In an interview with the Washington Post, Amy Kovac describes for the first time holding the child after he shot and wounded his first-grade teacher:
Kovac said she found the six-year-old standing next to his first-grade desk. She recognized him — he had been her one-on-one reading student since the start of the year. His arms were crossed, and a handgun lay on the floor next to him.
Kovac said the moment was chilling, but she calmed her nerves, took the boy by the hand and led him to the front of the classroom, where she used a phone to call 911. She then sat at Zwerner’s desk holding the boy in her arms for three minutes until police arrived. It seemed like an eternity.
“While I was holding him, he told me he had gotten his mom’s gun the night before and put it in his backpack,” Kovac said. “He also told me he only had time to load one bullet.”
Kovac said she found the six-year-old standing next to his first-grade desk. She recognized him — he had been her one-on-one reading student since the start of the year. His arms were crossed, and a handgun lay on the floor next to him.
Kovac said the moment was chilling, but she calmed her nerves, took the boy by the hand and led him to the front of the classroom, where she used a phone to call 911. She then sat at Zwerner’s desk holding the boy in her arms for three minutes until police arrived. It seemed like an eternity.
“While I was holding him, he told me he had gotten his mom’s gun the night before and put it in his backpack,” Kovac said. “He also told me he only had time to load one bullet.”