It was charged Thursday with three juvenile counts of aggravated murder in connection with Monday’s school shooting that killed three high school students.By Mark Duncan,allstar celtics 2011 APStudents and parents march to the high school in Chardon, Ohio, on Thursday to honor the three students who were killed in a shooting there Monday. The school re-opened to parents and students Thursday and classes resume Friday.By Mark Duncan, APStudents and parents march to the high school in Chardon, Ohio, on Thursday to honor the three students who were killed in a shooting there Monday. The school re-opened to parents and students Thursday and classes resume Friday.The prosecutor says Lane, 17, had admitted firing 10 shots at a group of students in the high school cafeteria, killing Russell King Jr., 17, and Demitrius Hewlin and Daniel Parmertor, both 16. Lane also faces two counts of attempted aggravated murder and one count of felonious assault.Hewlin attended Chardon High. King and Parmertor were students at a vocational school and were waiting in the Chardon High cafeteria for their daily bus when they were shot.PHOTOS: STORY: MORE: The juvenile counts of aggravated murder and attempted aggravated murder would mean only a few years in detention if Lane is convicted. But Prosecutor David Joyce has already said he plans to try the boy as an adult, which could mean life in prison if he is found guilty. He remains in custody.At a press conference at the school, assistant football coach Frank Hall – who chased Lane from the cafeteria – offered his condolences to the victims and their families.Fatal shootings at U.S. middle, high schoolsSince the 1992-93 academic year, there have been at least seven shootings at U.S. middle and high schools in which three or more people died.Feb. 27, 2012Chardon High School in Chardon, OhioCasualties: 3 killed, 2 injuredArrested: T.J. Lane, 17Oct. 2, 2006Amish schoolhouse in Nickel Mines, Pa.Casualties: 6 killed, including suspect; 5 injuredSuspect: Charles Carl Roberts IV, 32, committed suicideMarch 21, 2005Red Lake High School in Red Lake, Minn.Casualties: 10, including suspect; 5 injuredSuspect: Jeff Weise, 16, committed suicideApril 20, 1999Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo.Casualties: 15 including, the two suspects; 23 woundedSuspects: Eric Harris, 18, and Dylan Klebold, 17, committedsuicideMarch 24, 1998Westside Middle School in Jonesboro, Ark.Casualties: 5 killed; 10 woundedConvicted: Andrew Golden, 11, and Mitchell Johnson, 13; sentenced to prison until age 21Dec. 1, 1997Heath High School in West Paducah, Ky.Casualties: 3 killed; 5 woundedConvicted: Michael Carneal, 14; sentenced to life in prisonFeb. 2, 1996Frontier Junior High School in Moses Lake, Wash.Casualties: 3 killed; 1 woundedConvicted: Barry Loukaitis, 16; sentenced to life in prisonReported by Lindsay PowersSources: National School Safety Center, Associated Press, Seattle Times”It’s an emotional time. To the victims and the families, I want to say, ‘I’m sorry. My thoughts and prayers are still with you.’ “Voice cracking, Hall said; “I’m not a hero, I’m a just a football coach and a study hall teacher. He thanked school administrators for emergency crisis training. “We all wished we never had to use it, but we used it and it worked,” he said.Earlier Thursday, hundreds of people gathered at the city square here Thursday morning as the community continued to grapple with Monday’s shooting rampage. Two other students were wounded in the attack.After a moment of silence and some words of remembrance, they quietly marched down the city’s roads to Chardon High where grief counselors, school staff members and community members met them.”Chardon needs to be here,” said Traci Arbogast, a stay-at-home mom, as she hugged her daughter, Amanda, a 16-year-old Chardon junior. “I think we need to work as a group and show that Chardon is united.”For her daughter, walking back to the suburban Cleveland school as a group made returning to what is also a crime scene a little easier. Amanda Arbogast attended elementary school through high school with King.”It’s nice being here instead of trying to tackle going back to school alone,” Amanda Arbogast said. “It’s good to walk together — to know we have each other and that the whole community is there for support.”Her mother said the future of Chardon’s recovery rests with its young. “The kids will heal us,” she said. “Chardon kids are strong. They are staying busy with fundraising and putting ribbons up. The kids are going to bring the community back.”Chardon School Superintendent Joseph Bergant II hugged several students inside and outside the school. He declined to makes any comments to reporters.Inside the school, the hallways were filled with red and black. Ribbons hung from lockers and cut-out red paper hearts were placed along the walls. Inside the cafeteria where the carnage took place, teddy bears, flowers and boxes of tissues marked the table where the shooting occurred. Some students sat at long brown tables recounting the shooting while others cried and pointed to the places where other students had run away from Monday’s gunfire.Along the walls of the cafeteria, there was a banner that read “Chardon our thoughts are with you all” from nearby Mentor High School. Personal, colorful messages from the Mentor students covered the banner. Chardon students used pens to add their own thoughts.Dr. David Schonfeld, director of the National Center for School Crisis and Bereavement at , said parents and teachers should be prepared for all kinds of issues to come to the surface for survivors – even difficulties “completely unrelated” to the shootings.”It kind of brings to the surface everything else that’s difficult – you need to be prepared for that in your kids,” he said.Schonfeld warned that experiencing a shooting an’t simply be talked through. “I don’t know that it’s ever going to make sense to me. It’s not something that you ever fully resolve.”Lane comes from a family with a violent history.In 1997, his father, Thomas Lane, was arrested after his mother, Sarah Nolan, reported that he had pushed her around their house, threw everything out of the cupboards and threw his dinner against a wall because he was upset about the meal, according to a police report from the Geauga County Sheriff’s Office. Nolan told deputies that Lane pulled her hair and threatened to kill her.In a dramatic arrest, sheriff’s deputies wrestled with Lane, who fought back violently, according to the report. They peppered-sprayed him, but he broke free and ran into a field. Deputies used a stun gun and pepper-sprayed him again. Lane continued kicking and punching. The officers were finally able to subdue him using their batons, the report said.Julie Gray, Lane’s second wife until their divorce in 2002, said TJ is close to the couple’s twin 12-year-old daughters and is a frequent visitor to her home. Gray said TJ was an avid skateboarder and recently spoke of attending college.Gray said one the twins, Anna, was with TJ Sunday night at Thomas Lane’s home. She said that they were all sitting around, watching home movies and laughing. “They were having a relaxing weekend,” Gray said. “They hung out, did things together. There was no sign.”TJ posted a dark poem about death on his Facebook page in December. But Gray says the poem was a for a school assignment, for which he received an A+.Contributing: Rick Hepp of Cleveland’s WKYC-TV;cheap Baltimore Ravens Gary Strauss, Greg Toppo and Marisol Bello in McLean, Va., Associated Press.