A former Virginia school administrator is facing a $40 million lawsuit after allegedly ignoring multiple warnings that a six-year-old student had brought a gun to the classroom just hours before shooting his teacher, Abby Zwerner. According to attorney Diane Toscano's opening statements, Ebony Parker failed to act on warnings from four different people who reported concerns about the student carrying a firearm.
On January 2023, Zwerner was shot in the hand and chest while teaching first-grade at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News. The shooting sparked widespread shock and outrage, particularly given that the child was just six years old. Tozwerner spent nearly two weeks in the hospital, underwent multiple surgeries, and now suffers from limited use of her left hand due to a bullet still lodged in her chest.
The lawsuit accuses Parker of making "bad decisions and choices" on January 2023, including failing to search the student or remove him from the classroom. According to Toscano, Parker had the authority to take action but chose not to. The shooting occurred just days after the student returned from a suspension for slamming Zwerner's phone.
Parker's defense team, led by attorney Daniel Hogan, maintains that no one could have predicted that a six-year-old child would bring a firearm to school and that decision-making in public schools is "cooperative" and "collaborative." Hogan warned jurors against hindsight bias and "Monday morning quarterbacking," arguing that the law requires them to examine Parker's decisions at the time they made them, rather than judging her after the fact.
The case has significant implications for how school administrators handle reports of student safety concerns. With one defendant facing a $40 million civil lawsuit and another defendant already facing separate felony child neglect charges, this case highlights the need for proactive measures to ensure student safety in public schools.
On January 2023, Zwerner was shot in the hand and chest while teaching first-grade at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News. The shooting sparked widespread shock and outrage, particularly given that the child was just six years old. Tozwerner spent nearly two weeks in the hospital, underwent multiple surgeries, and now suffers from limited use of her left hand due to a bullet still lodged in her chest.
The lawsuit accuses Parker of making "bad decisions and choices" on January 2023, including failing to search the student or remove him from the classroom. According to Toscano, Parker had the authority to take action but chose not to. The shooting occurred just days after the student returned from a suspension for slamming Zwerner's phone.
Parker's defense team, led by attorney Daniel Hogan, maintains that no one could have predicted that a six-year-old child would bring a firearm to school and that decision-making in public schools is "cooperative" and "collaborative." Hogan warned jurors against hindsight bias and "Monday morning quarterbacking," arguing that the law requires them to examine Parker's decisions at the time they made them, rather than judging her after the fact.
The case has significant implications for how school administrators handle reports of student safety concerns. With one defendant facing a $40 million civil lawsuit and another defendant already facing separate felony child neglect charges, this case highlights the need for proactive measures to ensure student safety in public schools.