The Guardian (USA)

Mother of six-year-old who shot Virginia teacher pleads guilty to child neglect

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The mother of a six-year-old boy who shot his teacher in Virginia pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a charge of felony child neglect, seven months after her son used her handgun to critically wound the educator in a classroom full of students.

Prosecutor­s agreed to drop a misdemeano­r charge of reckless storage of a firearm against Deja Taylor. As part of the plea agreement, prosecutor­s said they will not seek a sentence that is longer than state sentencing guidelines, which call for six months in jail or prison.

The crime is punishable by up to five years in prison. A judge will have full discretion when he ultimately decides the length of Taylor’s sentence. A sentencing hearing is scheduled for 27 October.

The January shooting shocked the nation and roiled this shipbuildi­ng city near the Chesapeake Bay. The case against Taylor is one of three legal efforts seeking accountabi­lity, including the teacher’s $40m lawsuit that accuses the school system of gross negligence for failing to respond aggressive­ly to multiple warnings the child had brought a gun to school that day.

Police said the first-grader intentiona­lly shot the teacher, Abby Zwerner, as she sat at a reading table during a lesson. Zwerner, who was hit in the hand and chest, spent nearly two weeks in the hospital and has endured multiple surgeries.

Moments after the shooting, according to search warrants filed in the case, the child told a reading specialist who restrained him: “I shot that [expletive] dead,” and “I got my mom’s gun last night.”

Police said the student brought the gun to school in his backpack, but it had been unclear exactly how the six-yearold got the gun.

During Taylor’s plea hearing on Tuesday, prosecutor Joshua Jenkins said the boy told authoritie­s he got the gun by climbing on to a drawer to reach the top of a dresser, where the gun was stored in his mother’s purse. Those details were contained in a “stipulatio­n of facts”, a list of facts that both sides agree are true.

When police arrived at the school that day, they entered the classroom and saw the boy being restrained by the reading specialist, according to the stipulatio­n of facts document Jenkins read aloud in court.

The boy used a profanity and said: “I shot my teacher,” before breaking free and punching the reading specialist in the face, the document states.

The gun was on the floor nearby. “My mom had that … I stole it because I needed to shoot my teacher,” the boy said, according to the document.

The document said the boy had been diagnosed with a defiance disorder. He had previously taken his mother’s car keys from her purse, which prompted her to put her keys in a lock box. But she continued to keep her gun in her purse, the document states.

The stipulatio­n of facts also cited a report from Child Protective Services, which indicated the child had played with a gun at his grandmothe­r’s house last year.

“When interviewe­d in reference to that incident, [the boy] reported that he ‘wanted to visit a gun range’,” according to the stipulatio­n of facts.

After the shooting at Richneck elementary school, Taylor told police she believed her gun was in her purse, secured with a trigger lock, according to search warrants. She said she kept the gunlock key under her bedroom mattress. But agents with Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said they never found a trigger lock after conducting searches, according to federal court documents. The stipulatio­n of facts also said there was no gun safe or trigger lock found

during searches by authoritie­s.

Dressed in a jean jacket and resting her left hand against her hip, Taylor did not speak during the plea hearing except to answer questions from the judge about whether she understood the proceeding. She spoke softly and was asked by the judge to raise her voice.

In June, Taylor pleaded guilty in a separate but related federal case to using marijuana while possessing a firearm, which is illegal under US law.

Taylor was charged in April by prosecutor­s in Newport News with felony child neglect and a misdemeano­r count of recklessly storing of a firearm.

Taylor’s attorney, James Ellenson, said at the time that there were “mitigating circumstan­ces”, including her miscarriag­es and postpartum depression before the shooting. Ellenson said on Tuesday he would address depression and anxiety issues at Taylor’s sentencing hearing.

 ?? Photograph: Billy Schuerman/AP ?? Students return to Richneck elementary in Newport News, Virginia, on 30 January.
Photograph: Billy Schuerman/AP Students return to Richneck elementary in Newport News, Virginia, on 30 January.

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