First responders to Richneck shooting, testify about treating teacher shot by student

First responders to Richneck shooting, testify about treating teacher shot by student
October 30, 2025

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First responders to Richneck shooting, testify about treating teacher shot by student

NEWPORT NEWS — A Newport News police detective raced into Richneck Elementary School after first-grade teacher Abby Zwerner was shot.

“Where’s the main office?” Detective Amber Ruhlen asked as she frantically put on light blue latex gloves on the way in.

Down a short hallway, Zwerner was lying on the floor at the center of the school’s main office, with blood from her hand and chest. Two Richneck staff members were by her side, tending to her wounds.

“We’re gonna take care of her,” Ruhlen said as she unzipped her police-issued first aid kit. “Medics are on their way.”

Watch parts of Detective Ruhlen’s body camera footage here.

“How many times was she shot?” the detective asks. “How many gunshots did you hear?”

“One,” Zwerner says softly.

“I’m gonna get up close and personal with you,” said Ruhlen, turning Zwerner slightly over to see if there was an exit wound on her back. There was not.

Another man came over and asked Zwerner her name, and asked how old she was.

“Twenty-five,” the teacher whispers. Then a school staffer said it louder so they could hear.

“I can’t breathe,” Zwerner says as Fire Department medics take over the treatment a few minutes later.

Newport News Circuit Court, trial exhibit

This is Room 11 at Richneck Elementary School, where Abby Zwerner was shot by a 6-year-old student on Jan. 6, 2023. The gun is at left, under the table, while the boy’s bookbag is near the desk to the left of the window.

Several medics put her on a gurney, with Ruhlen coming with the teacher onto the ambulance and trying to distract her as the ambulance raced to Riverside Regional Medical Center under police escort.

“We’re gonna take really good care of you,” Ruhlen tells the teacher as the ambulance takes off from Richneck.

Seconds later, Zwerner asks, “Can you tell me a story?” — apparently as a way of distracting herself.

“Yeah, of course,” Ruhlen replies, making small talk. She asks Zwerner about her pets, her pet’s name and how old she is, and whether she’s dating anyone.

Zwerner replies in low tone that she has a 3-year-old cat, and has a boyfriend that she “kind of” lives with.

The tense scenes — captured on Ruhlen’s body camera footage — were played Wednesday during a civil trial in Newport News Circuit Court in which Zwerner is suing Richneck’s assistant principal, Ebony J. Parker.

Zwerner contends Parker was grossly negligent in failing to act on several warnings that the 6-year-old first grader was armed in school that day. During a first-grade reading class at 1:58 p.m. that afternoon, the boy drew a gun from his front hoodie pocket and shot Zwerner from about 10 feet away.

A classroom at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News where a first-grade student shot his teacher on Jan. 6, 2023. (Newport News Circuit Court trial exhibit).

The bullet went through Zwerner’s left hand — which she held up as the boy fired — with a large fragment ending up in her left chest.

Former Newport News Sheriff’s Deputy Thomas Blythe was the first on scene, saying the school’s doors were locked when he and other officers approached.

They looked through the windows, “and didn’t see anyone around.” Finally, a custodian let them in.

“We were trying to find out where the person with the gun was,” Blythe said. Then another custodian said, “We have him.”

The deputy described going into Room 11.

Amy Kovac, a reading teacher, had run into the room after Zwerner and the other students fled, was in a corner with the student, her arms and legs wrapped around him to keep him from leaving.

A gun was lying nearby and the shooter’s checkered bookbag was near a desk — with ABCs and reading tips for the first-graders adorning the walls.

This is the firearm that a 6-year-old student used to shoot his schoolteacher on Jan. 6, 2023 (Circuit Court exhibit, courtesy of Court TV).

“We were quite taken aback,” Blythe said. “We didn’t expect to see so young a suspect.”

Later, he said, he went down the hall to a bathroom where some young students were hiding and released them.

