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Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. A 12-year-old boy in Colorado got a five-day suspension for flashing a toy gun across his computer screen during an online art class, according to a report.
This is the toy gun that a seventh grade student at Grand Mountain School waved during a virtual lesson. The boy was suspended after school resource officers visited his house.
That year, several toy stores announced they would no longer be selling realistic toy guns. In her statement on the move, Chair Ann Brown wrote, "Fatal accidents with guns involving kids are tragic.
I didn’t know how to react. I’d always known that I didn’t want my kids to play with toy guns, but I didn’t know I would be faced with this type of moment so soon. My kids were just 3 and 2.
From now on, however, toy guns in New York will no longer be mistaken for real weapons," state Sen. Brad Hoylman said, according to the governor’s press release on the law.
From Texas Standard: In 2014, a Cleveland police officer killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who was playing at a park with a toy gun – a gun that police thought was real.
SALEM — Reports of a possible firearm at Southeast Elementary School Friday turned out to be a toy gun. In an announcement posted on its Facebook page Friday, the Salem Police Department said that it ...