A school shooter, in his own words: 'I wasn't wanted by anyone'

Keith BieryGolick
Cincinnati Enquirer
Kristi Blevins hugs her son after his sentencing for the shooting at Madison High School in 2016.

He and his girlfriend broke up. His parents wouldn’t let him run track. He’d been abusing Adderall for about a year.

This was 14-year-old James “Austin” Hancock.

On Feb. 29, 2016, a few weeks before his birthday, Austin brought a handgun to Madison Schools and shot two students at lunch. Two others were injured. No one died, but the shooting sent shockwaves across this tiny Butler County community.

But the shooting wasn’t planned.

Terror, tragedy and triumph:The untold story behind Madison's school shooting

Austin wasn’t happy with his life, but when he stole a gun from his great-grandmother the day before, he says he never intended to do what he ultimately did with it.

People gather for a vigil after the school shooting in Madison Township.

These were among the revelations Austin gave in a deposition taken last year. A transcript of the sworn testimony was filed in a civil lawsuit against the teenager and his family.

That lawsuit was dismissed earlier this month.

In court, Austin never spoke much. Even an interview with a sheriff’s deputy after his arrest didn't go into much detail.  

The following story, about the how and the why, was pieced together using Austin’s own words. The Enquirer is publishing them for the first time.    

July 27, 2017 

1:08 p.m. Circleville Juvenile Correctional Center.

...

I felt like I wasn’t wanted by anyone, especially my mom.

It seemed like the older I get, the more I see her. But like I went a couple years where I didn’t even see her at all – no birthday cards or any of that. 

Kristi Blevins, mother of James 'Austin' Hancock reads a statement before Butler County Common Pleas Judge Ronald Craft prior to Austin's sentencing of the shooting of two students and wounding two others at Madison High School Feb. 29.

[Austin’s biological parents split up shortly after he was born, and his dad got full custody of him when he was 5. His father and stepmom have two other young children.] 

It’s kind of like a chain-link fence.

Just feeling like I wasn’t wanted by anyone because I’d go to my mom’s house and she has three other kids so I felt like I wasn’t wanted there. And then I’d go back to my dad’s house and they have two kids, but they seem like they always focus all their time with them. 

I spent most of my time in my room but they never really paid attention.

[Austin said his eighth-grade year started well, but the longer it went on the worse it got. He regrets not talking to a counselor about the feelings building up inside of him.]

I mentioned some stuff to my grandma … but nothing major. Nothing that was really bothering me.

I talked to her about stuff with my dad about how he was being really harsh on me. And, I mean, he’s told me – he’s told me a few times before that he hated me and that he wished I … wasn’t his son.

Tommy Hancock and his wife, Sarah, listen to court proceedings as his son is sentenced for the shooting at Madison High School in 2016.

[After he was arrested, a sheriff’s deputy asked Austin why he did it. “So I wouldn’t have to go back home,” he said.]

I didn’t really like my home life because I was always groundedfor my grades. So it was always a strict home life. 

And then I found out my girlfriend was cheating on me so that was a big deal. And, I don’t know, afterthat I just started failing a couple of my classes, so it would just bemore rough on me at my house. 

I wanted to be on the track team, but that’s also when my grades were bad. My teacher said … as long as I had my grades at D plus – because she was … one of the track coaches – as long as I have a D-plus I would be on the team. 

So I brought my grades up to a D-plus, but to myparents that wasn’t good enough. So they wouldn’t let me on the team.

[Austin has been taking Vyvanse, a drug most often used to treat attention deficit hyperactivitydisorder, since he was six. He switched to Adderall when he was 11. He says he started abusing the drug when he was 13.]

[Instead of taking the pills as prescribed, he would save up 10 of them and take several at a time. He did this the night before the shooting.]

I just wanted to get high off of it, I guess, just to relieve all these things – like, all these emotions that I was feeling.

Austin Hancock, who injured four students in a 2016 school shooting, was sentenced to juvenile detention until he turns 21.

I’d just use it to get rid of my feelings. But really after the medicine went away, I would just feel worse.

