Archive November 7, 2025

US school teacher shot by six-year-old student awarded $10m

A jury in the state of Virginia in the United States has awarded $10m to a former teacher who was shot by a six-year-old student.

The jury on Thursday sided with former teacher Abby Zwerner’s claim, made in a civil lawsuit, that an ex-administrator at the school had ignored repeated warnings that the six-year-old child had a gun in class.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Zwerner, 28, was shot in January 2023 as she sat at a reading table in her first-grade classroom and spent nearly two weeks in the hospital, required six surgeries and still does not have the full use of her left hand.

The bullet fired by the six-year-old narrowly missed her heart and remains in her chest.

Zwerner, who did not address reporters outside the court after the decision was announced, had sought $40m in damages against Ebony Parker, a former assistant principal at Richneck Elementary School in the city of Newport News, Virginia.

One of her lawyers, Diane Toscano, said the verdict sent a message that what happened at the school “was wrong and is not going to be tolerated, that safety has to be the first concern at school”.

Zwerner’s lawyers had claimed that Parker, the assistant principal at the time, had failed to act in the hours before the shooting after several school staff members told her that the student had a gun in his backpack.

“Who would think a six-year-old would bring a gun to school and shoot their teacher?” Toscano had asked the jury earlier.

“It’s Dr Parker’s job to believe that is possible. It’s her job to investigate it and get to the very bottom of it.”

Parker did not testify in the lawsuit.

The mother of the student who shot Zwerner was sentenced to four years in prison after being convicted of child neglect and firearms charges.

No charges were brought against the child, who told authorities he got his mother’s handgun by climbing onto a drawer to reach the top of a dresser, where the firearm was in his mother’s purse.

Newtown Action Alliance, an advocacy organisation that supports reforms aimed at addressing gun violence, said that the case points to the need for greater regulations over the storage of firearms in homes with children.

“Abby Zwerner was shot by her 6-year-old student using a gun from home,” the group said in a social media post, adding that “76 percent of school shooters get their guns from their homes or relatives”.

Zwerner no longer works for the school district and has said she has no plans to teach again. She has since become a licensed cosmetologist.

While accidents involving young children accessing unsecured firearms in their homes are common in the US, school shootings perpetrated by those under 10 years old are rare.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,352

Here is how things stand on Friday, November 7:

Fighting

  • Ukraine attacked Russia with at least 75 drones on Thursday, sparking a fire in an industrial area in the southern city of Volgograd, which killed at least one person and halted dozens of flights across the country, Russian officials said.
  • Russian oil firm Lukoil’s refinery in Volgograd has also halted operations after it was struck by Ukrainian drones, the Reuters news agency reports, citing three sources familiar with the matter.
  • The sources said Lukoil’s primary processing unit, CDU-5, with a daily capacity of 9,100 metric tonnes, or 66,700 barrels per day – a fifth of the plant’s total capability – and another with a capacity of 11,000 tonnes per day were damaged during the attack.
  • Russia’s Ministry of Defence said its forces have advanced in the battered Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk and were fighting house-to-house battles in a bid to eject Ukrainian troops.
  • Russia said it captured 64 buildings in Pokrovsk over the past 24 hours and repelled Ukrainian attacks from Hryshyne to the west.
  • Moscow says taking Pokrovsk would give it a platform to drive north towards the two biggest remaining Ukrainian-controlled cities in the Donetsk region, Kramatorsk and Sloviansk.
  • South Africa’s government said it received distress calls from 17 citizens who had joined mercenary forces in the Russia-Ukraine conflict. The men are between the ages of 20 and 39 years and are trapped in Ukraine’s war-torn Donbas region. It is unclear who they were fighting for.

Military aid

  • Ukraine is engaged in “positive” talks on the purchase of Tomahawk missiles and other long-range weaponry with the United States, Ukraine’s ambassador to Washington, Olha Stefanishyna, told Bloomberg News.
  • Swedish Defence Minister Pal Jonson said Sweden and Ukraine have signed a letter of intent that includes establishing a joint hub in Ukraine “where Swedish personnel will be working on defence innovation”.
  • Ukraine has also asked Sweden to start training Ukrainian pilots on Swedish Gripen fighter jets as soon as possible, Kyiv’s Defence Minister Denys Shmyhal said.

