16-year-old arrested months after stepdad found shot dead, Georgia deputies say
Jayden Daniel was arrested Thursday, July 17, and faces charges of murder, aggravated assault and theft by taking in the May 13 incident, according to the Newton County Sheriff's Office. He will be charged as an adult, a sheriff's spokesperson said.
He was found in DeKalb County, though authorities didn't say what led them there.
Daniel also faces charges of possession of a handgun by a person under 18, and possession of a knife or firearm during the commission of a crime, deputies said.
His arrest comes months after his stepdad, David Gay, 41, was found shot to death. Deputies responded to a shooting at the family's home in Covington and discovered Gay's body, according to the sheriff's office.
'A preliminary investigation indicated Gay was fatally shot by Daniel,' authorities said, though they did not give a motive.
The teen's mother had pleaded with Daniel to come forward after losing another son to gun violence last year, WAGA reported.
'This is the ultimate breaking point for me,' Kennethia Gay told the station. 'I said I couldn't lose another child. I lost my husband, and now I really can't lose another child.'
Daniel was taken to the Newton County Detention Center, deputies said.
Covington is about a 30-mile drive southeast from downtown Atlanta.

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Axios
8 hours ago
- Axios
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Yahoo
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- Yahoo
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San Francisco Chronicle
a day ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Trump's immigration raids are wreaking havoc on California's economy and schools
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Their Operation Return to Sender resulted in 78 arrests and about 1,000 detentions, criticism by Biden administration officials, an ACLU lawsuit and a spike in student absenteeism at southern valley school districts touched by the dragnet. Stanford Graduate School of Education professor Thomas S. Dee examined three years of daily attendance figures from five school districts in four counties — Fresno, Kern, Kings and Tulare — whose districts serve more than 500,000 students, more than 70% of whom are Hispanic. He found that, in January and February, absences jumped by an average of 22% across all the districts and by about 30% among the youngest students — those in pre-kindergarten through fifth grade. 'That's a period where kids are learning really critical foundational skills, such as how to read,' Dee said. As with the economy, the effects are manifesting with nonimmigrant students and families. Jesus Martinez, executive director of the Central Valley Immigrant Integration Collaborative, said the Fresno-based nonprofit's educational partners have reported widespread fears among all their students, including U.S.-born students with immigrant parents and friends. 'It extends beyond the undocumented individual,' he said. Some 5.5 million U.S.-born children live with a parent who is an unauthorized immigrant, according to a Center for Migration Studies analysis of census data. The California Legislature has considered 23 immigration enforcement-related bills this year, seven of which concern schools. Bills to deny access to federal immigration authorities to schools if they don't have a warrant or a court order and to require schools to notify parents and staff when immigration authorities are on school grounds require two-thirds support to pass. Dee said public schools are still grappling with a post-pandemic knot of chronic absenteeism, sagging enrollment and declining funding, problems he expects the raids to exacerbate. He said fall enrollment figures will help indicate how California's schools, whose funding is tied to enrollment, responded to the Trump administration's immigration incursions. 'What we're seeing could eventually become reduced enrollment if families flee the region,' he said. 'There are reasons to be concerned.' Dee also acknowledged the Trump administration would likely be untroubled by this result, as another one of its priorities is dismantling the public education system. 'It seems consistent with other ways in which the administration has been creating disruptions and even chaos in education,' he said, noting the administration's 'evisceration' of the Department of Education and its threats to Title I funding, intended to address achievement gaps among lower-income students. As for what happens next, Flores pointed to the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Along with adding as much as $6 trillion to the national debt, Trump's signature domestic policy achievement will supercharge immigration enforcement by $170 billion and turn U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement into the country's largest law enforcement agency. 'No one has a crystal ball, but I think it would be reasonable to expect that this trend will continue and possibly even worsen,' Flores said. 'If this is the effect we're seeing due to the escalation of June 8 and we can expect further escalations, it is difficult to imagine that things simply go back.'