I ended up getting addicted to that but I started getting really skinny because I didn’t really eat. But the Adderall seemed like it was messing with my emotions somehow, like just made me angrier and more depressed. 

Eventually, my parents were like, well, we need to reduce this milligram because you’re getting really skinny off of it. So they reduced it, but they had still had my old pill bottle so I’d just take those pills out of that.

[The weekend before the shooting, Austin visited his biological mom and went to Dave & Buster’s to celebrate his brother’s birthday. He told his dad he would come home after the party, but he didn’t really want to. He kept telling his grandmother this and eventually left with her.] 

[She bought him a BB gun at Wal-Mart because his birthday was only a few weeks away. They went to his great-grandmother’s house the next day, where Austin showed off his present and talked about hunting with his father. His great-grandmother showed him her handgun. It’s the one he would fire in school on Monday.]

Austin Hancock was 14 the first time he appeared in court after a school shooting in 2016.

[His great-grandmother made the bed for Austin at 11 p.m., but he asked to stay in the living room. That’s where she kept the gun. Austin stayed up past 2:30 a.m., drinking energy drinks and watching Netflix.]

That night I was thinking about the gun I saw – like, should I take it? Should I not take it? Like, because I had no intention to do what I did with it.

I guess I just wanted to have it for showing off or whatever.

When I was back in my dad’s house I just put the gun under my bed. But, like, after I had gotten home I regretted taking it because I knew she was going to find out sooner or later that the gun was gone.

The next morning, I wanted to tell my stepmom but I could only imagine what kind of trouble I’d be in so I didn’t tell her.

Karen Axmacher hugs her grandsons Justin Smith, 11 years old, left, and Jordon Smith 15, years old (not seen) after a 14-year-old, student shot two other male teen students in the cafeteria of Madison Jr/Sr High School in Madison Township, Monday February 29, 2016. James Austin Hancock has been charged with two counts of attempted murder, two counts of felonious assault, one count of inducing panic and making terrorist threats.

[When he got home from his great grandmother’s house, Austin’s dad was mad. He yelled at him for staying away the whole weekend and locked his BB gun up.]

I was scared that Sarah, my stepmom, was going to find it in my room if I went toschool, because she had found like video games or stuff that they didn’t really want me to have. 

So … I had put the gun in my backpack to go to school with no intention of doing what I did.

But I brought it to school and when I was in the classroom it was still in my backpack. But after that I just did … my work, but I had this really anxious feeling that somehow someone was going to find out that it was in my backpack. 

I had told my buddy that I had it in my backpack, or two buddies actually.

And so when we went to lunch I still had that anxious feeling that someone was going to find it in my backpack so I hadtooken it out and put it in my lunchbox. 

And when I went to the cafeteria, I went straight to the bathroom and my two friends had followed me and they wanted to see it. So I showed it or whatever, but I put the clip in one pocket and the gun in another pocket so I could eat my food. 

Authorities from the Butler County Sheriff’s Office investigate a shooting at Madison Jr./Sr. High School in 2016.

So when I went back out and sat down, I started eating my food but I had sweatpants on and the clip was like slick metal so it kept trying to slide out of my pocket. So, then, I went back to the bathroom and I put the clip in the gun.

And when I went back I guess one of the buddies I told – because he knew, like, I was mad at everything for like the longest time – so he was worried that I was going to do something. 

And I just had a gut feeling he was going to tell someone so I started getting really anxious and didn’t know what to do. And my victims were sitting at a table about 10 feet from me, but Ipassed them.

I could see my buddy whisper to some girl that I had the gun and she started panicking. 

And on top of that I hadtook Adderall the night before, the Adderall that I had saved up, and it had carried into that morning so I was – that really boosted my anxiety. 

So she started panicking and running and ran to the office, and from then it just felt like I blacked out and that’s when everything happened. 

It just seemed like everything went blurred.

[Four months after the shooting, Austin was sentenced to juvenile detention until he is 21. He is now 16, and his birthday is in a few weeks.]

James "Austin" Hancock, 15, leaves the courtroom after his sentencing for the school shooting in Madison Township.