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In a gun-friendly state, parental liability looms following school shooting

When John Monroe was 12 years old, his dad gave him his first rifle.

For Mr. Monroe, the Christmas gift – a tradition among some outdoor enthusiasts – ultimately led him to become one of Georgia’s top gun rights attorneys.

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Parents play a critical role in children’s behavior – including whether and how they handle guns. Georgia is now the latest state making a legal shift toward holding parents accountable when their children open fire.

But charging Colin Gray with involuntary manslaughter and second-degree murder this past week has put a darker spin on that rite of passage.

Even after law enforcement told the Georgia resident that his son may have threatened a school shooting, Mr. Gray bought his son an AR-15 platform rifle. Last week, police say, 14-year-old Colt used the rifle to kill four people and injure nine others. Both father and son are now charged in the killings.

This case pits parental liability for a child against a state’s lenient gun laws. The father’s conviction would send a strong message to Georgia’s lawmakers, who are weighing stricter gun storage laws.

In the days after the shooting, new threats hit schools nationwide. Dozens of Georgia children – including a fourth grader – now face felony charges of making terrorist threats.

Earlier this week, Georgia’s Savannah-Chatham County schools warned parents that “any student found responsible for making threats … could face serious consequences, including felony charges.”

Whether that shift is enough remains to be seen.

When John Monroe was 12 years old, his dad gave him his first rifle.

For Mr. Monroe, the Christmas gift – a tradition among some outdoor enthusiasts – was the beginning of a life of hunting and arms advocacy, leading him to become one of the foremost gun rights attorneys in Georgia.

That tradition was also about teaching children how to safely handle weapons, for their own protection as well as for others’, all as part of growing into a healthy adult. The gun was for hunting and protection, nothing more. “I never shot anybody with it,” says Mr. Monroe.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Parents play a critical role in children’s behavior – including whether and how they handle guns. Georgia is now the latest state making a legal shift toward holding parents accountable when their children open fire.

The prosecution of Colin Gray, a 50-something father in Barrow County, Georgia, on involuntary manslaughter and second-degree murder has put a darker spin on that nostalgia-steeped rite of passage. 

Even after a visit from law enforcement in 2023 on a tip that his son, Colt, had threatened a school shooting, Mr. Gray bought his son a Christmas present: an AR-15 platform rifle – a self-loading gun used for sport and home defense, but also used for more than half of the deadliest mass shootings in the United States. Last week, police say, 14-year-old Colt brought the rifle to school and used it to kill four people and injure nine others. Both Colin and Colt Gray are now charged in the killings.

The case against the father in this north Georgia town pits the emerging principle of parental liability for a child’s violent gun use against this Southern state’s lenient gun laws and culture. 

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