Stabbing at Local High School

A stabbing occurred at Bryan Station High School, one of the 5 public high schools in Lexington, KY

Bryan+Station+High+School

Courtesy of Lexington Herald-Leader

Bryan Station High School

On the morning of Apr. 22, a student at Bryan Station High School was accused of stabbing another student in a school classroom. School officials have confirmed that the student accused of stabbing has been charged with first degree assault.

LEX 28 News reports on the incident
Courtesy of LEX 18 News
LEX 28 News reports on the incident

The male victim was stabbed around 11 am with a pocketknife, according to Fayette County Public Schools spokeswoman Lisa Defendall. The student with the pocketknife was quickly put into handcuffs as law enforcement and school administrators were immediately called in to control the situation. The injuries from the pocketknife were not life-threatening and the student was able to walk to the ambulance. Fire crews were called by the school’s law enforcement to help assist the victim.

Bryan Station principal, James McMillin, sent two emails to parents: the first assured parents that the injured student would make a full recovery. McMillin made it clear that the stabbing had been an isolated incident and that no other student was in danger. McMillin’s second email stated that along with any consequences from the juvenile court system, the arrested student would undergo administrative consequences from the school district. “There is no tolerance for violence of any kind at Bryan Station High School,” said McMillin.

I feel like if it can happen in one school, it’s possible that it can happen at another

— Victoria Daniel, senior

The incident at Bryan Station has opened many eyes as the reality sunk in that a stabbing like this could happen anywhere. “I feel like if it can happen in one school, it’s possible that it can happen at another,” said senior Victoria Daniel.

There are many opinions at Dunbar as to how the student’s punishment should be carried out. Senior Akash Ahmad said, “Considering that no one else was hurt and it was only a minor wound to the point where he could walk away, it seems like there shouldn’t be any extremely severe punishment other than jail time.”

Others believed he should be tried as an adult. Junior Tessa Kelty made it clear that at the student’s age he knew exactly what he was doing when he stabbed his peer, and his age should not be a factor in deciding his sentence.

Senior Megan Showalter expressed her rising concern involving the situation. “You never know what’s going to happen. When coming to school you want to be safe, and hearing that a local high school in the same area went through something like that is off-putting.”

Bryan Station High School is ranked the 208th high school in Kentucky out of 296 high schools. In Fayette County, Bryan Station is ranked sixth. The racial make up at Bryan Station is 42.2% white, 39.1% African-American and 14.3% Hispanic. In 2015 Bryan Station ranked lower than 70.3% of high schools in Kentucky.

The recent stabbing at Bryan Station does not bode well for the school’s reputation.

“This would solidify the underlying assumption that people have about that school, like ‘oh, there are only bad kids that go there’ it would only feed into the stereotype,” said Ahmad.

Dunbar English teacher, Mrs. Colleen Burns, formerly taught at Bryan Station High School. She said that a few kids making poor choices negatively impact the whole student body.

“Overall, the vast majority of students at Bryan Station are hardworking, they care about their work, and they do a good job,” she said.

“There are a few kids that make things hard for everybody else. Those students made poor choices and unfortunately that reflects on the whole school. I feel like while things like that tend to happen at Bryan Station a lot, it could happen at any school.”

The situation created awareness that even an isolated incident affects the entire student body and school community.