by Bhavesh Jinadra by CNB
Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: SATURDAY, February 29, 1992 TAG: 9202290305 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: A-1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: RON BROWN STAFF WRITER DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
CUSTODIAN COAXES FRANKLIN STUDENT TO GIVE UP GUN
School custodian O.L. Turner stood at the doorway of a Franklin County classroom Friday morning and saw a student loading a pistol inside."I knocked on the door, and he ordered me out two or three times," Turner said.
With nearly 20 students in the room, the 14-year-old appeared to be holding all the cards.
That's when Turner decided to make a deal.
"I asked him to trade me for the children," he said. "What I did, I did for the love of the kids."
Finally, the young man relented and laid down the gun as his schoolmates ran out the door screaming.
"He just put his head in his hands and started to cry," Turner said. "I just offered to talk to the boy. I put my arm around his back."
Moments earlier, police said, the boy was in no talking mood.
As his teacher and classmates walked into the world geography class at Benjamin Franklin Middle School, the boy waved a .357-caliber Magnum in their direction. He told the teacher she ought to leave.
She ran down the hall to call for himself to a boy with a gun in trade for help. She saw Turner and told him about the boy with the gun.
Turner walked to the room, where he saw the boy loading the pistol. That was when Turner decided it was time to talk.
"I have a rapport with those kids," he said. "I was talking to him like he was one of my own children."
As a grandfather and father, Turner has learned that it is never wise to give up on children too quickly. "They're human beings," he said. "Who knows? That boy may be a future president. He may one day be a father."
The boy is undergoing psychiatric evaluation at the Roanoke Memorial Rehabilitation Center.
He has been charged with brandishing a firearm and having a gun on school property.
"He was in a depressed state," Rocky Mount police Lt. Roy Lemons said. "Nobody saw the signs.
"He told us he didn't want to do anybody harm. He had just given up."
The boy's mother told police that she had had no previous problems with him.
"It was just scary, as a friend and everything," said Robert Spear, a 13-year-old classmate. "It was shocking to know it was him. He was a good person and everything."
Judy Redding arrived at the school to have lunch with her son, Jimmy, who was in the class that was held at gunpoint. Later, as parents showed up to pick up their children, "There were a lot of tears and lot of crying," she said.
Friday night, she was more optimistic as parents met with Franklin County School Superintendent Leonard Gereau and administrators from the school.
"The staff handled it properly," she said.
Gereau said the school is trying to help the other children cope with the incident. "We'll follow up with counseling for the students involved."
While Friday's incident was the worst in the seven years Gereau has been superintendent, it was not the first time guns and students have mixed. Earlier this year, a Franklin County student was caught on a school bus with a gun in a book bag.
That and a nationwide trend toward guns in schools prompted the county School Board recently to toughen the punishment against students who carry firearms. Gereau said those sanctions may come into play because of Friday's incident.
"The School Board will review the situation and make a decision on whether expulsion is warranted," he said.
The incident mirrors a growing trend towards kids and guns. About six weeks ago, the Roanoke Times & World-News detailed growing gunplay among Western Virginia's youth.
Just this week, the national Center to Prevent Handgun Violence said in a news release that gun-toting by students is becoming an epidemic.
"The senseless gun violence must stop," said Sarah Brady, who heads the Washington, D.C.-based research and legal action group. "The number of guns in our nation's schools and the tragedies our students are witnessing is reprehensible."
Friday night in Franklin County, most parents agreed that the solution may lie in their increased involvement with their children.
Redding, the boy's classmate, simply offered compassion.
"He's OK. He's a good kid," Redding said. "We don't hate him."
Staff photographer Stephanie Klein contributed information to this story.