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School Official on Trial for Ignoring Warnings Before 6-Year-Old Shot Teacher

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Casey Hayes
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Staff warned her a student had a gun, but she told them to wait.

A former school leader faces eight felony charges after a first-grade teacher was shot in her classroom.

We trust schools to be the safest place for our kids. When that trust is broken by the people in charge, it leaves a community searching for answers.

What happened

In January 2023, a six-year-old boy brought a 9mm handgun to Richneck Elementary in Newport News, Virginia. He shot his teacher, Abby Zwerner, while she sat at a reading table.

Before the shooting, staff members told assistant principal Ebony Parker that the boy was acting out. They warned her he likely had a weapon in his bag.

Prosecutors say Parker ignored these warnings. She allegedly told staff to wait because the school day was almost over and refused to let them search the boy.

What the money/evidence shows

  • 8 counts: The number of felony child neglect charges Parker faces, one for each bullet in the gun.
  • $10 million: The amount a jury awarded Zwerner in a civil case against Parker.
  • 5 years: The maximum prison time for each felony count.
  • 6 surgeries: The medical care Zwerner needed after the shooting.
  • 3.75 years: The prison sentence given to the boy's mother for her role in the incident.

The bigger question

When does a bad choice at work become a crime? This trial asks if school leaders can be held legally responsible when they fail to act on safety threats.

If a boss can ignore a report of a weapon without consequences, parents have to wonder who is really watching out for their kids. We need to know if this is about one person or a broken system.

The other side

Defense lawyers argue that Parker did not act with malice and that blaming one person for a systemic failure is dangerous. They suggest the school district's own gaps are to blame, not just one administrator. This argument faces a tough road given the evidence presented by staff.

What happens now

Parker is on trial in Newport News. If she is found guilty, she could spend decades in prison.

School boards across the country are watching this case closely. It serves as a warning that ignoring safety reports is no longer just a human resources issue; it is a matter of criminal law.

What we still don't know

  • Did Parker try to call her bosses for help before the shooting happened?
  • How will this verdict change other lawsuits filed by parents of students in that class?
  • Will Virginia pass new laws requiring police to be called for every weapon report on campus?

Transparency notes

Published: May 18, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.

Spot an error or missing context? Email hi@kindjoe.com and we will review and correct if needed.

Sources

External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.

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