Sanctions

  • Swiss commodity trader Gunvor said it has withdrawn its proposal to buy the foreign assets of sanctioned Russian energy company Lukoil after the US Treasury called the firm Russia’s “puppet” and signalled Washington’s opposition to the deal.
  • The US Treasury said in a post on X that President Donald Trump “has been clear that the war must end immediately. As long as [Russian President Vladimir] Putin continues the senseless killings, the Kremlin’s puppet, Gunvor, will never get a license to operate and profit”.
  • Lukoil has started diverting Caspian oil flows from the Azeri capital of Baku to the Russian port of Makhachkala in response to Western sanctions, Reuters reports, citing two industry sources. One of the sources said a tanker, Lady Leila, under the Russian flag, arrived late on Thursday at Makhachkala with a cargo of 5,000 metric tonnes of crude oil from Lukoil’s Korchagin oilfield in the Caspian Sea.

Regional security

  • Flights have resumed at Sweden’s second-largest airport, Gothenburg-Landvetter, after a drone incident prompted a sabotage investigation and halted air traffic. It was the latest in a series of incidents European officials have said are part of hybrid warfare being waged by Russia on European countries.
  • Belgian Defence Minister Theo Francken said his country will work to improve surveillance of its airspace following repeated sightings of drones over its airports and military bases in recent months.
  • NATO countries have been on high alert in recent weeks after drone sightings and other air incursions, including at airports in Copenhagen, Munich and in the Baltic region. Some 20 Russian drones also entered Polish airspace in September. Moscow has denied any connection with the incidents.
  • Poland will roll out a new military training programme this month as part of a broader plan to train about 400,000 people in 2026, the Defence Ministry said. Galvanised by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Poland now spends more of its gross domestic product (GDP) on defence than any other NATO member.

Russian affairs

  • The Russian government has agreed to phase in a planned lowering of its value-added tax thresholds for small businesses from 2026 rather than impose it in one go, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said after a backlash from business owners over the measure intended to fund Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
  • Two lawmakers from Germany’s biggest opposition party, the far-right Alternative for Germany, will travel to Russia next week for a BRICS summit. The party is under fire from opponents over its ties to the Kremlin and accusations – strongly denied – that it could be passing on sensitive military information.

War crimes

  • A Ukrainian court has sentenced a Russian soldier to life in prison after finding him guilty of killing a Ukrainian prisoner of war, the first time Kyiv has jailed a suspect on such charges.
  • The court in the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia found Dmitry Kurashov guilty of shooting dead Vitalii Hodniuk, a Ukrainian soldier who had surrendered in January 2024 when his dugout was captured by Russian forces.
Russian soldier Dmytro Kurashov, who is accused of committing a war crime by executing a Ukrainian serviceman who had surrendered during combat, attends a court hearing in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, on November 6, 2025 [Inna Varenytsia/Reuters]

New Rangers dawn as far away as ever in European Groundhog Day

SNS

May 30 was meant to be the day of a new beginning for Rangers.

New investment. New regime. New manager en route. A new outlook, all triggered by the arrival of a US-based consortium vowing to get the club “back to the top”.

Already the Trumpesque “Make Rangers Great Again” merchandise seen back then has been parked. The star-spangled banners in the Ibrox stands now replaced with statements of protest, accompanied by howls of dissatisfaction.

Five harrowing months on from when the group led by Andrew Cavenagh walked in the big door in the Bill Struth Stand, the feel-good has been has been banished amid interminable disappointment.

It’s been catastrophic so far. A new head coach, Russell Martin, has been and gone – smuggled away in the back of a car – after 123 days.

The process of appointing his replacement garnered ridicule as candidates were in and out like a managerial Hokey Cokey, all before Danny Rohl re-emerged to take charge after earlier withdrawing from the race.

Fans have been seen accosting board members in hotel lobbies and airports, while on the pitch the team languish 14 points off the Premiership summit as Europe continues to to be a traumatic experience.

The latest torturous episode came courtesy of a Roma team who played most of their 2-0 Europa League victory at Ibrox in second gear.

In truth, there was no real need to reach for a third against a Rangers team which was again complicit to stay anchored on zero points.

There have been flickers of improvement under German Rohl, who has won two of his first five games.

    • 18 June 2023

‘It was uninspiring’

A seventh successive European defeat in a row was meted out on Thursday, achieving an embarassing club record.

