Former Assistant Principal Indicted on Child Neglect Charges
The former assistant principal of a Virginia elementary school where a 6-year-old boy shot and wounded his first-grade teacher last year has been indicted on eight felony counts of child neglect.
A special grand jury found that Ebony Parker showed a "reckless disregard for the human life" of the other students at Richneck Elementary School on Jan. 6, 2023, in Newport News, Virginia, unsealed court documents show.
Each of the charges is punishable by up to five years in prison.
Details of the Incident
According to authorities, Parker, of Newport News, was working the day the 6-year-old fired a single shot at his teacher, Abigail Zwerner, during a reading class.
Zwerner has filed a $40 million lawsuit alleging that Parker, 39, ignored several warnings that the boy had a gun in school that day. Zwerner was shot in the chest and hand in the shooting but has recovered.
Child's Account of the Shooting
The boy told authorities he got his mother's 9mm handgun by climbing onto a drawer to reach the top of a dresser, where the firearm was in his mom's purse. He concealed the weapon in his backpack and then his pocket before shooting his teacher.
In the lawsuit, Zwerner's lawyers describe a series of warnings that school employees gave administrators in the hours before the shooting, beginning with Zwerner, who went to Parker's office and told her the boy "was in a violent mood," had threatened to beat up a kindergartener and stared down a security officer in the lunchroom. The lawsuit alleges that Parker "had no response, refusing even to look up at (Zwerner) when she expressed her concerns."
The lawsuit also alleges that a reading specialist told Parker that the boy had told students he had a gun. Parker responded that his "pockets were too small to hold a handgun and did nothing," the lawsuit states.
The indictments allege that Parker "did commit a willful act or omission in the care of such students, in a manner so gross, wanton and culpable as to show a reckless disregard for human life."
The special grand jury issued the indictments on March 11, and they were unsealed by court order Tuesday. A warrant was issued for Parker's arrest on Tuesday morning, but she's not yet in custody.
Parker, who resigned from her role after the shooting, is the first school official and second person charged in this case.
In December 2023, Deja Taylor, the child's mother, was sentenced to two years in prison for felony child neglect. The state sentence she received from Circuit Court Judge Christopher Papile was stiffer than what is called for in state sentencing guidelines and harsher than a joint sentencing recommendation of six months that prosecutors and Taylor's lawyers had agreed to in a plea deal.
Taylor received a 21-month federal prison sentence in November 2023 for possessing a gun while using marijuana, a violation of U.S. law. When combined with her state sentence, she is facing nearly four years of incarceration.
A lawsuit filed by Zwerner alleges that the parents of a boy did not consent to placing him in special education classes designed for students with behavioral issues.
Following Taylor's indictment, Zwerner's attorney stated, "There were multiple accountability failures that resulted in Abby's near-fatal shooting. Today's announcement only addresses one of these failures. After three months of investigation, many questions remain unanswered. Our lawsuit asserts that the school division broke state laws, and we are pursuing this in civil court. We are committed to holding school leaders accountable for their role in this tragic event."
The defendants in the lawsuit include the Newport News School Board, former Superintendent George Parker III, former Richneck principal Briana Foster Newton, and Parker. The superintendent was terminated by the school board.
Zwerner is no longer employed by the school system and has ceased teaching.