courtroom

Kentucky Youth Agrees to Plea Deal for Campus Shooting, Deaths

The suspect in a 2018 shooting at Marshall County High School has pleaded guilty to murder.

Gabe Parker, now 18, has accepted a plea deal stemming from the deaths of two Marshall County High School students in 2018. He will plead guilty to two counts of murder, and more lenient assault charges. Parker was 15 years old when open fire in a common area of the school, killing Preston Cope and Bailey Holt, both 15.

Parker brought his stepfather’s Ruger MK 11 .22-caliber pistol to school, committing the shooting, which also injured several other students. A sentencing hearing will be held June 12, and if the court agrees to the plea deal, he will be sentenced for two counts of first-degree murder, eight counts of first-degree assault and six counts of second-degree assault.

Marshall County Circuit Judge James Jameson will have to approve of the deal. If approved, Parker will be sentenced to life in prison, but will be eligible for parole at age 35.

Defense attorney Tom Griffiths said the plea deal will allow Parker to “start the next phase of his life where he’s going to have to earn any chance to ever be on the outside of a prison again,” according to The Courier Journal.

"Gabe has a lot to atone for," defense attorney Tom Griffiths told The Courier Journal. "This plea allows him to start the next phase in his life where he's going to have to earn any chance to ever be on the outside of a prison ever again.”

The Courier Journal also reported that Marshall County Commonwealth’s attorney Dennis Foust said the families of the murdered victims felt the plea was the right way to go, especially in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, which would have delayed the trial by as much as a year. The families were ready for closure and the opportunity to begin healing. Faust had refused any deals in the past.

Mary Garrison Minyard, Parker’s mother, sobbed throughout the court proceeding, saying in the statement, “To every child in the school that day, to every parent and loved one of those children; to the school system and entire community, I’m so sorry.”

Griffiths said his client has never denied the shooting and has been ready to enter a guilty plea for a while. He said prolonging the case would have served nothing, especially if the ongoing pandemic would have forced the trial to be continued this year, or even into 2021.

About the Author

Ralph C. Jensen is the Publisher of Security Today magazine.

Featured

  • Emerging Campus Access Control Solutions

    Emerging solutions in campus access control can mean different things. Usually, we expect the topic to focus on the very latest in door security products and solutions that have just been recently released or are about to be launched. After all, staying up on improvements to keep campuses safer is critical. Plus, it’s always interesting and exciting to learn what’s new and how innovations are going to better protect lives and assets and help the industry be even more successful. Read Now

  • Here’s How Instructional Audio Can Play a Key Role in School Safety

    Ensuring the safety of students and employees is critical in today’s educational environment. While the threat of a school shooting is in the back of everyone’s mind, the truth is there are many possible scenarios that could crop up at any time in classrooms, hallways, and other school spaces—from fights or altercations to a sick child or staff member who requires emergency attention. Read Now

  • How School Security Continues to Advance

    For more than 30 years, I’ve been fully immersed in security operations in K-12 schools, including working in school safety in Littleton, Colorado during the attack at Columbine High School in 1999. That incident, coupled with those before and since, underscores the critical need for continued improvement in safety and security measures in our schools. Thankfully, ongoing advancements in security technology enable prompt response to critical threats as well as daily operational efficiency Read Now

  • The Role of Trusted Access Control and Identity Management

    The diverse and dynamic campus environments of modern post-secondary institutions rely on multiple systems and processes to ensure campus security and operational efficiency. Read Now

Webinars