Parents, students and leaders express concerns at Metro Nashville Public Schools' board meeting just six days after a deadly school shooting.
After a deadly shooting rocked the community and halted classes at Antioch High School for nearly a week, the return of students Tuesday started and ended the same way — with protest.
Community leaders serving area immigrant and Hispanic populations organize support, rethink outreach amid school shooting and deportation threats.
Middle Tennessee community members told News 2 they have no plans to stop and they will continue to support Antioch High School any way they can.
Something new greeted nearly 2,000 students at the door Tuesday; in response to last week’s deadly shooting, Metro Nashville Public Schools implemented new security measures, including the
Nashville expresses its condolences after Wednesday's fatal shooting at Antioch High. Who was the 16-year-old killed in the cafeteria?
Online writings linked to the gunman at Nashville, Tennessee's Antioch High School include racist and antisemitic content, photos of a handgun and praise for mass murderers, a report says.
Family, friends, and the Nashville community are left grief-stricken by the loss of Josselin Corea Escalante, whose life was cut short by a shooting at Antioch High School Wednesday. Community members gathered for the 16-year-old’s funeral on Sunday,
The records, according to WSMV4, also highlight that the box cutter threat occurred in the cafeteria, the same location as the deadly shooting at Antioch High Schol, which claimed the lives of a 16-year-old girl and Henderson himself.
One 16-year-old girl named Josselin Corea Escalante was killed, and two other students were injured. The injured students were taken to Vanderbilt Pediatrics for medical attention. The shooter shot himself and died from the self-inflicted wound.
A 16-year-old female student was killed, another student was wounded, and the shooter—a 17-year-old male student—killed himself, per police.