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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Andrea Cavallier

Dad of Georgia high school shooting suspect found guilty of murder charges for mass shooting deaths

A Georgia jury has found Colin Gray guilty on all charges related to his actions of failing to stop his teenage son from carrying out a mass shooting at Apalachee High School that killed two students and two teachers in 2024.

The verdict was reached on Tuesday, after just a few hours of deliberations by the jury and two weeks of witness testimony.

Colin Gray was convicted on all 27 counts, including two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of involuntary manslaughter, tied to prosecutors’ claim that he knowingly allowed his troubled son access to firearms and ammunition prior to the mass shooting. He had pleaded not guilty to all charges. He now faces 10 to 30 years in prison on each murder charge and 1 to 10 years on each manslaughter charge.

His son Colt Gray, who was 14 at the time of the September 4, 2024, shooting, is accused of bringing a AR-15-style rifle his father had given him for Christmas to school and killing two students - Mason Schermerhorn, 14, and Christian Angulo, 14, and two teachers, Richard Aspinwall, 39; and Cristina Irimie, 53. Another teacher and eight other students were wounded.

Colt, now 16, faces 55 felony counts, including murder and aggravated assault. He has pleaded not guilty. A date for his trial has not yet been set.

Colin Gray, the father of Apalachee High School shooting suspect Colt Gray, listens during his trial last month. He has been found guilty on all charges (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Colin Gray could have prevented an attack, Barrow County Assistant District Attorney Patricia Brooks said in her closing argument.

“After seeing sign after sign of his son’s deteriorating mental state, his violence, his school shooter obsession, the defendant had sufficient warning that his son was a bomb just waiting to go off,” Brooks told jurors on Monday. “And instead of disarming him, he gave him the detonator.”

In the defense closing argument, Jimmy Berry, agreed that what the dad knew ahead of time was of paramount importance in the case.

“That’s real important because that really is the key to this case, is what did he know?,” he said. “Did he know that Colt would do this?”

Colt Gray, who was 14 at the time of the September 4, 2024, shooting, is accused of bringing a rifle his father had given him for Christmas to school and killing two students and two teachers (Barrow County Sheriff’s Office)

The trial

On the stand, Colin Gray broke down when asked if he ever saw red flags.

“No, I struggle with it every day,” he said. “He’s a good kid… to do something that heinous – I don’t know if anybody could ever see that kind of evil. The Colt I knew… there was this whole other side of Colt I didn’t know existed.”

Asked if he tried to help his son, Gray said: “I did, I just wanted him okay.”

Under cross-examination, he acknowledged that multiple firearms were stored unsecured in a closet and that Colt sometimes kept the rifle in his bedroom. Prosecutors highlighted a text message from Colt weeks before the shooting: “Whenever something happens just know the blood is on your hands.”

Jurors also saw body-camera footage from May 2023, when deputies visited the home after an FBI tip about an online threat to shoot up a school. The threat could not be substantiated, and Gray bought the rifle later that year.

District Attorney Brad Smith, left, points to a weapon that was displayed on the screen during the first day of the trial of Colin Gray (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

During closing arguments, prosecutors showed jurors images of students barricading classroom doors and wounded teenagers being helped after 41 seconds of gunfire.

“Those 41 seconds forever altered the lives of the students of Apalachee High School, their parents and everyone in this community,” Brooks said.

Berry urged jurors not to decide the case on emotion and argued the shooting was impossible to foresee.

“Who would be able to foresee that a 14-year-old is going to take a rifle, as big as it is, as heavy as it is, and stick it in a book bag, get on a bus, come to school, walk down the hall, go to class, put it down on the floor and not one single person sees it?” he said. “How foreseeable is that?”

Prosecutors countered with surveillance video showing Colt boarding a school bus with a backpack concealing the rifle, walking through hallways unnoticed, and spending time in a bathroom shortly before opening fire.

Students testified through tears about being shot in algebra class, seeing classmates bleeding, and believing they might die. In rebuttal, prosecutors said only one person had the full picture.

“The only person who knew every single dot, the only person who knew how much access Colt had to firearms and ammunition, is that man,” Brooks said. “The individuals at the school only had minutes to connect the dots. The defendant had years and he did nothing.”

Brooks told jurors that Colin Gray “shares the blame” and called his actions “criminally negligent,” urging convictions for murder and manslaughter.

“That man was the one person who could have prevented this mass shooting,” she said. “The blood is on their hands.”

