Shooting of Kayla Rolland

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Kayla Rolland
Kayla Rolland
Location Mount Morris, Michigan, Michigan, United States
Date
February 29, 2000
Attack type
Murder
Weapons Guns
Deaths 1
Perpetrators 1
Participant 1

The shooting death of Kayla Rolland occurred at Buell Elementary School in Mount Morris Township, Michigan, United States on February 29, 2000. Six-year-old Dedric Darnell Owens, who was black, fatally shot white classmate Kayla Renee Rolland (May 12, 1993 – February 29, 2000) in a stairwell before he was taken into police custody. Buell Elementary School closed in 2002.[1] It was part of the Beecher Community School District.

Dedric was not charged with a crime after the incident. Ten years later he was convicted of an unrelated home invasion. These events have been cited by White Nationalists in their recitations of black on white violence.[2][3]

Incident

The incident began when 6-year-old Dedrick Owens found a Davis Industries P-32 .32-caliber handgun in his uncle's home,[4][5] and brought the firearm, along with a knife, to Buell Elementary School. Further in the day, during a change of classes, Owens fatally shot 6-year-old Kayla Rolland in the presence of a teacher and 22 students while they were moving up a floor on the stairs, saying to her: "I don't like you", before pulling the trigger. The bullets entered her right arm and traveled through a vital artery. At 10:29 a.m. EST, Rolland was pronounced dead at Hurley Medical Center while in cardiac arrest.[6]

Owens then threw the handgun into a wastebasket and fled to a nearby restroom. He was found there, in the corner, by a teacher and was taken into police custody soon after. He was held in custody until the Genesee County Family Independence Agency could determine his placement.[7] He and his two younger siblings have since been placed with an aunt.[8]

Dedric Darnell Owens

Aftermath

At six years of age, Kayla Rolland was believed to be the youngest school shooting victim in U.S. history until the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012.[9] Dedric Owens is the youngest school shooter. Due to Owens' age (born on May 5, 1993) and the legal claim that at that age he would lack the ability to form intent, he was not charged with the murder. In most U.S. states, six-year-olds are not liable for crimes they commit. Genesee County Prosecutor Arthur Busch called on the citizens to collectively hug the boy presumably out of pity and sympathy. In an 1893 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court declared that "children under the age of 7 years could not be guilty of felony, or punished for any capital offense, for within that age the child is conclusively presumed incapable of committing a crime." This is followed in many U.S. states.[10]

Dedric Owens was sentenced on September 4, 2012, to two years in a Michigan prison for an April 23, 2012 home invasion (3rd degree)[citation needed] in Bay County, Michigan, about one hour north of Flint, Michigan. He was discharged on August 26, 2013.

Jamelle James, who owned the .32-caliber semiautomatic pistol, eventually pleaded no contest to involuntary manslaughter and spent two years and five months in prison before he was released on probation. The other adults involved would be in and out of court systems in the years to follow.[1] Two years later, Buell Elementary School was closed, and was demolished in January 2009.

Cultural references

The incident was documented in the 2002 Michael Moore film Bowling for Columbine.[11]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Five years after school shooting, Michigan community still in pain Sign on San Diego Retrieved on November 26, 2007
  2. http://www.newnation.org/Archives/Black-on-White-050706.html
  3. https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.fan.unabomber/jGOvP6W1ubE
  4. Major U.S. school shootings in the last 10 years Fox News
  5. The Killing of Kayla Time Magazine
  6. Student killed in Michigan elementary school shooting CNN at the Wayback Machine (archived January 3, 2008)
  7. Michigan first-grader fatally shot by classmate CNN
  8. More Indictments In School Shooting CBS News
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  10. Dwyer, Kevin and Fiorillo, Juré. True Stories of Law & Order: SVU. 2007: Berkley/Penguin, page 15. ISBN 0-425-21735-3)
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External links

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