NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A shooting in a Nashville high school cafeteria Wednesday left a female student dead and another student wounded, nearly two years after another deadly school shooting in the city that ignited an emotional debate about gun control in Tennessee.
An alleged portrait is beginning to emerge of the 17-year-old boy who opened fire at his Nashville high school on Wednesday, killing one student and wounding a second student, according to police.
Analysts with the ADL Center on Extremism "have located a manifesto and social media accounts believed to belong to the shooter, where he shared a range of incel, accelerationist, white supremacist, antisemitic & anti-Black content," the organization wrote in a Wednesday post on X (formerly Twitter ).
In response to the shooting, the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee (CFMT) has activated the Nashville School Violence Support & Healing Fund.
Within days of President Donald Trump's inauguration, one Republican lawmaker in Tennessee is proposing to rename Nashville International Airport to "Trump international Airport." House Bill 217 was filed late last week by Rep.
Police say the gun used in the Nashville school shooting was purchased in Arizona as detectives piece together why the high school student fatally shot a classmate before killing himself
While Democrats hope to pass legislation regulating guns to prevent crimes, one Republican has proposed removing lawmakers’ power to do that from the Tennessee Constitution, reaffirming the
Former Tennessee Department of Correction employee Rustin Bowen is convicted of charges involving multiple child victims.
Nashville investigators say they believe the teenager who opened fire in a high school and killed a girl before killing himself was influenced by material found on "harmful" sites.
There is a reason you never hear about shootings at the airport, the Titans stadium, or Tennessee courtrooms: metal detectors.
The students and teachers, must now live with the unimaginable trauma of experiencing a school shooting. Our classrooms should be sacred places to learn, and students, teachers, administrators and parents should feel the greatest sense of safety in every school in Tennessee.