Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Students injured after teacher accidentally fires gun in California classroom

ABOVE: Gun-trained teacher accidentally fires weapon in class, injuring students – Mar 14, 2018

SEASIDE, Calif. – A teacher in Northern California accidentally fired his gun inside a classroom, injuring three students, police said.

Story continues below advertisement

Dennis Alexander, who is also a reserve police officer, was pointing the gun at the ceiling to make sure it was not loaded when the weapon discharged Tuesday inside his classroom at Seaside High School in the coastal community of Seaside, KSBW-TV reported .

The Seaside Police Department said no one suffered “serious injuries.” One 17-year-old boy sustained moderate injuries when bullet fragments lodged in his neck, the student’s father, Fermin Gonzales, told KSBW.

READ MORE: Georgia police say teacher in custody after reported shooting at school

“It’s the craziest thing. It could have been very bad,” Gonzales said.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

Alexander was teaching a gun safety lesson for his administration of justice and was about to show the students how to disarm someone, Gonzales said.

Gonzales said no officials contacted parents to let them know what happened and that he was shocked when his son returned home with blood on his shirt and bullet fragments in his neck. He rushed his son to a hospital for X-rays.

Story continues below advertisement

“I’m just pretty upset that no one told us anything and we had to call the police ourselves to report it,” Gonzales said.

Alexander was placed on administrative leave from his teaching job and he was also placed on administrative leave at the Sand City Police Department, police and schools officials said.

READ MORE: U.S. students stage mass walkouts across country to protest gun violence

Monterey Peninsula Unified School District sent a letter to parents saying its human resources department, the high school administrators and the Seaside Police Department “immediately began investigating the incident, including interviewing students in the class.”

Story continues below advertisement

It said counselling was made available to students and that it could not release any other details “due to the nature of this personnel incident.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article