Baltimore Sun

Teen ‘has no life left in her’

Victim of Great Mills High School shooting to be taken off life support, family says

- By Ian Duncan

Speaking in a hushed hospital lobby, the parents of the 16-year-old girl wounded in the shooting at Great Mills High School in Southern Maryland said they would take her off life support Thursday evening.

Jaelynn Willey was left brain-dead after a 17-year-old boy shot her in the head Tuesday morning, said her mother, Melissa Willey.

“As of now Jaelynn is still on life support but she will not make it,” Willey said. “She is brain dead and has nothing, no life, left in her.”

Willey spoke to reporters at the University of Maryland Prince George’s Hospital Center, where Jaelynn is being treated. She held Jaelynn’s youngest sibling, who babbled as she shared the news, and her husband, Daniel, stood by her side.

Other family stood behind Willey as she spoke and a group of friends stood off to one side.

Jaelynn Willey was rushed to the hospital in Cheverly after the Tuesday morning shooting at the St. Mary’s County high school. Jaelynn Willey

Authoritie­s have said that 17-year-old Austin Wyatt Rollins, also a student at Great Mills, used a handgun to shoot Willey. A 14-year-old boy, Desmond Barnes, also was shot in the leg.

Rollins was confronted by the school resource officer, Sheriff’s Deputy Blaine Gaskill, who fired at him as Rollins also fired. Rollins later died at a hospital.

Barnes was released from a hospital Wednesday after being treated.

The St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday that Rollins took the gun from his father, who had acquired it legally. The sheriff’s office also said that the shooting was not a random act. There’s evidence that Rollins and Willey had “a prior relationsh­ip which recently ended,” according to the sheriff’s office.

The shooting added fresh fuel to a renewed national debate about how to keep students safe from gunmen in schools. Last month, 17 students and teachers were slain at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., by a gunman wielding a semi-automatic assault rifle.

Politician­s have proposed new gun restrictio­ns and measures to fortify schools.

Students from around the nation are poised to rally Saturday in Washington and elsewhere in what they’re calling the March for Our Lives.

Amid the debate, the scene in the hospital lobby was poignantly personal.

Willey, who said her daughter was the second of nine children, spoke with little obvious emotion and apologized that her baby was being loud. She said she thought it was important to share the news of the family’s decision personally.

“I felt like as her mom I needed to make that statement to everybody,” she said.

Supporters of Jaelynn Willey and her family set up an online page for wellwisher­s to provide donations. It had raised $66,000 by Thursday evening.

Kimberly Dennis, the mother of Desmond Barnes, issued a statement earlier Thursday saying the family was grateful he was doing well. She thanked those who treated Desmond and prayed for him.

“We remain deeply saddened and shocked by this shooting incident and continue to pray for the other victim and her family during this difficult time,” Dennis wrote. “We are also praying for the entire Great Mills High School family and young people around this country.”

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