Minneapolis, Minnesota (AP)
One of the most seriously wounded survivors of the Red Lake school shootings says he’s looking forward to returning to school this fall.
“Oh yeah. Get some more chicks,” Steve Cobenais said in an interview aired on WCCO-TV on July 27.
Cobenais, 15, lost an eye and suffered a severe brain injury but didn’t lose his sense of humor. Doctors predicted he’d face a life of paralysis and severe mental incapacity, but he has beaten the odds. He’s walking and hopes to learn to drive, though doctors aren’t sure how far he’ll progress and his parents say he has changed.
Cobenais told the station he remembered gunman Jeff Weise as a “goth” and “weird,” but didn’t know the 16-year-old well and had no idea why Weise targeted him.
“He asked me if I believe in God, and I said ‘Yeah,’ and he shot me,” he recalled.
Weise entered Red Lake High School on March 21 and killed five students, a teacher and a security guard before shooting himself. Before that, he had killed his grandfather and his grandfather’s companion.
Cobenais’ parents never left his bedside at MeritCare Hospital in Fargo, N.D. When they made it back home to the Red Lake Reservation, they found their home had been vandalized and many of his most treasured possessions had been stolen.
“All my games and clothes,” he said.
His father lost his summer job after Cobenais had a seizure in June. Because of the vandalism and expenses the family gave up their home and moved in with Steven’s grandmother.
Cobenais still faces two more major reconstructive operations: one to put a metal plate in his head and one to put in a prosthetic eye.
A fund has been set up to help the Cobenais family with their expenses. Donations can be mailed to: Steven Cobenais Fund, Deerwood Bank, P.O. Box 1278, Bemidji, MN 56607, 218.759.6919.