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Student wounds official, shoots himself at small college in St. Louis

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(MCT) — ST. LOUIS — A student with a violent past, mental disability and handgun wounded an official at the Stevens Institute of Business & Arts — where he just lost financial aid — early Tuesday afternoon and then shot himself, officials said.

Greg Elsenrath, the financial aid director at the downtown career college, and his attacker were both seriously hurt and taken to St. Louis University Medical Center for surgery. A police source identified the gunman as Sean Johnson, 34.

The source said Johnson had been upset, but not threatening, in a meeting Monday with Elsenrath over loss of aid. Elsenrath reportedly said he would try to find other funds to help him. Monday was the first day of the winter quarter.

The source said it was not certain whether Johnson shot himself in the side of the chest deliberately or accidentally.

Police said Tuesday night that Elsenrath, of Winfield, was expected to survive and that Johnson remained in critical condition.

Officers swarmed the building about 2 p.m., after Elsenrath was shot in the chest in a fourth-floor office. They found Johnson wounded in a stairwell, between the third and fourth floors, with a handgun was near him. A SWAT team searched the structure and found no other victims or attackers.

The suspected shooter was an on-again, off-again student for the past four years, Police Chief Sam Dotson told reporters.

In 2009, Johnson was accused in St. Louis County Circuit Court of trying to slash a taxi driver with a box cutter as the cab drove along Interstate 70 near Lindbergh Boulevard. The driver said his customer reached from the back seat and thrust the cutter downward toward his neck, according to court documents. The vehicle hit a median barrier, and the two men were still struggling when Bridgeton police arrived.

Johnson was charged with first-degree assault and armed criminal action, and pleaded guilty in 2011 of reduced charges of unlawful use of a weapon and second-degree assault. Court records reflect that he has a mental health condition. Judge Tom DePriest sentenced him to five years of probation, with terms requiring him to take his medication and have no contact with the victim.

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