
Two students died and another was injured in a shooting at a Nashville high school on Wednesday morning.
Announcement: Antioch High School is on a lockdown due to shots being fired inside the school building. Metro Police are on the scene. The person responsible for shooting is no longer a threat. We will be gathering students in the auditorium and will provide information on…
— Metro Schools (@MetroSchools) January 22, 2025
The Metro Nashville Police Department reported the shooting took place inside Antioch High School’s cafeteria. Police say 17-year-old Solomon Henderson shot two students and then himself.
Josselin Corea Escalante, 16, died after being transferred to Vanderbilt University Medical Center. A third student went to the hospital with what police described as a “graze wound” and was in stable condition.
Two school resource officers were in the building at the time of the shooting, but not in the cafeteria where it took place.

The scene outside Antioch High School at noon Wednesday
Next steps in the investigation
Chief John Drake said Metro Nashville police do not yet know the motive for the shooting, or how the 17-year-old got the gun.
“We work closely with our federal partners, and they’re doing a trace on the weapon as we speak,” Drake said.
The police are able to run guns through the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms eTrace system, which is only available to law enforcement officials.
Tracing guns can be difficult in Tennessee because of state laws that have made it easy to possess guns here without permits. Background checks are not required for private sales, including sales online or at gun shows. And juveniles under 18, like the shooter, are not legally allowed to have handguns. So it’s possible that the trace might turn up results from whenever the last official sale took place.
Part of the incident was livestreamed on the KICK platform, which said that the video was banned and quickly removed, and that it would be cooperating with law enforcement. Police and other authorities said they were examining “very concerning on-line writings and social media posts” by the teen who opened fire. The posts have yet to be verified by police, but it appears the assailant was radicalized online, and held extremist ideologies about race, religion and sexual orientation.
Authorities have not yet established a connection between the teens involved.
Families reunited
The shooting set off a whirlwind of confusion for families. Traffic gridlock slowed reunifications in a nearby parking lot, with some parents parking along roadways and walking in the below freezing temperatures to be reunited.
Scores of parents packed into a nearby MAPCO gas station where the outlets were full of phone chargers as parents repeatedly checked their kids’ locations.
Chante Frye was one of the moms reading and re-reading texts and waiting for her 15-year-old to make it to the reunification site.
“She didn’t want to come today … because there’s so many fights going on in Antioch all the time,” Frye said. “This is really not surprising that this actually happened, in my opinion. There’s fights every — every other day.”
Violence at the school has escalated at times in recent years. Two students have been arrested for having loaded guns on campus. And in 2020, one was charged with homicide for running a classmate over with a car.
District Superintendent Dr. Adrienne Battle, who used to be the principal of the school, urged the community not to let the violence overshadow the good that happens there.
The Antioch area is one of Nashville’s most diverse — with nearly equal white and Black populations and a larger percentage of Latinos than elsewhere in the city (18% compared to 11%). The victim, Escalante, was Hispanic. The assailant was Black.

Students and family members gather outside of the reunification center on Wednesday afternoon.
The community reacts
Hamilton United Methodist Church hosted a vigil Wednesday night in light of both the Antioch High School shooting and the one at SkyBar, an Antioch lounge, on Monday.
‘Senseless tragedy’
State Sen. Charlane Oliver, D-Nashville, represents the Antioch area.
“My heart is broken over the devastating shooting at Antioch High School today,” she said in a statement. “As a mother and a representative of this community, I grieve with the families, students, and staff who are enduring this unimaginable tragedy. My heart goes out to the victims who were shot, their loved ones, and everyone impacted by this horrific act of violence. No child should ever feel unsafe in their school, and no family should face the anguish of such a senseless loss.”
“My prayers are with all of those impacted by this senseless tragedy. We are only one week into the start of our legislative session and already our state has been ravaged by another school shooting,” she wrote.” We must do better.”
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, who called a 2023 special session on public safety after the Covenant School shooting, released a statement on X (formerly Twitter).
I’ve been briefed on the incident at Antioch High School and am grateful for law enforcement & first responders who responded quickly and continue to investigate. As we await more information, I join Tennesseans in praying for the victims, their families & the school community.
— Gov. Bill Lee (@GovBillLee) January 22, 2025
Rachel Iacovone, Paige Pfleger, Cynthia Abrams, Catherine Sweeney, Marianna Bacallao, Tony Gonzalez, Miriam Kramer and LaTonya Turner contributed reporting and editing.
This is a developing story. Some things that get reported early on, by the media or law enforcement, could later turn out to be wrong. WPLN News will have updates as the situation develops.
This story was last updated at 12:30 p.m. Thursday.