Teacher shot by 6-year-old hailed as a hero for evacuating kids
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[January 10, 2023]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - Police on Monday hailed a 25-year-old Virginia teacher as a
hero for evacuating students from her classroom even after she was shot
by a 6-year-old student.
The teacher, Abigail Zwerner, was in stable condition on Monday,
following the Friday afternoon shooting at Richneck Elementary School in
Newport News, Virginia, Police Chief Steve Drew told a news conference.
Meanwhile the 6-year-old boy was in temporary custody at a medical
facility, and a judge had until Tuesday to determine whether to extend a
temporary order keeping him in custody, Drew said.
It was too soon to determine whether the boy's parents might be charged
with a crime for failing to secure the weapon, which the boy's mother
had bought legally, he said.
The police chief called Zwerner "a hero."
"She made sure that every one of those kids were out of that room, that
she was the last one to leave. And she took it upon herself in that
situation, after suffering a gunshot wound, to make sure that her
students ... were safe," Drew said.
The boy had taken the 9 mm Taurus handgun from home, placed it in his
backpack and removed it while Zwerner was teaching class, Drew said. He
pointed and fired once. Zwerner, who took a defensive posture, was shot
through the hand and into the chest.
After the shot, another woman who works at the school rushed into the
classroom and held the boy down while Zwerner escorted the estimated 16
to 20 students out, Drew said. When police arrived, they found the gun
on the floor.
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Police vehicles are seen parked outside
Richneck Elementary School, where according to the police, a
six-year-old boy shot and wounded a teacher, in Newport News,
Virginia, U.S., January 6, 2023, in this screen grab from a handout
video. WVEC via ABC/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
"I wish that we never had to have it asked. How does a 6-year-old
know how to use a firearm? I don't know that I could give you an
adequate answer," Drew said.
While police and prosecutors continued their investigation,
educators vowed to re-examine security protocols.
Newport News Public Schools Superintendent George Parker told
reporters the school was unprepared for a 6-year-old bringing a gun
to school and firing it, saying this marked only the third time
since 1970 that a child aged 6 or younger had discharged a weapon at
a U.S. school.
Until now, security measures focused on using metal detectors at
high schools and drilling for active-shooter situations at all
levels.
"I hate to be at this point where I'm considering this .... It may
warrant us to reconsider metal detectors at all of our buildings,"
Parker said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Bradley Perrett)
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