Principal found dead at Tenn. school; student held

  • Welcome to "The New" Wrestling Smarks Forum!

    I see that you are not currently registered on our forum. It only takes a second, and you can even login with your Facebook! If you would like to register now, pease click here: Register

    Once registered please introduce yourself in our introduction thread which can be found here: Introduction Board


Joined
Feb 11, 2007
Messages
324
Reaction score
0
Points
16
Age
34
10 Maria Wallpapers

Please rep if u enjoyed and like

49686_MKanellis10_F951JSVOQ_123_713lo.jpg

49745_MKanellis2_IR67G41XH_123_510lo.jpg

49708_MKanellis3_7752XLTU_123_574lo.jpg

49788_MKanellis6_I6167RJ4_123_891lo.jpg

49744_MKanellis8_T8941OCHE_123_1095lo.jpg

49765_MKanellis7_66H836RIC_123_661lo.jpg

49769_MKanellis4_OR75VEU6_123_344lo.jpg

49783_MKanellis9_2T93AJC5_123_1041lo.jpg

49719_MKanellis5_884CQI5C6_123_981lo.jpg

49724_MKanellis1_5729DCU_123_551lo.jpg
 

No More Sorrow

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 28, 2011
Messages
8,942
Reaction score
41
Points
48
Age
33
Location
Connecticut
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - A school principal described as very caring and attentive to her students was killed Wednesday in an apparent homicide at a private school and a 17-year-old student was taken into custody, police said.

Officers said the body of Suzette York, 49, was discovered in a classroom by a teacher shortly after 11 a.m. at Memphis Junior Academy, a Seventh-day Adventist Church-affiliated school in east Memphis.

Police spokeswoman Karen Rudolph said a male student was taken into custody at the school.

A motive and cause of death were not immediately disclosed. Police said only that York was fatally wounded.

Marvin Lowman, executive secretary with the Kentucky-Tennessee conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, said York had been principal at the school since 2008.

Peter Hunter, who attended the school for seven years and now has a 6-year-old cousin in the school, said York was a caring, sweet woman who enjoyed teaching young people.

"She was a wonderful person who was very much involved with her students, a person who cared deeply about the development of her students," he said. "This was not the way she was supposed to go."

Classes at the one-story, red brick school began Monday. A sign out front Wednesday said, "Welcome back." The school has a large back recreation area with a swing set and playground slide.

Tuition ranges from $223 to $840 a month. The school has about 100 students with classes for pre-kindergarten through high school.

"Our staff is committed to providing quality education in a Christian environment," the school's website says.

Hunter said York was a science and math teacher who had left the school, but returned to become an administrator.

"She came back here because she had a passion for the people," he said.

Hunter said the school had a nurturing environment where the goal was to treat everyone as family.

"It shows you that something like this can happen anywhere," he said.

Stephen Rogers and his wife have a son who graduated from the academy and a 14-year-old son who is a freshman there now. Rogers described York as personable and spiritual.

"She had a natural concern for the children being obedient and doing the things that they're supposed to be doing," he said.

Some three hours after the slaying, about 30 people attended a 40-minute prayer service at the nearby Mullins United Methodist Church.

"We are afraid," the Rev. Scottie Brafford said during the service, referring to recent violence in Norway and elsewhere. "We do not know where the bottom is any longer."

Linda Taylor told The Commercial Appeal she received a call from her husband who said the school called and told them to pick up their 14-year-old son, Josiah, because there was an emergency. The school didn't say that someone had been killed.

"I'm just wondering what's going on," she said at the scene.