Crime & Safety

‘I Did It’: VA Boy, 6, Boasted About Shooting Teacher, Report Says

The first-grader at Richneck Elementary School told school officials he "got his mom's gun" and shot Abigail Zwerner, a report said.

A 6-year-old boy who police say shot his first-grade teacher at a Newport News elementary school earlier this year boasted about the shooting and admitted to using his mother's gun, according to a new report.
A 6-year-old boy who police say shot his first-grade teacher at a Newport News elementary school earlier this year boasted about the shooting and admitted to using his mother's gun, according to a new report. (AP Photo/Denise Lavoie, File)

NEWPORT NEWS, VA — A 6-year-old boy who police say shot his first-grade teacher at a Newport News elementary school earlier this year boasted about the shooting, telling school officials he "shot that b---- dead," according to unsealed redacted search warrants obtained by WTKR-TV.

The documents further detail the Jan. 6 shooting at Richneck Elementary School, where police said the boy used his mother's 9mm handgun to shoot teacher Abigail Zwerner, who survived the attack. Police said the boy took the gun to school and pulled it from his backpack before using it to shoot Zwerner.

Newport News Police Chief Steve Drew has repeatedly characterized the shooting as "intentional," saying the boy aimed at Zwerner and fired one round, striking her in the hand and chest. The shot resulted in severe injuries, including a lung collapse.

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Zwerner spent two weeks in the hospital before she was released.

According to the documents obtained by WTKR, the boy made the comments when a staff member restrained him after the shooting, saying, "I did it" and "I got my mom's gun last night."

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The boy's mother, Deja Taylor, was charged with felony child neglect following the shooting and failing to secure the handgun used to shoot Zwerner. A plea hearing on the charges is scheduled for Aug. 15, WTKR reported.

Taylor also pleaded guilty to federal gun charges, including using a controlled substance while possessing a handgun. Her sentencing is scheduled for October.

In a statement released shortly after the shooting, the boy's family said their son suffered from an acute disability and was under a care plan at the school.

Before the shooting, the boy also choked another teacher "until she couldn't breathe" and tried to whip other students with his belt, according to legal records obtained by The Associated Press. The incidents were detailed in a notice sent to the Newport News school district by an attorney for Zwerner, who has filed a $40 million lawsuit against the district.

According to the notice obtained, the boy allegedly "slammed" Zwerner's cell phone and broke it. School officials gave him a one-day suspension, but when he returned to class the following day, he shot Zwerner while she sat at a reading table, the notice said.

The notice also said an unnamed teacher confirmed a choking incident in 2021. The teacher said the boy came up behind her as she sat in a chair, locked his forearms in front of her neck, and pulled back and down, The AP reported. A teaching assistant was able to pull the boy off her.

The legal notice also detailed Zwerner's account of the shooting and contained a timeline describing how Zwerner, three other teachers and a guidance counselor expressed concerns to administrators about the child possibly having a gun.

School administrators have also been accused of downplaying the boy's behavior and repeatedly ignoring Zwerner's requests for help, according to a Washington Post report. Teachers told the Post that Zwerner alerted school officials about the boy's behavior and repeatedly sought assistance during the school year.

In a May interview with "Good Morning America," the boy's mother claimed responsibility for the shooting while revealing her son's ADHD diagnosis. Taylor described her son as a "great" but "very energetic" kid, according to the interview.

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