Father of boy involved in Georgia school shooting arrested

The account's profile name was in Russian and was translated into the last name of the shooter who killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut in 2012.

A police incident report containing interviews with the boy and his father last year was released Thursday.

In the report, one deputy described the boy as “introverted” and “calm” and said he “confidently never made any threats to shoot up the school.”

He claimed that he deleted his Discord account because it had been repeatedly hacked.

Colin Gray also told police his son was being bullied at school and was struggling with his parents' separation.

According to police records, the boy's mother and father were going through a divorce, and the boy was living with his father during the divorce.

The teenager often went hunting with his father, who told police he took a photo of his son's face showing deer blood on it.

All nine people injured are expected to fully recover, Barrow County Sheriff Jude Smith said at a news conference Thursday.

He said some of the victims had already left the hospital.

Fourteen-year-old students, Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo, and 39-year-old teachers Richard Aspinwall and 53-year-old Christina Irimi were killed in the attack.

Witnesses said the suspect left algebra class Wednesday morning but later returned and tried to enter the classroom.

Some students tried to open the locked door, but backed away when they saw the weapon.

Witnesses said they then heard 10 to 15 gunshots. Two school police officers quickly challenged the boy, who immediately surrendered.

This isn't the first prosecution of the parents of a school shooting suspect.

In April, the parents of a Michigan teenager who killed four students with a gun they had bought him days before the shooting were convicted of participating in the attack.

James and Jennifer Crumbly were both convicted of murder and sentenced to 10 to 15 years in prison each.

The case was widely reported as the first time that the parents of a child who committed a mass shooting were held criminally responsible.