Posted on 04/10/2023 1:03:43 PM PDT by grundle
The Jan. 6 shooting of first-grade teacher Abigail Zwerner in Newport News stunned the community when police announced the child's actions were intentional.
The mother of a 6-year-old boy who seriously wounded his teacher with a gun in January will face charges in the shooting, a local prosecutor in Virginia said Monday.
A grand jury indicted Deja Taylor on charges of felony child neglect and a misdemeanor count of recklessly leaving a loaded firearm so as to endanger a child, Newport News Commonwealth's Attorney Howard Gwynn said. The indictment comes a month after Gwynn said he would not seek charges against the student.
"Every criminal case is unique in its facts, and these facts support these charges, but our investigation into the shooting continues," Gwynn said in a statement on Monday.
His office has also petitioned a circuit court to empanel a special grand jury to continue an investigation into potential security lapses that may have led to the shooting.
"If the Special Grand Jury determines that additional persons are criminally responsible under the law, it can return additional indictments," Gwynn said.
A lawyer for Taylor did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday about the charges.
A lawyer for Abigail Zwerner, the wounded teacher, said Monday that charges against the student’s mother are welcome but more people need to be held accountable.
“There were failures in accountability at multiple levels that led to Abby being shot and almost killed. Today’s announcement addresses but one of those failures,” lawyer Diane Toscano said, adding, “Our lawsuit makes clear that we believe the school division violated state law, and we are pursuing this in civil court. We will not allow school leaders to escape accountability for their role in this tragedy.”
A week ago, Zwerner filed a $40 million lawsuit alleging administrators at Richneck Elementary School shrugged off multiple warnings from staff and students who believed the boy had a gun and posed an imminent threat on the day of the shooting on Jan. 6.
The student shot Zwerner with a 9 mm handgun while she sat at a reading table in their first-grade classroom, according to officials.
Newport News police had praised Zwerner for managing to escort her class of about 20 students to safety even after she was seriously wounded in her left hand and chest. Police said the shooting was intentional.
The boy's family said in a previous statement that the weapon was "secured" in the home and that they have "always been committed to responsible gun ownership and keeping firearms out of the reach of children."
The family also said the boy has an acute disability and was receiving the "treatment he needs" under a court-ordered temporary detention at a medical facility.
According to police, his mother legally purchased the gun he used, but they haven't said how he obtained it or if it was safely secured as the family has claimed.
In the wake of the incident, an assistant principal accused of ignoring warnings resigned and the schools superintendent, George Parker III, was removed by the school board "without cause."
The district has also implemented metal detectors and installed a full-time security guard at Richneck.
"The safety and wellbeing of our staff and students is our most important priority," the Newport News school board said in a prior statement, adding that officials "will continue to do whatever it takes to ensure a safe and secure teaching and learning environment across all our schools."
The school district did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.
Zwerner's lawsuit also alleges the school district knew the boy had a history of violence and was required to have one of his parents with him during the school day, but on the day of the shooting, no parent was with him and he wasn't assigned a monitor.
The family's lawyer, James Ellenson, said this month that the allegations in the complaint involving the 6-year-old "should be taken with a large grain of salt."
"We of course continue to pray for Ms. Zwerner's complete recovery," he said.
Lock up the mother for life. When her son turns 18, let him serve the rest of her sentence.
....I would imagine that if this does come to pass, her Deja-vue won’t be very inspiring.....
Both need life in prison. Death sentence for the shooter.
I attended that school.
I’m guessing the demographics are substantially different?
Don’t know. Been a long time. Lots of military families.
Notice how they framed it in the first sentence.
This business of not prosecuting kids for doing stoopid criminal stuff just because they’re kids has to get fixed. Holding dumbass parents accountable has to be part of the fix. The notion that mom and dad can just shrug and claim ignorance of the kid’s dumb stuff just isn’t how it should work.
-—And then that claim of “acute disability” is another huge failure of the attempt to “mainstream” problem kids. It just doesn’t work and we still need those specialized institutions where these abnormal kids can get the particular attention they need.
It has to begin somewhere with someone.
see my #11
What color?
In many states, a person under a certain age cannot be prosecute for crimes based on the presumption that they cannot form criminal intent.
May be sent to some sort of facility until a certain age, but a conviction would be very unlikely.
I attended that school.
= = =
No bullet hole scars?
Not from that school. I was injured in the Tupac shooting in Vegas though.
Revolvers, even fully loaded, can be locked with a $1 padlock behind the trigger.
Not one mention of “father”.
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