A six-year-old boy allegedly shot and wounded a teacher at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Virginia, prompting consternation from local officials who vowed to find answers and prevent such an event from happening again.
The injury to the teacher, a woman in her 30s, was considered life-threatening, although she had shown some improvement in the hospital, Police Chief Steve Drew told reporters.
There was no further explanation for how the six-year-old acquired the handgun.
Police described it as an “altercation” in the first-grade classroom that resulted in one shot fired.
“This was not an accidental shooting,” Drew said.
“I want to know where that firearm came from.”
Drew said the boy was in custody.
No students were injured but they had been moved to a gymnasium for their safety and counsellors had been made available, he said.
“They are safe. They are interacting with officers and having some fun, slapping some high fives and teasing each other,” Drew said.
Students were reunited with their parents under a school escort.
“Right now it’s still raw but what I will tell you is there’s going to be a full after-action (report), not only internally from the city council with the school board and others, but we are going to ensure that we have the right steps and policies so that this doesn’t happen again,” Newport News Mayor Phillip Jones told reporters.
In the same news conference, schools superintendent George Parker lamented educators’ inability to keep guns out of school, saying he was “shocked” and “disheartened”.
“We need to keep guns out of the hands of our young people,” Parker said.
“I cannot control access to weapons. My teachers cannot control access to weapons.”
Parker said all school campuses are equipped for random metal detector searches but they were not deployed at Richneck Elementary on Friday.