Boy shot, wounded at Tennessee school; juvenile detained

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — A teenage boy was shot and critically wounded Thursday at a school in Memphis, Tennessee, and police detained a second boy believed to be the shooter. The K-8 school was placed on lockdown and students were taken by bus to a nearby church to be reunited with frantic parents.

Memphis police identified both the victim of the shooting at the Cummings School and the shooter as “male juveniles.” The victim was 13, Assistant Police Chief Don Crowe said, but he declined to release the age of the suspect. He said both were students at the school.

The wounded child was undergoing surgery at a hospital, officials said. No details about what led to the shooting have been released.

“Certainly, at this point, we need everyone to be praying for that child and the child’s family so he can make a full recovery,” he said of the victim.

He said the suspect fled the school after the shooting, but later turned himself in at a police precinct.

Parents held umbrellas and talked with each other in a light drizzle as they waited for children to arrive at the church. Ebonnie Hayslett rushed to the school to make sure her two nieces were safe.

“The worst news you could receive is a shooting at a kids school,” she said. “My main concern was the kids being OK, the teachers, the faculty. No one wants to go pick up their kids and be surrounded by SWAT cars and police officers.”

A school resource officer who was inside the building responded to the shooting and informed other officials inside the school, said Shelby County Schools Superintendent Joris Ray. Students were lined up and taken out of the school into buses, which brought them to the church.

Tempers flared briefly as parents lined up outside the church, demanding information about the shooting and pushing for the release of their kids. When the students were dismissed, some of them were crying and hugging their parents as they left the church.

Ray said emergency procedures were followed closely, and he praised teachers and staff for keeping the children calm and safe. He became emotional while speaking with news reporters outside Metropolitan Baptist Church.

“We’re doing all we can to keep our students safe,” Ray said. “We can’t allow our children to hurt from gun violence.”

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Reynolds reported from Louisville, Kentucky.