Charges dropped against Georgia teens in fatal high school prank
Charges dropped against Georgia teens in fatal high school prank
Tim StellohSat, March 14, 2026 at 12:25 AM UTC
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A makeshift memorial outside North Hall High School, where Jason Hughes worked as a math teacher, in Gainesville, Ga. on Sunday. (Emilie Megnien / AP)
A Georgia prosecutor said Friday that he had dismissed vehicular homicide charges against a high school student who fatally struck his math teacher during a prank last week.
Hall County District Attorney Lee Darragh confirmed the dismissal to NBC News without comment.
The family of Jason Hughes, the North Hall High School teacher who was killed, had called for the charges to be dropped.
In addition to the homicide charge, the prosecutor dismissed reckless driving, criminal trespass and littering charges against Jayden Wallace, 18, in connection with the death of Hughes, 40, on March 6.
Darragh also dismissed criminal trespassing and littering charges against four other 18-year-old students who were present when Hughes was run over outside his home in Gainesville, northeast of Atlanta.
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In a statement, an attorney for the Wallace family, Graham McKinnon, said there was no crime — “only an extremely sad and devastating accident." He thanked Hughes’ wife for her “remarkable compassion and spirit of forgiveness in the face of the tremendous loss of her husband.”
Jason Hughes. (Jason Hughes) (Jason Hughes)
Authorities have said Hughes was killed after the students “rolled” the trees outside his home with toilet paper. Hughes emerged from his home, then tripped and fell, the Hall County Sheriff’s Office said. He was run over as the students began to drive off.
Hughes’ family have said he knew the teens were coming — Wallace’s attorney described the prank as a longtime junior-senior tradition at North Hall High School — and “was excited and waiting to catch them in the act.”
They said Hughes slipped because it had been raining.
“Our family is determined to prevent a separate tragedy from occurring, ruining the lives of these students,” the family said. “This would be counter to Jason’s lifelong dedication of investing in the lives of these children.”
Source: “AOL Breaking”