Giant tifo displays of Rangers’ Roman warriors pre-match made way for banners reading “This is not a hobby this is our lives” as the game followed a similar European pattern founded on self destruction.

An unmarked Matias Soule nodded Roma into the lead after 13 minutes. The killer second came through a sumptuous Lorenzo Pellegrini finish, assisted by Artem Dovbyk and a gawping Rangers defence. There was no need for a third.

Rohl, who already seems more popular than the man he replaced ever was, shuffled the hand his predecessor had dealt him. Five substitutes – one at half-time – were made and the system changed more than once.

To an extent, he got a reaction. Rangers got into good areas but far too often the final ball was poor. You got the impression Roma could have upped it if need be.

“It was uninspiring,” said former Rangers striker Steven Thompson on Sportsound. “They huffed and puffed in the second half. It was improved, but not good enough.”

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

‘Have they signed anyone better than they’ve let go?’

That latter point is perhaps the key one for the Rangers support, the head coach, and Cavenagh. A squad which has already undergone major work requires further surgery.

In June, the American businessman spoke of the club being “impatient” in their thirst for success as £20m of investment was announced.

A lot of the narrative at the time surrounded whether that would be enough to narrow the gap to Celtic and would there be more coming?

It’s safe to say plenty of money has been poured into this Rangers squad – whether it’s been done wisely or not is open to great debate.

A reported fee of £8m was given to Everton for Youssef Chermiti, who had not scored for 28 months prior to joning. Twelve Rangers appearances later, only one goal has followed.

Oliver Antman, Oscar Cortes, Thelo Aasgaard, Emmanuel Fernandez and Djeidi Gassama have also come in for reported significant fees. But to what impact?

Hamza Igamane left for a fee reported to be north of £10m. The maligned Cyriel Dessers also left for big money after scoring 29 goals last season. Vaclav Cerny and his 19 goals departed upon completion of his loan deal.

“Have Rangers signed anyone better than who they’ve let go?” Rangers legend Ally McCoist asked on TNT Sports. “Forget one transfer window for Rangers, it might be three. It’s a big job. A big, big job.”

Get in touch

For Rangers to bring players in, you’d expect some will need to go out in what is traditionally a harder transfer window to manoeuvre in. Especially when supporters are so critical of what they’ve already seen under this regime.

Chief executive Patrick Stewart and sporting director Kevin Thelwell have been the subjects of protest from the club’s support. Banners protesting against them returned on Thursday, as did more cries from the crowd.

There’s no hiding place for either, particularly now Martin is no longer there to be the primary target for the ire. They removed him, but it has not been enough to alleviate the pressure mounting on them. Only wins will do that, and quickly.

Rangers’ priority will be the domestic scene, and it should be.

On Sunday, they competed with 10 men for a large spell of their extra-time League Cup semi-final defeat by Celtic. There’s positives they can take from clinging to a win at Easter Road, and also shaking off a Kilmarnock resurgence to ease to victory.

Rohl spoke post-match about seeing a team “willing to turn things around” and being “totally convinced” the tanker can be turned.

Remarkably they are only five points adrift of Celtic, albeit a long way further back from Hearts. The season is far from a lost cause.

But that is a long way off right now. Five months on from that new dawn, better days seem further away than they did that day in May.

Related topics

  • Rangers
  • Europa League
  • Scottish Football
  • Football

‘Flying’ Sarr easing Crystal Palace’s Eze loss

Getty Images
  • 21 Comments

Filling the boots of Eberechi Eze was never going to be easy.

The England midfielder departed Crystal Palace for a new challenge at Arsenal this summer with 40 goals and 28 assists across 169 appearances in all competitions under his belt – including a historic goal at Wembley in the FA Cup to seal Palace a first major trophy.

But Senegal forward Ismaila Sarr has more than risen to the task of filling the void left by Eze with eight goals in 15 games this season.

His double on Thursday helped the Eagles to a 3-1 victory over Dutch side AZ Alkmaar – a first win in the Conference League on home soil – and underlined their credentials as one of the favourites for the title.

But it was not just the two goals that made Sarr the main talking point.

The 27-year-old was a constant threat going forward with his pace, touch, clever runs and link-up play with forward Jean-Philippe Mateta.

He hit the post in the early exchanges of the match before winning a penalty when goalkeeper Rome-Jayden Owusu-Oduro brought him down in the box, although Mateta ultimately missed the spot-kick.

