Lane walked into the cafeteria at Chardon High School, about thirty miles outside Cleveland.
Lane was known by many around Chardon High, 30 miles east of Cleveland.
He is not involved in the counseling of the Chardon High School students.
Lane brought to Chardon High School belonged to his uncle, who had bought it in 2010, at a gun shop.
After the shooting, an assistant football coach chased Lane out of Chardon High, and police arrested him nearby a short time later.
Rep. John Patterson, who represents Chardon, said he planned to introduce a bill to designate highways in the names of the three victims.
The march in Chardon rekindled memories of the walk taken along the same route by grieving students as they returned to classes three days after the shooting.
The official said the suspected shooter is a Lake Academy student, not a student at Chardon High School, where the shootings occurred, according to the Associated Press.
The march by Chardon High School students, walking arm-in-arm in the damp cold from the school to the town square, was an emotional highlight during the day's commemoration.
Mr. Lane began living off and on with his paternal grandparents in Chardon several years ago, said Carl Henderson, a former Chardon police officer and Geauga County Sheriff, who lived near the family.
The Virginia Tech students have visited Chardon more than a half dozen times over the past year to promote healing, said Fetchik, wearing a lapel ribbon in the school's red and black colors.
The day's activities in Chardon highlighted the anniversary but served to keep students busy with projects including writing messages of support, artwork, memorial wreaths and making security blankets for future victims of tragedies.
Lane pleaded guilty last month to three counts of aggravated murder, two counts of attempted aggravated murder and weapons-related charges in the February 27, 2012, shooting at Chardon High School in northeastern Ohio.
Rachel Loder, 16, who was a sophomore at the time of the Chardon shootings, received such a security blanket and cried and embraced it at difficult times during the past year, her father George Loder said.
"Folks, just bear with us, we have a lot of homework to do, " Chardon Police Chief Tim McKenna said at an afternoon news conference in Chardon, a town of 5, 100 about 30 miles east of Cleveland.
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