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GEORGIA SCHOOL SHOOTING SUSPECT STRUGGLED WITH MENTAL HEALTH, AUNT SAYS

The 14-year-old Georgia high school shooting suspect’s parents have not
commented publicly after the deadly attack at Apalachee High School.

5 min

Students kneel in front of a makeshift memorial at Apalachee High School on
Sept. 5 in Winder, Ga. (Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)
By Sarah Blaskey
Updated September 5, 2024 at 1:31 p.m. EDT|Published September 5, 2024 at 12:32
p.m. EDT

The 14-year-old arrested after a mass shooting at Georgia’s Apalachee High
School had been “begging for months” for mental health help before he allegedly
carried out a deadly attack Wednesday, according to an aunt of the suspect.

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He “was begging for help from everybody around him,” the aunt, Annie Brown, told
The Washington Post. “The adults around him failed him.”



Brown, who lives in Central Florida, declined to elaborate on the teen’s mental
health challenges but said she tried from afar to get him help. She said his
struggles were exacerbated by a difficult home life. He and his family had
“previous contacts” with the local child services department, Chris Hosey, the
director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, said at a news conference
Wednesday night.

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Brown said that in January, she helped her nephew enroll at Haymon-Morris Middle
School in Barrow County so he could finish eighth grade following a period of
absenteeism. He had just started ninth grade at Apalachee High this school year,
she said.

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Law enforcement authorities have confirmed that he was a student at Apalachee. A
spokesperson for the school district did not immediately respond to a request
for comment on his prior enrollment history.

The shooting at Apalachee on Wednesday morning left four people dead: two staff
members and two students. Authorities have identified the suspect as Colt Gray.
Gray’s parents have not commented publicly. The Post’s efforts to reach them for
comment were unsuccessful.

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Authorities have also said he was interviewed in May 2023 by law enforcement
officers in neighboring Jackson County who were investigating online threats to
carry out a school shooting.

At the time, Gray “expressed concern that someone is accusing him of threatening
to shoot up a school, stating that he would never say such a thing, even in a
joking manner,” according to records of the investigation by the Jackson County
Sheriff’s Office, which had received a tip from the FBI about a threat to open
fire in a local middle school.

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SCHOOL SHOOTINGS: TRACKING GUN VIOLENCE IN THE U.S.

(The Washington Post)
The Post has spent years tracking the number of students affected by school
shootings. More than 382,000 students have experienced gun violence at school
since the Columbine High massacre in 1999.

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The threatening comments were made on the social media platform Discord from an
account associated with an email address that the FBI believed was owned by the
teen, the records say. The teen told officers he had previously used Discord but
got rid of his account months earlier “because too many people kept hacking his
account and he was afraid someone would use his information for nefarious
purposes,” the records show.

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The account flagged by the FBI featured a profile name written in Russian that,
when translated, spelled out “Lanza,” referring to Adam Lanza, the Sandy Hook
Elementary school shooter, according to the records.

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The suspect’s father, Colin Gray, told investigators at the time that he was
unfamiliar with Discord and said he had no knowledge of the email address
associated with the Discord account that made threats. He also said that his son
“does not know or speak Russian,” according to the records.

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He told officers that he allowed his son to use his hunting rifles when
supervised but that the child, who was 13 at the time, did not have “unfettered
access to them.” The weapons were kept in the house, according to the report.

The records show that one officer said he urged the man to keep the firearms
locked away and advised him on May 21 to “keep the teen out of school until the
matter could be resolved.”



On May 23, the investigator noted that the case would be “exceptionally cleared”
because the tip alleging Colt’s role in the threat could not be substantiated.
Officers were unable to confirm that the Discord account was linked to Colt
Gray, and information included in the FBI tip was “unreliable,” the records say.
The officers noted in the report that the FBI tip included a brief physical
description of the suspect that did not match the teen’s appearance. The source
of the physical description was unclear in the records.

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At the time of Jackson County’s investigation, the teen’s father told officers
that he and his wife had split up after their family was evicted from their home
a few months earlier. The father said he and his son had moved and that, while
his son had experienced “some problems” at the middle school he previously
attended, things had “gotten a lot better” now that he was attending a new
school.

It is unclear when the teenager stopped attending that school, Jefferson Middle
School in Jefferson, Ga.

Charles Polhamus, the suspect’s grandfather, told The Post he would have never
thought his grandson capable of violence. Although the two had not spoken in
more than a year, Polhamus, who was once his grandson’s baseball coach,
remembered the teen as an overall “good kid.” Polhamus said he felt terrible for
the victims.

Brown said that since the shooting, she has been praying for “the families who
have been affected because of my nephew’s actions.”

She said she would also continue to support her nephew. Without excusing his
actions, Brown said he was still “just a baby” who was never given the mental
health support he needed and repeatedly requested.

Alice Crites and Chris Dehghanpoor contributed to this report.

Share
More on school shootings
HAND CURATED
 * The number of students who have experienced gun violence at school since
   Columbine
   June 29, 2024
   
   The number of students who have experienced gun violence at school since
   Columbine
   June 29, 2024
 * Guns are seized in U.S. schools each day. The numbers are soaring.
   October 10, 2023
   
   Guns are seized in U.S. schools each day. The numbers are soaring.
   October 10, 2023
 * Accused Georgia 14-year-old would be youngest mass school shooter since 1998
   1 hour ago
   
   Accused Georgia 14-year-old would be youngest mass school shooter since 1998
   1 hour ago

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