Abby Zwerner shot by 6-year-old as she tried to confiscate gun

The first-grade teacher in Virginia who was shot by her 6-year-old student was about to confiscate the gun when the child pulled the trigger.

“She was going to confiscate it — and that’s when he shot,” Brittaney Gregory, whose son was in the class, told the Washington Post.

Abby Zwerner, 25, was shot about 2 p.m. Friday at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Va. She was listed in serious but stable condition at Riverside Regional Medical Center, the paper reported.

The teacher has been hailed as a hero for warning the other kids to flee when the shooting erupted.

The 6-year-old has been taken into custody after the shocking incident, which Police Chief Steve Drew said resulted from a fight and was “not an accidental shooting.”

It was unclear what sparked the fight or how the boy managed to get a hold of the weapon.

Abby Zwerner, 25, of Williamsburg, Virginia, was shot intentionally by a student Friday.
Virginia teacher Abby Zwerner, 25,
“She was going to confiscate (the gun) — and that’s when he shot,” said Brittaney Gregory, whose son was in the class, referring to teacher Abby Zwerner, above.

Gregory said that when the teacher told the children to run, they fled to another teacher’s classroom and remained under lockdown.

The mom described Zwerner as her son’s favorite teacher, who would leave notes in his backpack.

“I hope you had a great day,” Gregory said the teacher wrote in one. “I want you to know your smile is contagious,” another said, according to the parent.

Gregory said her son is “still in shock” and has nightmares from the shooting.

“He normally sleeps in his own room but the night of the shooting he came into my room. He was talking in his sleep, saying we got to get out of here,” she told the paper, adding that she plans to take her son to a therapist.

Gregory said she found out about the shooting when a neighbor asked her if she saw a report on TV.

“What school?” she said she asked. “‘Your son’s school. They said it was the first grade,’” the neighbor told her, she said.

“My heart instantly dropped,” Gregory said.

When she arrived at the scene, police said no kids had been hurt.

“Not physically, but this is going to scar him mentally,” she said she thought.

When she was finally reunited with her son, she said “you could tell on his face what he was going through. He was a deer in the headlights.”

Authorities said it wasn’t immediately clear what sparked the argument.
AP

Meanwhile, another student described the frantic moments after the shooting.

“We were doing math … an announcer came on she was like, ‘Lockdown, I repeat lockdown,’” fifth-grader Novah Jones, who was in another classroom, told CNN.

“I was scared … it was like my first lockdown and I didn’t know what to do, so I just hid under my desk like everybody was,” she said during an interview that included her mother, Kasheba Jones.

As police raced to the scene, Novah informed her mother about the lockdown.

The young student who shot Zwerner was taken into custody.
ABC4

“I texted her, ‘Mom, help,’” she said.

“I couldn’t breathe I was in shock,” her mother, Kasheba told CNN.

Novah said she had “flashbacks” found it difficult to sleep that night because she worried that the boy “still had the gun and he was going to come to my house.”

Andrew Block, an associate professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, said it is unlikely the shooter could be prosecuted even though there is no minimum age for being charged with a crime in Virginia.

“As a practical matter, it would be next to impossible to prosecute a 6-year-old, no matter how serious,” Block, the former director of the Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice, told the Washington Post.

He cited the “infancy defense,” in which people under age 7 do not have the ability or mental state to form the intent to commit a crime.

“The bigger barrier, presuming the prosecution could overcome that, is all defendants have to be competent to stand trial,” Block told the outlet.

“That means you have to understand the nature of legal proceedings against you and assist in your own defense. There’s no way a 6-year-old would meet that criteria,” he added.

But Block noted that an adult could face misdemeanor charges if the pistol came from a home where the child lives because under state law, guns must be secured from kids under 14.

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Virginia football team to attend funerals of three teammates

The entire Virginia Cavaliers football team will attend the funeral service of D’Sean Perry on Saturday in Miami. The memorial is the first of three services for their late teammates. The full team will be at each funeral, according to ESPN.

Virginia will be at the memorial service for Devin Chandler on Sunday in Virginia Beach, Virginia, and the celebration of life service for Lavel Davis Jr. on Wednesday in North Charleston, South Carolina. Perry, Chandler and Davis were shot and killed on a charter bus Nov. 13 after returning home from a class trip. 

The entire Virginia football team will attend the funerals of Lavel Davis Jr., D’Sean Perry and Devin Chandler.
Getty Images, AP

The University has been in mourning and held a memorial service for the three players last Saturday at John Paul Jones Arena. More than 9,000 people were in attendance including family, friends, and the entire team. 

Christopher Darnell Jones Jr. has been charged with three counts of second-degree murder and the use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. There is a case status hearing scheduled for Dec. 8. Jones Jr. has also bee charged with two counts of malicious wounding and additional gun-related charges related to the shooting.

Virginia was scheduled to play their final game of the season at Virginia Tech on Saturday. However, the game was canceled because the Cavaliers wanted to attend their teammates funerals.

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Vigil held for UVA students Davin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr., D’Sean Perry

Thousands of University of Virginia students and community members flooded the college’s South Lawn Monday night for an emotional vigil honoring three students killed in a shooting one night earlier.

Mourners lit candles and left flowers in remembrance of Davin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr. and D’Sean Perry, three UVA football players who were fatally shot when a gunman opened fire at their team bus on campus.

Their deaths have left the tight-knit football team reeling and many players openly wept as mourners paid tribute to the slain young men.

“It’s a void that we will feel for a long time. This team is very, very close,” the team’s former director of player relations, Jordan Bullock, told The Post. “To lose one is tragic, to lose three is just devastating.”

Bullock, 28, said it’s heartbreaking that the victims were taken so soon and will never get to graduate.

He said he believed Perry was destined for greatness.

D’Sean Perry was in the midst of his junior season for the Cavaliers.
University of Virginia

“D’Sean walked around with a curiosity of the world that would have taken him places,” Bullock said. “I think he would have grown up to be an influential person.”

He added that the student was a “silent leader” who people gravitated to.

“He had this ability just to connect with anybody.”

Lavel Davis Jr. was a wide receiver for Virginia.
University of Virginia

Bullock said he spoke to Davis last week at a UVA basketball game.

“He looked happy. Last season he was out because of an injury,” he said. “I think he was just happy to be back on the team and contribute.”

“Lavel was someone who always carried a smile on his face,” he added.

Devin Chandler was described as a “funny and passionate person” by his former roommate.
University of Virginia

Football player Chayce Chalmers, 21, a safety for the UVA team and former roommate of Chandler’s, was in shock over the senseless violence.

“I don’t believe it,” he told The Post of the shooting, his voice breaking. “It doesn’t feel real. It doesn’t feel real at all.”

He said Chandler was a funny and passionate person who was dedicated to football and enjoyed playing video games.

“He was a great, great guy,” Chalmers said of his roommate.

The vigil took place on the university’s South Lawn.

Chalmers called Perry “iconic” and said Davis was hardworking and “up and coming.”

“[Perry’s] a quiet guy. He’s hilarious. He knew how to get the team motivated,” he said, still speaking in the present. “He’s iconic, man.”

The football player said all three men were like family who shared a special bond.

“Those were my brothers, my teammates,” Chalmers said. “I worked my tail off with them, I cried with them.”

Another player expressed similar bonds with the victims.

“I’ll miss them a lot and I love them very much,” tight end Henry Duke told The Post.

Police arrested UVA student Christopher Darnell Jones Jr. and charged him with three counts of second-degree murder. He is being held at Henrico jail.

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University of Virginia gunman ID’d as Christopher Darnell Jones, considered armed

Students and staff at the University of Virginia were sheltering in place Sunday night as a gunman remained on the loose following a shooting at the college’s Charlottesville campus.

University police said the suspect, identified as Christopher Darnell Jones, should be considered “armed and dangerous” and advised community members to stay inside.

Shots rang out in the area of Culbreth Road on university grounds, UVA police announced around 10:30 p.m.

“UVA Alert: ACTIVE ATTACKER firearm reported in area of Culbreth Road. RUN HIDE FIGHT,” the department tweeted about 10 minutes later.

The shooting suspect was described as a black male wearing a burgundy jacket, blue jeans and red shoes, according to the campus cops. He could be driving a black SUV.

Shots rang out in the area of Culbreth Road on university grounds, UVA police announced.
Facebook/UVA

It’s unclear if anyone was struck by bullets or injured in the shooting.

The shelter in place order remained in effect for at least three hours as the suspect remained at large.



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Parkland shooter Nikolas Cruz’s siblings to testify on his behalf

The brother and sister of Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz are expected to testify on his behalf this week, when the killer’s defense attorneys unveil their case at his sentencing trial.

Arguing that his troubled childhood warrants some measure of mercy, Cruz’s counsel will lobby jurors in Florida to give him a sentence of life in prison, rather than the death penalty.

His half-sister, Danielle Woodard, 35, and brother, Zachary Cruz, 22, are expected to be questioned on the circumstances of their infamous sibling’s upbringing.

Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz’s siblings are expected to testify on his behalf at his sentencing trial this week.
Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun Sentinel via AP, Pool
Zachary Cruz, 22, and Danielle Woodard, 35, will answer questions about Cruz’s childhood.
Miami-Dade Corrections, Broward

Woodward, who shares her birth mother with Cruz, is currently behind bars awaiting trial for allegedly car-jacking a 72-year-old woman in Broward County in 2020, and will be transferred from the jail to testify.

She has a long criminal history and has served several stints behind bars since her youth.

While their mother put Cruz up for adoption while still an infant, Woodard is expected to tell jurors about her drug and alcohol use while pregnant with him.

Cruz pleaded guilty to killing 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on February 14, 2018.
AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File
Anne Ramsay holding up a photo of her daughter Helena, a victim of the Parkland shooting, at Cruz’s trial on August 4, 2022.
Amy Beth Bennett/South Florida Sun Sentinel via AP, Pool

Zachary Cruz, who was hit with six months probation for trespassing at the shooting site after the murders, is expected to answer questions about his brother’s early life.

The defense team will highlight several traumas Nikolas Cruz endured as a child, including his mother’s cocaine and alcohol use while pregnant, his alleged sexual abuse by an unidentified “peer” and his adoptive father’s death at age 5.

Cruz’s lawyers will also bring up his acute mental health problems, bullying he endured at school and his adoptive mother’s passing months prior to the Feb. 14, 2018 massacre.

Cruz, then 19, opened fire at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and killed 14 students and three staffers in one of the worst mass shootings in the nation’s history. He has pleaded guilty to 17 counts of first-degree murder.

The defense deferred giving their opening statement at the start of the trial, and will do so as early as Monday.

Prosecutors presented Cruz’s crimes in graphic detail, with jurors watching footage of the bloodshed and touring the fenced-off crime scene.

Relatives and friends of those killed have given wrenching testimony about their torment, at times drawing tears from Cruz’s lawyers.

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