Shropshire Star

Pupil arrested with gun at school which saw deadly shooting

The 14-year-old pupil took a gun to Apalachee High School in Georgia where four people were killed in September.

By contributor By Associated Press Reporter
Published
A memorial at Apalachee High School after the shooting in September
A memorial at Apalachee High School after the shooting in September (AP)

A 14-year-old pupil has been arrested after bringing a gun to Apalachee High School – the Georgia high school where a shooting in September killed two teachers and two pupils.

The Barrow County Sheriff’s Office said school resource officers arrested the boy “without incident” on Wednesday afternoon at the school in Winder, about 40 miles northeast of Atlanta.

Deputies said the pupil was “co-operative and compliant when encountered by law enforcement officers and there have been no reports of the student threatening anyone with the gun”.

The pupil, who was not named because of his age, was taken to a juvenile detention centre in Gainesville. He is charged with two counts of possessing a weapon on school grounds, theft and being a minor in possession of a gun.

Deputies did not say what kind of gun was seized. Authorities said the student was arrested shortly after 2pm at school, but they did not say when he arrived or release details of the circumstances of the arrest.

The Barrow County school district cancelled classes on Thursday at the high school with nearly 2,000 students.

The September 4 shooting killed teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39, and Cristina Irimie, 53, and pupils Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo, both 14. Another teacher and eight more students were wounded, seven of them hit by gunfire.

Colt Gray, who was 14 at the time, was charged as an adult after the September shooting and was indicted on 55 counts, including murder and 25 counts of aggravated assault at the high school. He has pleaded not guilty.

His father Colin Gray was indicted on 29 counts, including two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of involuntary manslaughter, based on prosecutors’ contention that he let his son access guns and ammunition “after receiving sufficient warning” that the boy would harm others. Colin Gray has also pleaded not guilty.

The district told parents that students and staff should not report to school on Thursday and that on-campus extra-curricular activities were cancelled.

The district also cancelled an open house to view new portable classrooms that were erected on campus to replace classrooms in the now closed-off hallway where the shooting took place

Wednesday’s arrest came after pupils, teachers and parents attended a Barrow County school board meeting on Tuesday to demand that the district take additional visible measures to enhance security at Apalachee.

They suggested even more school resource officers, mandating clear backpacks and buying a computerised camera system that the maker says can detect guns using artificial intelligence.

Superintendent Dallas LeDuff said at the meeting that the district will present results from a security survey later this month and has met with school resource officers to discuss what security measures they recommend.

“It has been a very intentional process,” Mr LeDuff said. “I think I am proud of the work our staff has done.”

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