CHARDON, Ohio -- A teenager opened fire in the cafeteria at his suburban Cleveland high school Monday, killing one student and wounding four others before he was chased from the building by a teacher and captured nearby, authorities said.

A student who saw the attack said it appeared that the gunman targeted a group of students sitting together and that the one who was killed was gunned down while trying to duck under the cafeteria table.

FBI officials would not comment on a motive. Police Chief Tim McKenna said authorities "have a lot of homework to do yet" in their investigation of the shooting, which sent students screaming through the halls at the start of the school day at 1,100-student Chardon High.

An education official said the shooting suspect is a Lake Academy student, not a student at Chardon High. Brian Bontempo, superintendent of the Lake County Educational Service Center, which operates the academy, declined to answer any questions about the student.

The alternative school in Willoughby serves seventh through 12th grades. Students may have been referred to the school because of academic or behavioral problems.

The suspect's name has not been released because he is a juvenile. The FBI said he was arrested near his car a half-mile from Chardon. He was not immediately charged.

Teachers locked down their classrooms as they had been trained to do during drills, and students took cover as they waited for the all-clear in this town of 5,100 people 30 miles from Cleveland.

One teacher was said to have dragged a wounded student into his classroom for protection. Another chased the gunman out of the building, police said.

Danny Komertz, 15, who witnessed the shooting, said the suspect was known as an outcast who had apparently been bullied.

But other students disputed that. "Even though he was quiet, he still had friends," said Tyler Lillash, 16. "He was not bullied."

Long before official word came of the attack, parents learned of the bloodshed from students via text messages and cellphones and thronged the streets around the school.

Two of the wounded were listed in critical condition, and another was in serious condition.

"I looked up and this kid was pointing a gun about 10 feet away from me to a group of four kids sitting at a table," Komertz said.

The slain student, Daniel Parmertor, was an aspiring computer repairman who was waiting in the cafeteria for the bus for his daily 15-minute ride to a vocational school. His teacher at the Auburn Career School had no idea why Parmertor, "a very good young man, very quiet," had been targeted, said Auburn superintendent Maggie Lynch.

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