Authorities say a Georgia teacher was killed in a prank gone wrong. A
teen is charged with homicide
[March 10, 2026]
By CHARLOTTE KRAMON and RUSS BYNUM
GAINESVILLE, Ga. (AP) — It was a prank that turned deadly, authorities
said: A group of teenagers unspooled rolls of toilet paper outside the
home of a beloved high school teacher who tripped in the street and was
struck by a pickup truck as the pranksters started to drive away.
The 40-year-old teacher, Jason Hughes, died after being taken to a
hospital late Friday, the Hall County Sheriff's Office said. The
18-year-old driver of the pickup was arrested on a felony charge of
vehicular homicide, and four other teens were charged with misdemeanors.
Hughes' family said he knew and loved the five students involved and
urged authorities to drop all charges against them.
“This is a terrible tragedy, and our family is determined to prevent a
separate tragedy from occurring, ruining the lives of these students,”
Hughes' family said in a statement provided to The Associated Press on
Monday. “This would be counter to Jason’s lifelong dedication of
investing in the lives of these children.”
Hughes taught math and helped coach golf, football and baseball at North
Hall High School in Gainesville, about 55 miles (88 kilometers)
northeast of Atlanta.
One of Hughes' neighbors, Ty Talley, said the toilet paper prank was
part of tradition in which North Hall students play practical jokes on
teachers during prom season.
“It was nothing malicious,” Talley said. “It was just a prank that kids
play on their teachers and each other. I did it as a kid.”

The day before Hughes' death, the Hall County school system posted a
message urging students to refrain from any prom-season pranks resulting
in property damage or destruction. It warned of "serious consequences
that can arise from engaging in destructive behavior."
Students and Hughes' fellow teachers left a makeshift memorial of
flowers along a section of fence outside the school.
Sean Pender, the school's football coach, said that Hughes helped
players with their academics and was also a man of deep faith who led a
weekly Bible study for other coaches.
“What made Jason so special was the way he did it,” Pender wrote in a
social media post. “He never judged. He never forced anything on anyone.
He simply loved people well. He met people where they were, lifted them
up, and reminded them that they mattered.”
[to top of second column]
|

Flowers lie along a fence outside North Hall High School in
Gainesville, Ga., on Monday, March 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilie Megnien)

The teenagers pulled up in two vehicles outside Hughes' home at
about 11:40 p.m. Friday and began wrapping his trees with toilet
paper, the sheriff's office said in a news release. It said the
teens started to leave when Hughes came out of the house.
As one of the teens began to drive away in a pickup truck, “Hughes
tripped and fell into the road and was run over,” the sheriff's
office said.
After Hughes was struck, the teens stopped and tried to render aid
until emergency responders arrived, according to the sheriff's
office.
Hughes' family said he wasn't trying to confront the teens, but
rather had heard in advance about their prank and hoped to surprise
them.
Authorities charged the pickup's driver, Jayden Ryan Wallace, with
first-degree vehicular homicide, a felony punishable by three to 15
years in prison under Georgia law. He was also charged with reckless
driving, a misdemeanor.
No one answered the door when a reporter knocked at Wallace's home
Monday. His case did not show up in online court records, and it was
not immediately known if he had an attorney who could speak for him.
The four other teens were charged with misdemeanor counts of
criminal trespassing and littering on private property, the
sheriff's office said.
Decisions on whether or how to prosecute the teens ultimately lie
with Hall County District Attorney Lee Darragh.
“I’m not commenting on that case presently,” Darragh told an AP
reporter by phone Monday. “I don’t have enough information about it
to do so.”
___
Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia.
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |