Tribe reels from Washington state school shooting (AP) — The Tulalip Indian Reservation sits on the Puget Sound on Washington's scenic northwest coast, a small community where everyone is "related in one shape or form." Tribal members struggled to find answers Saturday following a shooting at a nearby high school in which a young gunman from a prominent Tulalip family opened fire, killing one person and injuring four others - including two of his cousins. Because from all we have determined, he was a happy-go-lucky, normal kid. The shooter was Jaylen Fryberg, a popular freshman at Marysville-Pilchuck High School, a government official with direct knowledge of the shooting told The Associated Press. First-year social studies teacher Megan Silberberger intervened in the attack in Marysville, 30 miles north of Seattle, teachers union president Randy Davis said. The attacker killed one girl and seriously wounded four others before he died of what police said was a self-inflicted wound. The Marysville School District released a statement from he in which she thanked people for support and asked for privacy. Students and parents said Fryberg was a member of a prominent family from the nearby Tulalip Indian tribes and a freshman who played on the high school football team.