Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawyers spar over benefits for teacher’s injuries

Educator suing after being shot by 6-year-old

- BY BEN FINLEY

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — Lawyers sparred in a Virginia courtroom Friday over whether a teacher who was shot by her 6-year-old student should get only workers’ compensati­on for her serious injuries.

Abby Zwerner is suing Newport News Public Schools for $40 million, alleging gross negligence against school administra­tors. But the school board is trying to block the lawsuit, arguing that Zwerner’s injuries fall under workers’ compensati­on.

The former first-grade teacher was hospitaliz­ed for nearly two weeks and endured multiple surgeries after a bullet struck her hand and chest. Workers’ compensati­on would provide up to nearly 10 years’ pay and lifetime medical benefits for physical and psychologi­cal injuries.

Zwerner attended Friday’s hearing before a judge, her left arm still supported by a sling and her left hand wrapped in a thick, cloth bandage.

One of her attorneys, Kevin Biniazan, asked the judge to allow Zwerner’s lawsuit to proceed to trial because “no first-grade teacher expects to be shot at work.”

“The particular danger of encounteri­ng a firearm is not in the nature of employment for a firstgrade teacher,” Biniazan said.

But Anne Lahren, an attorney for the school board, said the incident “falls squarely” under workers’ compensati­on because Zwerner was working in her capacity as a teacher. And Zwerner’s lawsuit centers on allegation­s of negligence at her workplace, which also fall under the law, Lahren added.

Robert Samuel, another school board lawyer, said: “This doesn’t mean that Ms. Zwerner doesn’t get benefits and is left out in the cold.”

Matthew Hoffman, a circuit court judge in Newport News, said he’ll rule on the matter in the next week. He’ll have to decide whether Zwerner’s allegation­s can move forward in court or if they belong before the workers’ compensati­on commission.

After the hearing, Zwerner stood with her attorneys outside the courtroom. She declined to answer direct questions from a gaggle of reporters, her face holding back emotion.

“It’s an overwhelmi­ng moment for her — I think we have to appreciate that,” Biniazan said. “It’s all culminatin­g in some ways on today. So, as much as Abby may have thoughts and comments, they’re all swirling around in her head, probably faster than she can articulate them. So I hope you can excuse her in speaking through us.”

Zwerner was shot at Richneck Elementary School in early January by one of her students. She rushed the rest of the children out of the classroom before she collapsed in the school’s office.

The former teacher says administra­tors ignored multiple warnings the boy had a gun that day and had routinely dismissed ongoing concerns about his troubling behavior. Legal experts say Zwerner’s lawsuit faces an uphill battle under Virginia’s uncommonly strict workers’ compensati­on law, which covers allegation­s of negligence.

Meanwhile, the mother of the 6-year-old boy who shot Zwerner is still awaiting sentencing for felony child neglect. Deja Taylor’s sentencing was scheduled for Friday afternoon but postponed until December.

Court records indicate the delay comes at the request of both the defense and prosecutor­s, in part because a report was not yet available from the guardian ad litem. In Virginia, a guardian ad litem is appointed to represent the interests of the child in cases alleging neglect.

Taylor faces up to five years in prison after pleading guilty, though prosecutor­s will recommend only a six-month sentence as part of a plea deal.

Taylor told police she believed her 9mm handgun was secured at home with a trigger lock. But authoritie­s said they never found a lock during searches of the home.

 ?? BILLY SCHUERMAN/THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT VIA AP ?? Abby Zwerner, right, a teacher shot by her 6-year-old student, leaves after a hearing Friday for a civil lawsuit she filed against the Newport News Public Schools in Newport News, Va.
BILLY SCHUERMAN/THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT VIA AP Abby Zwerner, right, a teacher shot by her 6-year-old student, leaves after a hearing Friday for a civil lawsuit she filed against the Newport News Public Schools in Newport News, Va.

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