcement officers are seen responding to Santa Fe High School following the shooting

Law enforcement officers are seen responding to Santa Fe High School following the shooting

A junior at Santa Fe High, Pagourtzis hid a shotgun and a handgun under his trenchcoat before opening fire in a first-period art class on Friday, according to an affidavit filed by police.

The shooting unfolded over the course of about 30 minutes in a warren of interconnected classrooms, according to new witness accounts.

Witnesses said the ordeal began with a shotgun blast through an art classroom door, shattering a glass pane and sending panicked students to the entryway to block him from getting inside, witnesses said.

Junior Breanna Quintanilla was in art class when she heard the shots and someone say, ‘If you all move, I’m going to shoot you all.’

The 17-year-old Pagourtzis walked in, pointed at one person and declared, ‘I’m going to kill you.’ Then he fired.

‘He then said that if the rest of us moved, he was going to shoot us,’ Quintanilla said.

When Quintanilla tried to run out a back door, she realized Pagourtzis was aiming at her. He fired in her direction.

‘He missed me,’ she said. ‘But it went ahead and ricocheted and hit me in my right leg.’ She was treated at a hospital and spoke with a brown bandage wrapped around her wound.

‘It was a very scary thing,’ Quintanilla said. ‘I was worried that I wasn’t going to be able to make it back to my family.’

Students are seen evacuating the Texas high school after shots rang out during first period on Friday morning

Students are seen evacuating the Texas high school after shots rang out during first period on Friday morning

On his now-deleted Facebook page, Pagourtzis on April 30 shared a photo of a black T-shirt with the words 'Born to Kill' printed across the front

Other photos shared on Pagourtzis's page the same day in April depicted a dark-colored trenchcoat festooned with various insignia, including the Nazi Iron Cross

Warning signs: On his now-deleted Facebook page, Pagourtzis on April 30 shared a photo of a black T-shirt with the words ‘Born to Kill’ printed across the front (left). Other photos shared on Pagourtzis’s page the same day in April depicted a dark-colored trenchcoat festooned with various insignia, including the Nazi Iron Cross (right) and Communist hammer and sickle

A photo showing a handgun and a knife appeared on an Instagram account associated with Pagourtzis in late April

A photo showing a handgun and a knife appeared on an Instagram account associated with Pagourtzis in late April

Witnesses said a teacher who heard the shooting pulled the school’s fire alarm to alert the student body. 

In a sickening new account, mother Deedra Van Ness says her daughter Isabelle hid while the shooter left the art classroom, then reentered to taunt the victims.

‘The gunman then comes back into their room and they hear him saying….are you dead? Then more shots are fired,’ she wrote in an essay. 

Isabelle survived by lying motionless for half an hour on the floor of a barricaded closet next to the bodies of her deceased classmates, her mother said.

‘By this time, cell phones all over the classroom are ringing and he’s taunting the kids in the closet asking them….do you think it’s for you? do you want to come answer it? Then he proceeds to fire more bullets into the closet and tries to get in,’ the mother wrote. 

Finally, cops arrived and rescued Isabelle and her classmates – though not all of them survived. And the reaction from some of Isabelle’s friends was not what she would have expected.

‘Unbelievably, other students are bullying her on social media. Blaming her for not trying to do more to save her classmates, calling her a liar about what happened, etc,’ Van Ness wrote. 

A member of the FBI walks with evidence outside a trailer owned by Pagourtzis' parents near Santa Fe High School following a mass shooting on Friday

A member of the FBI walks with evidence outside a trailer owned by Pagourtzis’ parents near Santa Fe High School following a mass shooting on Friday

Pagourtzis appeared in court via video link on Friday evening but kept his head bowed and barely said a word except to request a court-appointed attorney

Pagourtzis appeared in court via video link on Friday evening but kept his head bowed and barely said a word except to request a court-appointed attorney

Pagourtzis had planned to kill himself, officials said, but instead collapsed in cowardly fear when confronted by police.

‘He sort of fell to the ground and surrendered,’ said Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), head of the House Homeland Security Committee. 

Investigators who reviewed Pagourtzis’s computer and cellphone found evidence the teen had been planning to kill himself after the shooting. 

In a statement through their lawyer, Pagourtzis’ family said they had no warning of the tragedy and were cooperating with authorities.

‘We are as shocked and confused as anyone else by these events that occurred. We are gratified by the public comments made by other Santa Fe High School students that show Dimitri as we know him: a smart, quiet, sweet boy,’ the family said. 

‘While we remain mostly in the dark about the specifics of yesterday’s tragedy, what we have learned from media reports seems incompatible with the boy we love.’ 

Pagourtzis is now being held without bond on charges of capital murder and aggravated assault of a public servant. 

He barely spoke during the brief court appearance on Friday evening, except to request a court-appointed lawyer. 

Due to Supreme Court rulings, his age will make him ineligible for the death penalty, and might even mean Pagourtzis could be paroled after 40 years if convicted. 

Victims of the Santa Fe High School massacre

 



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