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Until recently, the mother of the 6-year-old boy who shot his teacher at Richneck Elementary School didn’t have much of a criminal record. However, 10 On Your Side’s investigative team has learned she’s at the center of several police reports filed against the boy’s father.

Deja Taylor, 25, and Malik Ellison, 26, are the mother and father of the 6-year-old who shot his first-grade teacher, Abby Zwerner, inside her classroom on Jan. 6.

The boy used his mother’s gun to shoot Zwerner. Prosecutors believe Taylor lied about using marijuana on a federal form when she bought the gun from Winfree Firearms Inc. in Yorktown on July 19, 2022.

On Monday, Taylor pleaded guilty to a pair of federal charges in connection to the gun: Unlawful user of a controlled substance in possession of a firearm and making a false statement during the purchase of a firearm. She’s scheduled to be sentenced in October.

Taylor is also charged in connection to the shooting at Richneck. She’s scheduled to go to trial in August on felony child neglect and misdemeanor recklessly leaving a loaded firearm as to endanger a child.

Taylor is being represented by Jim Ellenson and Gene Rossi. Both attorneys declined to comment on this story.

Ellison isn’t charged in connection to the Richneck shooting, but he is at the center of a traffic stop cited by prosecutors in the statement of facts filed in Taylor’s federal firearms case.

10 On Your Side reached out to Ellison through social media ahead of publication but did not receive a response.

According to that document, Taylor was pulled over for speeding on Richmond Road in April 2021, and Williamsburg police discovered drugs in the car – including marijuana edibles that were within reach of her then 4-year-old son. 10 On Your Side’s investigative team has learned that Ellison was also in the car during that traffic stop. Williamsburg police arrested Ellison and charged him with violating a protective order Taylor filed against him prohibiting him from contact with her and their son.

Ellison was found guilty of that charge in April 2022. The investigation into the traffic stop is ongoing, said Williamsburg Police Department Investigator John Heilman.

Taylor sought a protective order against Ellison in September 2020 after he assaulted her at her St. Thomas Drive apartment. Taylor told police that Ellison came to the home uninvited, forced his way into the apartment, hit her in the face, and threw her to the ground. Taylor told police that the day before the assault, she had warned Ellison not to come to her home, and that he had followed her to a McDonald’s on Oyster Point Road, according to court records obtained by 10 On Your Side.


Ellison told Newport News police that he was in town from Dallas, where he was living at the time, to take custody of his son. He said that he and Taylor agreed the boy should live with him, and that he’d come to her apartment to visit their child, court records state.

Ellison was convicted of assault and battery in connection to the September 2020 attack.

Taylor also reported that Ellison stalked her, showed up to her home with a gun, and assaulted her in October 2020. He was charged with buying a gun and being a person subject to a protective order, but that case was dismissed in Newport News Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court.

The September 2020 assault led Taylor to file for a protective order against Ellison, which barred him from contacting her or their son. Ten days after the April 2021 traffic stop in Williamsburg, Taylor asked a judge to remove the protective order, telling a judge that Ellison moved in with her so they could co-parent and so he could watch their son while she worked full time, court records show. It is unclear whether a judge amended the protective order.

Ellison was charged with domestic assault again in 2021, but Taylor wasn’t the victim. Ellison began living with a woman who he was in a relationship with in June 2021. That woman called Newport News police on Aug. 20, 2021 and told investigators he came to her home, put his hand around her neck, and threatened to kill her, court records state.


10 On Your Side will not name the woman, but our investigative team did reach out to her for comment. We received none prior to publication.

The woman told police the attack happened while she and Ellison were arguing about possible infidelity between him and Taylor, who was his ex-girlfriend at the time. The woman said when she confronted Ellison about the possible infidelity, he knocked her glasses off of her face. She ran into her bedroom and closed the door, but Ellison forced his way in. The woman said she backed away to create space, but Ellison followed her, pushed her onto the bed, put his hand around her neck, and threatened to kill her, according to court records.

The woman broke away from Ellison and went to her car to call police. While doing so, she said that Taylor came to her home and yelled, “It’s ok, I’ll be back!” The woman told police she felt that Taylor was threatening her. Taylor was not charged in connection to the assault, court records show.

A police report shows that the woman’s face was swollen, and she had visible red marks on her neck and shoulder. Ellison pleaded guilty to assault and battery in connection to the attack in August 2022.

That attack wasn’t the only time the woman claimed Ellison was violent toward her, court records show. The woman called Newport News police again on Sept. 21, 2021 and told investigators that Ellison held a gun to her head and threatened to kill her, according to court records.

The woman told police that she asked Ellison to leave after she found out he was sleeping with his son’s mother in her home while she was gone. She told police Ellison held a gun to the back of her head and said he would kill her before leaving the apartment on Sojourner Court in a red Chrysler, court records state.