Daniel Munn, Riverside Hospital’s chief of surgery, testified that the bullet that struck Zwerner’s left hand “went past the heart and just barely missed it,” and ended up two centimeters from her aorta.

It also fractured Zwerner’s rib cage.

Munn said Zwerner had a collapsed lung. The treatment is relatively simple — using a tube to remove excess air and allow the lung to expand. But without such treatment, he said, “this can oftentimes cause a patient to pass away at the scene.”

Munn testified that it’s too dangerous to remove the bullet fragment. “It’s more dangerous to remove the bullet than to leave it in place,” Munn said.

And because of the bullet piece still inside, he said, Zwerner can never have an MRI because the machine’s magnetic force could shift the metal fragment

Two hand surgeons, Romney Anderson and James Stuart, gave in depth testimony on the six surgeries that Zwerner has had on her left hand — removing bullet fragments, sewing tendons together, reducing scarring.

Another surgery is expected in March.

The surgeons spoke of how they had to take bone grafts from Zwerner’s pelvis to replace and repair bone in her hand.

A former military doctor, Anderson said it was the type of injury often seen on the battlefield in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Abby Zwerner, left, shows her hands to a jury in Newport News Circuit Court as one of her surgeons, Dr. Romney Anderson, explains the differences between her hands. (Peter Dujardin, Daily Press).

“It’s a devastating hand injury with a significant amount of bone injuries or bone fractures as well as a number of soft tissue injuries that were associated with that,” Anderson said.

At one point during Anderson’s testimony, Zwerner’s attorney Jeffrey Breit asked the surgeon and Zwerner to stand before the jury to show jurors her hands side-by-side. They demonstrated color changes, reduced range of motion and scar tissue on the left.

Anderson described an operation in which surgeons forced breaks to the scar tissue without breaking the bone. That was successful, he said, in improving Zwerner’s range of motion.

“She’ll certainly never have the exact same range of motion as the other side, never the same mobility,” Anderson said.

During cross-examinations by Parker’s attorney Sarah Douglas, both surgeons said they knew Zwerner had gone to school to be a hair dresser in 2024, and they said they did not have a concern that she’s now a licensed cosmetologist.

Also on Wednesday, Hannah Zwerner — Abby’s twin sister — described the two growing up together, saying they were “best friends” in addition to being sisters.

After college, Hannah said, the sisters lived together, both of them school teachers, with Hannah teaching high school English and Abby at Richneck. And Abby, her sister said, always took work home.

Abby went to work early and stayed late, her sister said.

“She had mountains of paperwork,” Hannah said. “She would hook up to the printer in our living room and print things for lessons the next day. And I just remember thinking, she’s so dedicated, and I just never brought work home.”

Hannah said she went with Abby to help decorate her classroom, saying Abby always wanted the room looking a certain way.

Before the shooting, she said, Abby was “full of light and spark and just so outgoing and just silly.” But now, Hannah said, her sister is “more reclusive.” The light in her “is still there,” but “it is very dimmed.”

Though it once felt that Abby had a lot to look forward to, she doesn’t have that anymore.

“She’s just not the person that she was,” Hannah said. “I feel like she’s kind of lost her sense of direction in a way.”

Parker’s lawyer, Douglas, asked Hannah about the fact that she created a GoFundMe page and sold T-shirts to raise money, and got Hannah to acknowledge that Abby felt well enough to attend a Taylor Swift concert in Philadelphia a couple years ago.

“But that was not without its own challenges,” Hannah said.

Ann Schufflebarger, a 38-year veteran of teaching and administration, testified that while assistant principals are very busy people, a report of a gun “was a huge red flag” that should have stopped everything else in their tracks.

“When you hear something like that, you’re expected take that credibly,” Schufflebarger said, saying administrators must “assume credibility” until a concern is checked into.

And as more teachers voiced concerns, the stakes were raised further. “When you look at that in totality, it’s almost shocking the lack of action there.”

Peter Dujardin, 757-897-2062, pdujardin@dailypress.com

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