Chattanooga Times Free Press

Judge set to decide whether school shooter’s journals are public records

- BY TRAVIS LOLLER

NASHVILLE — Some of the writings of a former student who fatally shot three 9-year-old children and three adult staff members at a private Christian elementary school last year can be released to the public without compromisi­ng the investigat­ion, a lawyer for police said in court Tuesday.

The comments by attorney Lora Fox came on day one of a two-day hearing over whether records collected by police investigat­ing the March 27, 2023, shooting at the Covenant School can be made public.

Metro Nashville Police have said an exception to the Tennessee Public Records Act allows them to keep the records private until their investigat­ion is complete. On Tuesday, Fox maintained that position but said a subset of the records — the writings found in the shooter’s car — “Metro believes can be released.”

However, an attorney representi­ng the Covenant School argued a different law forbidding the release of informatio­n, records, or plans related to school security should prevail. Construed broadly, the school safety exception could apply to all of the shooter’s writings, Peter Klett argued, because releasing them could inspire copycats.

“You do have individual­s who could take the writings of the shooter and commit violence against the Covenant School or some other school. As a result, your honor, we believe that that presents a serious security threat to the Covenant School and other schools in this community and elsewhere,” he said.

Those seeking the immediate release of the records include news outlets, a gun rights group, a law enforcemen­t nonprofit and state Sen. Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanoog­a. They argue there is no meaningful criminal investigat­ion underway since the shooter is dead, killed by police. It does not matter that the investigat­ion is officially still open.

“If there is an open investigat­ion but not a contemplat­ed criminal action, the records need to come out,” said attorney Nicholas Berry, who represents Star News Digital Media. “A theoretica­lly possible criminal proceeding is not sufficient.”

The shooter left behind at least 20 journals, a suicide note and a memoir, according to court filings. A few pages of one journal were leaked to a conservati­ve commentato­r who posted them to social media in November. Part of the interest in the records stems from the fact that the shooter, who police say was “assigned female at birth,” may have identified as a transgende­r man.

U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, of Missouri, is among those who have promoted a theory that the shooting was a hate crime against Christians. The delay in releasing the writings has fueled speculatio­n — particular­ly in conservati­ve circles — regarding what they might contain.

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