Police pulled the Chrysler over and discovered that Taylor was driving, and Ellison was her passenger. At the time of the stop, there was still an active protective order against Ellison prohibiting him from contact with Taylor, court records show.

Police found a gun in the car, but Ellison denied pointing it at the woman. He was charged with brandishing a firearm at her, but that case was set aside in September 2022. He pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of ammunition in connection to the stop.

The boy is doomed
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Virginia 6-year-old's chilling words after shooting 1st grade teacher during class revealed in unsealed docs​

This child is six years old and has a history of violence already. What's going to happen to him?

Newly unsealed search warrants reportedly reveal the shocking words a 6-year-old Virginia student allegedly uttered after brandishing a gun at school and shooting his teacher in the classroom.

"I shot that b---- dead," the boy said on Jan. 6, 2023, just moments after the shooting, according to Amy Kovac, a reading specialist at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Virginia. Kovac rushed into the classroom afterward and restrained the child until police arrived.

The unsealed warrants, reported by local news outlets Tuesday, described how Kovac had heard a gunshot and witnessed several children run out of the classroom.

Their teacher, 25-year-old Abigail Zwerner, also dashed out, bleeding from the hand and upper torso before she collapsed in the front office and was rushed to the hospital. The warrant says Kovac went into the classroom where she found the boy standing by his desk with the gun next to him on the floor.

"I did it," the boy also said, according to Kovac. "I got my mom’s gun last night."

Earlier in the day, two students had told Kovac they saw the boy with a gun in his backpack, the warrant says. Kovac and a school administrator are said to have searched the student’s backpack at recess but did not find the firearm inside at that time.

Zwerner’s legal team filed a $40 million lawsuit against the Newport News School Board and certain administrators in April.

The warrant says Zwerner told investigators there had been multiple "disciplinary incidents" involving the same student leading up to shooting. They involved physical violence and threats of violence, which had been reported to school administrators, the warrant adds.

Days after the shooting, investigators interviewed the boy’s former kindergarten teacher.

The retired Newport News elementary school teacher, who had been assigned to Richneck Elementary School, told police how she had been choked in September 2021 by the same boy said to have shot Zwerner. The warrant notes how limited school records pertaining to the boy obtained from Child Protective Services did not include any information about the alleged choking described by the kindergarten teacher, so it is possible that the incident and "possibly others were not readily provided by Newport News Public Schools."

Though the boy has not been charged, his mother, Deja Taylor, faces two counts: felony child neglect and a misdemeanor count of leaving a firearm in a way that could endanger a child.

In lieu of a bench trial, a plea hearing is scheduled for Aug. 15. Taylor’s attorney, James Ellenson, has previously told WTKR that the boy’s mother was suffering from mental health issues following an ectopic pregnancy and a miscarriage.

Taylor has also pleaded guilty to federal charges of being an unlawful user of a controlled substance in possession of a firearm and making a false statement during the purchase of a firearm. Her next court appearance in that case is Oct. 18.

 
The mother of a 6-year-old boy who garnered national headlines earlier this year when her son shot his first-grade teacher during class pleaded guilty Tuesday to a single count of felony child neglect.
It was the second time in the past two months that Deja Nicole Taylor entered a guilty plea to charges relating to the Jan. 6 shooting of Richneck Elementary School teacher Abby Zwerner. The shot struck the 25-year-old educator in her hand and chest and left her seriously injured.
In June, Taylor pleaded guilty in federal court to having a firearm while also possessing marijuana and lying on a federal gun background check about her drug use. She’s due to be sentenced in that case Oct. 18. Though the federal charges carry up to 25 years combined, prosecutors have agreed to ask for a term within the federal sentencing guidelines — between 18 months and two years.
The child neglect count Taylor pleaded to on Tuesday carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison. In exchange, prosecutors agreed to ask for a term within state sentencing guidelines, which is expected to be no more than six months. But Circuit Judge Christopher Papile has the authority go above their recommendation. Sentencing was set for Oct. 27.
 
Federal prosecutors filed to revoke bond of the mother of the 6-year-old who police say shot his teacher at Richneck Elementary School in January in Virginia.

The motion to revoke was filed on Sept. 1 after Deja Taylor tested positive for marijuana on July 19, and for marijuana and cocaine on Aug. 25, according to court documents.
On June 12, Taylor pleaded guilty to two federal felony charges including unlawfully using a controlled substance and for being in possession of a firearm and making a false statement during the purchase of a firearm, according to court documents.
She was released on the conditions that she not violate federal, state, or local law, and that she refrain from the unlawful use and possession of a narcotic or controlled substances. The documents state that she was ordered to submit to substance abuse treatment as directed, and that she submit to substance abuse testing as directed.
Because Taylor tested positive for drug use, she was in violation of her conditional release, according to court documents.

