Dad defends daughter who stabbed two teachers and fellow pupil with five shocking words
Dad defends daughter who stabbed two teachers and fellow pupil with five shocking words
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The father of a schoolgirl found guilty of attempted murder after she allegedly stabbed two teachers and a fellow pupil says the teenager was being bullied and had "reached her breaking point" - even going so far as to say "her actions have some merit". Amman Valley school in Wales went into lockdown on April 24 last year after teachers Fiona Elias and Liz Hopkin, and a female pupil, were stabbed by the "out-of-control" girl, who was aged 13 at the time. On the morning of the attack, she smuggled her dad's fold-up multitool knife in her trousers, and later claimed she didn't intend to hurt anyone.
The girl, now 14, pleaded guilty to charges of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and possession of a bladed article on a school premises, but denied attempted murder. She said in a week-long trial in court that she was being bullied "three or four" times a week at the Ammanford school, causing her to feel "anxious and scared all the time". Backing up his daughter's claims, her father told the Times that while she was "responsible for her actions [...] unfortunately her actions have some merit.".
He said: "When you have somebody of authority who is pushing down on you and they are not listening and you are getting constantly bullied everyone is going to have a breaking point and she got to her breaking point I believe. "At home, prior to it all happening, I could see she was getting depressed and she was self-harming. This was a sign. She contemplated suicide for a little bit because the bullying was extreme but instead of going that way about it she went the other way and lashed out.".
During the trial the court heard that the girl had writted disturbing entries into a notebook, including phrases like "crime of a lifetime", wanting to do "something humans are not supposed to do", and "why do I want to kill others as much as I want to kill myself?". According to her father, the girl was being kicked, punched, and slapped by bullies at the school, and felt she was being unfairly "pulled up" for detention. During questioning, she admitted that she hated Mrs Elias but said she did not want to kill anyone.
The court was told the girl was found with a knife in her school bag back in September 2023 by assistant head Mrs Fiona Elias - and was excluded. Her father won a plea for her to be allowed back on the condition that he would check her bag everyday, but the girl began carrying the multi-tool in her trousers instead. Her father said he didn't check her bag on the morning of the attack because the teenager had left the house before he woke up. He said he previously warned staff that "if you don’t stop the bullying something is going to go bad". He alleged: "They completely ignored it and brushed it off by the looks of it.".