Berry argued Colt was “smart” and “manipulative,” hiding his intentions from his father and others. “He never in a million years thought that this son that he loved was going to turn out to be a monster that killed these people,” Berry added.

The case is part of a growing national effort to hold parents criminally responsible when warning signs precede school shootings, following the convictions of James and Jennifer Crumbley, whose then-15-year-old son Ethan killed four students in 2021 at his high school in Michigan.

Gray testified that he gave his son a rifle to bond over hunting and trips to the gun range. Prosecutors argued that decision was reckless given what they described as Colt’s spiraling mental health and violent fixation.

Jennifer and James Crumbley, the parents of 2021 school shooter Ethan Crumbley, are the first parents in the U.S. to be held criminally responsible for a school shooting (AP)
Colt Gray had an interest in Nikolas Cruz, convicted in the 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people (AP)

The jurors also heard how Colt Gray had an interest in Nikolas Cruz, convicted in the 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, his mother Marcee Gray testified.

Colt kept what prosecutors called a “shrine” of Cruz that included photos and news articles on his bedroom wall., according to evidence presented in court.

Marcee Gray said she urged her husband to lock up the guns, but witnesses testified that in the days before the shooting, Colt kept the rifle in his bedroom.

“I never thought that he would even have a thought process of bringing a gun to school or doing any kind of harm to anybody else. Well, on anybody at school,” Colin Gray told jurors during his testimony.

Colt’s parents were separated, and Marcee Gray was not charged.

Who were the victims of the Apalachee school shooting?

Two students and two teachers were killed in the Apalachee school shooting in 2024.

Christian Angulo has been described by friends and family as “a beautiful soul” who was “loved by so many.”

Following the shooting, his sister, Lisette Angulo, shared the family’s heartbreak and shock over his death in a GoFundMe.

“Unfortunately my baby brother was one of the victims of the school shooting at Apalachee High School,” she confirmed. “He was only 14 years old. He was a very good kid and very sweet and so caring. He was so loved by many. His loss was so sudden and unexpected.. We are truly heartbroken. He really didn’t deserve this.”

Christian Angulo, one of the students killed in the 2024 school shooting, was described by friends and family as ‘a beautiful soul’ (Supplied)

Ivonne Lizbeth Infante, who said Angulo is her boyfriend’s nephew, also paid tribute to the teenager on Facebook, calling him a “very sweet” and “kind young man.” “Always loved having him and his family over and our weekend trips to Costco,” she added.

“He loved to play with our baby girl. I will forever be grateful for the love and the time spent with us. He didn’t deserve this, none of them did.”

Mason Schermerhorn, who was autistic, was another student killed in the shooting. A family friend, Doug Kilburn, told The New York Times that the teenager “really enjoyed life” and “always had an upbeat attitude about everything.” He enjoyed spending time with his family, playing video games, telling jokes and taking trips to Walt Disney World, the paper reported.

Mason Schermerhorn, 14, was identified by his family as one of the victims of the shooting at Apalachee High School (Social media)

Richard Aspinwall, was a 39-year-old married father-of-two and math teacher at the school. He died while “protecting his students,” according to a GoFundMe that was set up for his family at the time.

A tribute to the teacher, who also coached the school football team, posted on Facebook said the fundraiser would go towards supporting his wife and two daughters.

“We are all in shock over the news that Ricky Aspinwall lost his life protecting his students,” the page, set up by Julie Woodson, reads. It has so far raised more than $100,000.

Richard Aspinwall, a math teacher at Apalachee High School who was killed in the 2024 mass shooting (Apalachee High School)

One person who knew him said: “Coach Aspinwall was a really good coach and he has a good heart. My condolences to his wife and his loved ones and especially his two little girls.”

Another commented: “Senseless tragedy! One of my sons [sic] best friends and an all round great guy with a family. What is wrong with this world! Praying for his beautiful family and friends.”

Christina Irimie, 53, was also a math teacher at the school. She was described as a “beloved teacher, wife, daughter and friend” on a GoFundMe page launched to help her family cover funeral expenses. “She dedicated her life to shaping the minds and hearts of students and the community.” Irimie was also described as “an incredible teacher” by a friend in a post on Facebook.

Christina Irimie, was another math teacher killed at Apalachee high school in 2024 (apalachee high school)

“Christina Irimie was an incredible teacher. I feel blessed to have known her, but she went into her school building today, to teach math because she was amazing at it, and she will never come home to her family and friends,” the friend wrote.

“Do something for Ms. Irimie….Take action for our kids AND the teachers and staff that care about them so much.”

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