She was probably doing drugs while pregnant with this child :(
 
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The mother of a 6-year-old boy who shot his teacher in Virginia was sentenced Wednesday to 21 months in prison for using marijuana while owning a firearm, which is illegal under U.S. law.
Deja Taylor’s son took her handgun to school and shot Abby Zwerner in her first-grade classroom in January, seriously wounding the educator.

Investigators later found nearly an ounce of marijuana in Taylor’s bedroom and evidence of frequent drug use in her text messages and paraphernalia.
Taylor’s sentencing in a U.S. District Court offered the first measure of accountability for January’s shooting, which revived a national dialogue about gun violence and roiled the military shipbuilding city of Newport News.

Taylor, 26, still faces a separate sentencing in December on the state level for felony child neglect. And Zwerner is suing the school system for $40 million, alleging that administrators ignored multiple warnings the boy had a gun.
 
I feel bad for the kid. I definitely had some teachers I wouldn't have minded ridding the earth of by 9. Never acted on it, as I'm better than those pieces of shit.
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Oh, this explains everything lmao.
 
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I'll also point out that a lot of people are running out getting these THC Dr. and recreational cards that also own guns. They all willing to do 21 months??
 
I read the article. If that's how the little idiot behaves, he belongs in special ed. Minimum. Maximum? A secure, locked psych facility. Bet that would cool him down, real quick.
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I'm so mad on the teachers' behalf. A gorgeous, young, educated woman, injured seriously in the prime of her life by a kid with ignored mental health issues by a morbidly obese, ugly ass, druggie mom. Fuck this, she deserves a settlement, paid in part from 100% of "Mom's" measely earnings, if for no other point, so she can't buy anymore ugly ass, orange wigs.
 
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The mother of a 6-year-old boy who shot and critically injured his first-grade teacher at a Virginia school in January has been sentenced to two years in prison for child neglect, a judge ruled on Friday.
Deja Taylor’s son swiped his mom’s gun from her purse and used it to shoot his 25-year-old teacher, Abigail Zwerner, at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News on Jan. 6 with Taylor’s handgun that he had swiped from her purse.

The 26-year-old mother’s state sentence, handed down Friday by Circuit Judge Christopher Papile, is harsher than state guidelines recommend and significantly longer than the six-month sentencing recommendation agreed by prosecutors and Taylor’s lawyers when she entered a plea deal.
Taylor’s son, now 7, is being cared for by his great-grandfather, the family’s attorney James Ellenson told NBC News.

The mother is allowed supervised contact with her son at the discretion of the great-grandfather.
Taylor, in November, was already sentenced to 21 months in federal prison for using marijuana while owning a firearm in connection to the shocking case, which made headlines across the country.
Taylor’s son told investigators he got his mother’s 9mm handgun by climbing onto a drawer to reach the top of a dresser, where the firearm was hidden in his mom’s purse.

He stuffed the weapon in his backpack and then shot his teacher, in front of her first-grade class.

“I did it … I shot that bitch dead,” the pint-size pistol packer bragged to a staffer restraining him afterwards, according to court documents. “I got my mom’s gun last night.”
The mother also has been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, a condition sharing symptoms with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, according to court documents.
In May, Taylor told ABC’s “Good Morning America” that she feels responsible and apologized to Zwerner.


“That is my son, so I am, as a parent, obviously willing to take responsibility for him because he can’t take responsibility for himself,” Taylor said in the interview.
 
UPDATE: the school's administration is now being held accountable. Ebony Parker is the first. She's being charged with child abuse and neglect. She was also named in Abby Zwerner's $40 million lawsuit.

Ebony Parker, who worked as the former assistant principal at Richneck Elementary School, was indicted by a grand jury last month on eight felony charges, which carry a maximum of five years in prison for each.

 
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A Virginia jury has found a former elementary school administrator liable for $10 million in the shooting of a first-grade teacher by a 6-year-old student nearly three years ago.
Former first-grade educator Abigail Zwerner sued Ebony Parker, the former vice principal of Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Va., for gross negligence, alleging Parker failed to act on multiple warnings that the 6-year-old boy had a gun and was acting alarmingly the day of the January 2023 shooting.

After over five hours of deliberation on Wednesday and Thursday, the seven-person jury ruled in favor of Zwerner — who had been seeking $40 million in damages.
Parker sat stoically, her face unchanging as the verdict was read out.
While Zwerner pursed her lips, her eyes wide, as if to hold back tears.

Zwerner’s legal team lauded the verdict in a statement released right after, saying it would help Zwerner during her recovery from the harrowing incident.

“This verdict is a major step forward in Abby’s long road of healing,” lawyers Diane Toscano, Kevin Biniazan and Jeffrey Breit said in a joint statement. “It confirms what we’ve said from the beginning — what happened inside Richneck Elementary was wrong and will never be tolerated.”
Parker — who is facing criminal child neglect charges related to the shooting — didn’t testify in her own defense.

The boy was not criminally or civilly charged.
Parker is slated to go on trial in the criminal case next month.

She has pleaded not guilty.
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