The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Shot fired by teacher in Dalton classroom

Police charge social studies educator; no students in room at the time.

- Lauren.foreman@ajc.com, ellen.eldridge@ajc.com By Lauren Foreman and Ellen Eldridge

A North Georgia social studies teacher, known as the longtime “radio voice” of Dalton High School football and basketball, is facing charges after he fired at least one shot inside a classroom Wednesday, and he once tried to confess to having someone killed, police said.

The alleged confession was one of two previous incidents involving Randal Davidson and local police.

Dalton police could not verify any of the informatio­n Davidson said on March 21, 2016, about having two friends kill someone on his behalf. Police ultimately took him to a medical center because he was having suicidal thoughts, according to a police report.

Then, in January 2017, Davidson disappeare­d from the high school campus after saying he didn’t feel well and leaving early. He was found hours later sitting on a curb about a mile away, unable or unwilling to respond to police, according to the report. He was again taken to the hospital and no further action was taken by officers.

Wednesday’s incident at Dalton High, about 91 miles northwest of downtown Atlanta, sent panicked students running through hallways and unnerved parents who were already on edge in the wake of a mass shooting at a Florida high school on Feb. 14.

About 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, some students tried to get into Davidson’s classroom and he would not let

them in, Dalton police spokesman Bruce Frazier said.

They alerted Principal Steve Bartoo. When Bartoo came to the door and used his key to try to open it, Davidson forcibly closed it on him, Frazier said.

At that point, Bartoo heard one gunshot. The bullet went through a window and outside, Frazier said.

Police said Davidson, 53, used a snub-nosed .38 revolver. Although guns are not allowed on the campus, Frazier said Davidson brought the gun into class in his computer case.

The school has an assigned school resource officer, but at the time of the shooting he was at the junior high school meeting with that school’s officer, according to Dalton police Assistant Chief Cliff Cason.

Frazier said his officers responded within a matter of minutes.

Officers evacuated a hallway and secured the area first. During the evacuation, a female student was hurt, police said. That student was treated for an ankle injury.

After about 30 to 45 minutes, authoritie­s got Davidson to surrender.

He has been charged with aggravated assault, carrying a weapon on school grounds, terroristi­c threats, reckless conduct, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime and disrupting a public school, Frazier said.

Classes were canceled Thursday but are to resume Friday. Police plan to be on campus.

Davidson has been at Dalton High since 2004. In 2012, he was recognized as the school’s top teacher, according to Dalton Public Schools.

“He’s a good teacher,” Bartoo said.

Davidson moved to Dalton in 1995 and became sports and news director at WBLJ-AM radio, the district said.

The shooting occurred two weeks after 17 students and faculty members were killed inside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. Students returned to the school for the first time Wednesday.

During a listening session last week with parents and survivors of the rampage, President Donald Trump said if one of the victims, a football coach, had been armed “he would have shot and that would have been the end of it.”

In August, Lithia Springs High School closed after a teacher shot himself in his classroom office before students arrived. Jonathan Freeman survived the shooting.

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