Sarr then saw his header brilliantly saved before nipping in to bundle the ball over the line just before half-time then adding his second and Palace’s third of the night when Mateta teed him up to charge through and slot home.

“Sarr is in hot form,” said former Palace defender Joel Ward on TNT Sports.

“He adds so much to the team and, when there is space for him to attack and the ball is played in front of him, he is someone not many people can stand with and keep up with. He showed great composure throughout the game as well.

‘Important’ Sarr makes difference in first European home win

Sarr has four goals in his past three appearances and is already close to matching his tally from last season – 12 goals across all competitions.

Palace signed Sarr from Marseille for a fee of about £12.5m in 2024 in an attempt to replace winger Michael Olise, who had joined Bayern Munich that summer.

That is a piece of business that now looks incredibly shrewd, particularly with Eze also leaving the club this year.

Boss Oliver Glasner called the former Watford forward “an important player” for the club.

“It looks like he is dealing really well with this – we know when he has pace, he is really good,” the Austrian said.

“He has such great runs, such great finishes. I remember, more or less, the same finish he had against Brighton [last season].

“He had the same finish against Arsenal in the FA Cup [last season]. He is the one with the pace, and more runs in behind, the most sprinting difference. It helps he creates space for the others. He has done really well.”

The Conference League has been won by an English team in two of the past three tournaments and Palace are among the favourites to add their names to that list this term.

After a shock defeat by AEK Larnaca at Selhurst Park last time out, Glasner said the victory in front of their home supporters was much needed.

“I hope it won’t be the last,” he said.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Crystal Palace
  • Football

More on this story

  • Selhurst Park
  • Ask Me Anything logo

‘Flying’ Sarr easing Crystal Palace’s Eze loss

Getty Images
  • 21 Comments

Filling the boots of Eberechi Eze was never going to be easy.

The England midfielder departed Crystal Palace for a new challenge at Arsenal this summer with 40 goals and 28 assists across 169 appearances in all competitions under his belt – including a historic goal at Wembley in the FA Cup to seal Palace a first major trophy.

But Senegal forward Ismaila Sarr has more than risen to the task of filling the void left by Eze with eight goals in 15 games this season.

His double on Thursday helped the Eagles to a 3-1 victory over Dutch side AZ Alkmaar – a first win in the Conference League on home soil – and underlined their credentials as one of the favourites for the title.

But it was not just the two goals that made Sarr the main talking point.

The 27-year-old was a constant threat going forward with his pace, touch, clever runs and link-up play with forward Jean-Philippe Mateta.

He hit the post in the early exchanges of the match before winning a penalty when goalkeeper Rome-Jayden Owusu-Oduro brought him down in the box, although Mateta ultimately missed the spot-kick.

Sarr then saw his header brilliantly saved before nipping in to bundle the ball over the line just before half-time then adding his second and Palace’s third of the night when Mateta teed him up to charge through and slot home.

“Sarr is in hot form,” said former Palace defender Joel Ward on TNT Sports.

“He adds so much to the team and, when there is space for him to attack and the ball is played in front of him, he is someone not many people can stand with and keep up with. He showed great composure throughout the game as well.

‘Important’ Sarr makes difference in first European home win

Sarr has four goals in his past three appearances and is already close to matching his tally from last season – 12 goals across all competitions.

Palace signed Sarr from Marseille for a fee of about £12.5m in 2024 in an attempt to replace winger Michael Olise, who had joined Bayern Munich that summer.

That is a piece of business that now looks incredibly shrewd, particularly with Eze also leaving the club this year.

Boss Oliver Glasner called the former Watford forward “an important player” for the club.

“It looks like he is dealing really well with this – we know when he has pace, he is really good,” the Austrian said.

“He has such great runs, such great finishes. I remember, more or less, the same finish he had against Brighton [last season].

“He had the same finish against Arsenal in the FA Cup [last season]. He is the one with the pace, and more runs in behind, the most sprinting difference. It helps he creates space for the others. He has done really well.”

The Conference League has been won by an English team in two of the past three tournaments and Palace are among the favourites to add their names to that list this term.

After a shock defeat by AEK Larnaca at Selhurst Park last time out, Glasner said the victory in front of their home supporters was much needed.

“I hope it won’t be the last,” he said.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Crystal Palace
  • Football

More on this story

  • Selhurst Park
  • Ask Me Anything logo