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Virginia teacher shot by 6-year-old can proceed with $40 million lawsuit, judge rules

School Shooting-Newport News
November 03, 2023
BEN FINLEY - AP

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (AP) โ€” A teacher who was shot by her 6-year-old student in Virginia can press forward with her $40 million lawsuit against a school system over claims of negligence by school administrators, a judge ruled Friday.

The surprise decision by Newport News Circuit Court Judge Matthew Hoffman means that Abby Zwerner could get much more than just workers' compensation for the serious injuries caused by January's classroom shooting.

Lawyers for Newport News Public Schools had tried to block the lawsuit, arguing that Zwerner was eligible only for workers' compensation. It provides up to nearly 10 years pay and lifetime medical care for injuries.

Zwernerโ€™s attorneys countered that workersโ€™ compensation doesnโ€™t apply because a first-grade teacher would never anticipate getting shot: โ€œIt was not an actual risk of her job.โ€

Hoffman sided with Zwerner, concluding that her injuries โ€œdid not arise out of her employmentโ€ and therefore did not โ€œfall within the exclusive provisions of workersโ€™ compensation coverage.โ€

The judge wrote: โ€œThe danger of being shot by a student is not one that is peculiar or unique to the job of a first-grade teacher."

Zwerner was hospitalized for nearly two weeks and endured multiple surgeries after a bullet struck her hand and chest. Zwerner alleges that administrators ignored multiple warnings the boy had a gun that day and had routinely dismissed ongoing concerns about his troubling behavior.

โ€œThis victory is an important stepping stone on our path towards justice for Abby," Zwerner's attorneys, Diane Toscano, Jeffrey Breit and Kevin Biniazan, said in a statement.

โ€œWe are eager to continue our pursuit of accountability and a just, fair recovery,โ€ they said. "No teacher expects to stare down the barrel of a gun held by a six-year-old student.โ€

Zwerner no longer works for the school system. A tentative trial date for her lawsuit is scheduled for January 2025.

The school board's attorneys indicated that they would appeal Friday's decision and said in a statement that they โ€œfully anticipate its reversal by the appellate court.โ€

The school board maintained that Zwerner's injuries were directly related to her job and therefore covered under workers' compensation.

โ€œThe actual risk of employment in this scenario is that of a teacher being injured at the hands of a student which, unfortunately, is a fairly common occurrence and one that is only increasing in frequency this day and age," school board attorney Anne Lahren said in a statement.

Some legal experts expected Zwerner's lawsuit to fail under Virginiaโ€™s uncommonly strict workers' compensation law. That's because it covers workplace assaults and allegations of negligence against employers. Lawsuits that might move forward in other states often falter in the Commonwealth.

J. H. Verkerke, a University of Virginia law professor, said Friday's ruling was โ€œsomewhat surprisingโ€ based on previous Virginia court decisions.

โ€œVirginia precedent surely gives the school board reason to hope for reversal of the trial courtโ€™s ruling,โ€ Verkerke said.

In early January, the 6-year-old pulled out his motherโ€™s handgun and shot Zwerner as she sat at a reading table in front of her first-grade class. She rushed the rest her students into the hallway before collapsing in the schoolโ€™s office.

The shooting revived a national dialogue about gun violence and roiled this military shipbuilding cit y near the Chesapeake Bay.

Zwerner sued in April, alleging school officials ignored multiple warnings that the boy had a gun and was in a violent mood.

Police have said the shooting was intentional. Zwerner claims school officials knew the boy โ€œhad a history of random violenceโ€ at school and home, including when he โ€œchokedโ€ his kindergarten teacher.

Verkerke, the law professor, said Zwernerโ€™s attorneys needed to prove the shooting was unrelated to Zwernerโ€™s job. Their challenge was โ€œto somehow make out that itโ€™s personal."

In his ruling on Friday, Judge Hoffman wrote that the shooting against Zwerner was โ€œpersonal.โ€

Judge Hoffman noted that the boy had the gun with him from the beginning of the school day until just before dismissal.

โ€œIt was not until the student was back in (Zwerner's) classroom that he decided to fire it once, striking (Zwerner),โ€ Judge Hoffman wrote. โ€œHe did not at any time threaten any other student, teacher or administrator at the school with a firearm.โ€

Zwernerโ€™s attorneys argued in a brief last month that the boyโ€™s โ€œviolence was random and aimed at everyone, both in and out of school.โ€

He โ€œasserted that he was angry that people were โ€˜picking onโ€™ his friend, a motivation that had nothing to do with (Zwerner),โ€ her lawyers wrote without further elaboration. โ€œHis motivation was a personal one.โ€

The school board disagreed and questioned how the shooting could be anything but work-related.

Responding to the judge's decision on Friday, the school board's attorneys said โ€œit is clear that the student and Ms. Zwerner only knew each other through their teacher-student relationship.โ€

โ€œIn order for a โ€˜personalโ€™ action to defeat the exclusivity of the Workersโ€™ Compensation Act, that personal motive must not be itself related to ... the employment,โ€ they wrote.

Workersโ€™ compensation laws were deemed a grand bargain in the 20th century between injured workers and employers, Verkerke said. Workers lost the ability to sue in most cases, protecting employers from enormous payouts. But people who were injured gained much easier access to compensation โ€” lost pay and medical coverage โ€” without having to prove fault.

โ€œIโ€™m quite sympathetic to the idea that such an assault falls outside the โ€˜grand bargainโ€™ at the root of workersโ€™ compensation law,โ€ Verkerke said.

But he said the facts in the case cast doubt on the conclusion that the shooting was personal. The school board, he said, "would have substantial grounds to appeal.โ€

โ€”โ€”

This story corrects the spelling of attorney Anne Lahren's last name. It's Lahren, not Lehran.

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