Chattanooga Charter School to Pay $100K Settlement to Family of Student - Articles

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Posted by: Azya Thornton on May 30, 2025

A Chattanooga public charter school has agreed to pay $100,000 to the family of an 11-year-old boy, settling a federal lawsuit claiming that it wrongfully reported the student to police for an alleged threat of mass violence. WPLN News reports that the incident began when the student, nicknamed “Junior,” overheard two classmates discussing a potential school shooting and jokingly said “yes” when one appeared about to confirm the threat. Students then reported that Junior had threatened to shoot up the school. Though school administrators initially said he could return the next day, a sheriff’s deputy later handcuffed him at a family birthday dinner. The news outlet in partnership with ProPublica wrote about the case last October as part of a larger investigation into a new law in Tennessee making threats of mass violence at school a felony. According to the settlement, Chattanooga Preparatory School also agreed to implement training on how to handle threats of mass violence, including reporting only “valid” threats to police and differentiating between “clearly innocuous statements” and “imminent” violence.