An unsettling discovery cut into the school day Thursday at Raleigh’s Broughton High School, where officials say a student was found with an unloaded handgun on campus. The report triggered a law enforcement response and briefly disrupted normal routines before officers located the student. School leaders say the situation ended on campus and no one was injured.
How authorities say it unfolded
According to WRAL, a school resource officer was alerted just before noon that a student might have a firearm. Officers quickly found the student and discovered the gun was unloaded. WRAL reports the matter was handled at the school and resolved without injuries to students or staff.
What state law requires
Per the North Carolina General Assembly, state law calls for a 365-day suspension for any student who is determined to have brought or possessed a firearm on educational property. The statute also outlines a readmission process that allows students suspended for 365 days to ask to return after 180 days.
District rules and discipline
The Wake County Public School System’s Code of Student Conduct classifies firearm possession as a Level IV violation and instructs principals to recommend a 365-day suspension. Only the superintendent or the Board of Education can change that recommendation. District policies stress that the Code applies on campus and at school-sponsored events and note that administrators may consider interventions where appropriate. For more on district rules, see the Wake County Public School System.
Not an isolated event this spring
Reports of students with firearms have surfaced at other Wake County schools in recent months. The News & Observer reported that on May 19, a student brought a loaded gun to East Wake High and now faces juvenile petitions. In February, a case at Millbrook High covered by WRAL prompted a Code Red lockdown. Together, those incidents have kept school safety procedures and reporting tools under close local scrutiny.
What parents should expect next…