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Apalachee families weigh trial possibilities after accused shooter's latest court hearing
Apalachee families weigh trial possibilities after accused shooter's latest court hearing

Yahoo

time07-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Apalachee families weigh trial possibilities after accused shooter's latest court hearing

Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways Apalachee families weigh trial possibilities after accused shooter's latest court hearing The accused Apalachee High School shooter may never face a jury, and families are responding to the idea. 'I definitely think that it's difficult to decipher what we, as a community, would want,' said Layla Renee Contreras. Contreras' mother and sister were inside the school in September 2024 when gunfire erupted, killing two students and two teachers. Nine people were hospitalized. At a hearing Tuesday, attorneys discussed the idea of a non-negotiated plea deal. In that case, Colt Gray would plead guilty, and a judge would determine his sentence. 'I understand people do want to hear the trial. Also, it has been a lot,' said Contreras. She said a trial would mean reliving the trauma. Tuesday afternoon, the family of one of the Math teachers killed, Coach Ricky Aspinwall, pointed that out after the hearing. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] 'If he wants to plead guilty, it would just be a better route for everybody, get it behind us,' said Kevin Zinke. 'Whatever they feel is what I support,' said Contreras. Contreras has been at every school board meeting since the shooting. She's leading the push for faster security upgrades. She spoke in January when deputies said a student got a gun on campus. In February, she spoke after a student trespassing incident. This week, she signed up to speak about communication connected to fake threats that led to the lockdown last Friday. 'Friday, that event did bring up a lot of panic, more distrust in the system, as well,' said Contreras. RELATED STORIES: The Board of Education did not allow her to speak, citing a regulation that allows them to deny public participation when someone plans to speak on the same topic. They ended the meeting without discussing the latest lockdown. 'I wouldn't want to speak about it if there were improvements,' said Contreras. Before the meeting, board members said they would not make themselves available for comment. [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Apalachee High School names new head football coach
Apalachee High School names new head football coach

Yahoo

time26-03-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Apalachee High School names new head football coach

Apalachee High School has named its new head football coach. The school will welcome Kevin Saunders starting with the 2025-2026 school year. The Board of Education approved the hire during their March 25 work session. Saunders has a proven history of helping foster football programs with an overall head coach record of 191-113-2. He won a 2011 State Championship, has made multiple State Playoff appearances, and has been recognized as Coach of the Year several times. As head coach of Gilmer High School, Saunders turned their 0-31 record into a 4-6 record during his first year. 'This position means so much to me. I am so proud to be the coach at Apalachee. People tell me this is a tough job, but I believe this is a great opportunity to succeed. Excellence is a practice not a prize,' Saunders said. 'What drew me to Apalachee is the community, the school's commitment to student-athletes, and the opportunity to work with a talented group of young players. I'm looking forward to getting to know the players and their families, and to helping the team reach its full potential. Together, we will work to create a football program that everyone can be proud of.' Saunders takes over for Coach Mike Hancock, who resigned to focus on his mental health and wellbeing seven months after his defense coordinator, Ricky Aspinwall, was one of four victims killed during the September shooting rampage at the school. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] RELATED STORIES: Apalachee High School to play first home football game since school shooting Hundreds gather to mourn Apalachee High School teacher and football coach 'Good luck and good healing:' The Rock sends support to Apalachee students on first day back [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Apalachee High student, families go to GA Capitol demanding tougher school safety, gun storage laws
Apalachee High student, families go to GA Capitol demanding tougher school safety, gun storage laws

Yahoo

time04-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Apalachee High student, families go to GA Capitol demanding tougher school safety, gun storage laws

At the Georgia State Capitol, a student from Apalachee High School and members of the Apalachee family came together with lawmakers to demand action on school safety, and tougher laws for guns and safe storage. While the community members gathered at the capitol, students at Apalachee High School staged a walkout to push for more safety regulations. Channel 2′s Steve Gehlbach was at the capitol, where those gathered said they want to be more proactive so no young person can get their hands on a gun in the first place, like what happened in September. 'The shooting started, the minutes that followed would feel like an eternity,' Isabel Trejo, an Apalachee High School senior, said. 'In that moment, I felt responsible. I still do. Many of us do. I sat there frozen, terrified, unable to move, unable to help. If I had moved, have tried, I might have been next.' The current Apalachee senior joined with others from her community, including the brother of 14-year-old Christian Angulo, another victim of the shooting carried out by Colt Gray. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] RELATED STORIES: Apalachee High School students call for change with walkout Georgia House Speaker introduces new bill aimed at school safety Apalachee school shooting: Colt Gray snuck gun into school in his backpack, sheriff says Apalachee school shooting: Colt Gray's grandfather said his 'environment' drove him to shooting 'I'm sorry:' Mother of alleged Apalachee school shooter received cryptic texts from son that day Student honors teacher killed in Apalachee High School Layla Renee Contreras, an Apalachee alum with a sister still in school there, organized 'Change for Chee' to push for reforms in the wake of the Apalachee shooting. 'We cannot only be reactive, we must be proactive. And that brings me to what is still missing from this plan,' Contreras said about a Republican comprehensive school safety bill introduced by House Speaker Jon Burns on Monday. 'We cannot talk about school safety without talking about how firearms are stored.' Democratic Rep. Michelle Au invited the group to the capitol to discuss their safety priorities. She praised the Republican-led bill but said it doesn't do enough. 'How could a 14-year-old get access, unsupervised, to a gun?' Au asked at the event. For Trejo, the response to the shooting needs to have more than just changes at schools. 'We must also have safe storage bills in place to prevent further tragedies,' Trejo said. 'This tragedy could have been prevented if safe storage laws had been in place.' Au said the Pediatric Safe Storage Act, or House Bill 1, has bipartisan support and was co-sponsored by a Republican. She hopes to get it passed during the 2025 legislative session. [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

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