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1997 Pearl High School shooting

Mass shooting in Mississippi, US


Mass shooting in Mississippi, US

FieldValue
title1997 Pearl High School shooting
map_size250
map_captionLocation of Pearl High School
location500 Pirate Cove
Pearl, Mississippi, U.S.
coordinates
date
time08:06 a.m.
timezoneCST; UTC−06:00
targetStudents and staff at Pearl High School
typeMass shooting, school shooting, spree killing, matricide, uxoricide (ex-girlfriend)
fatalities3 (including the perpetrator's mother at home)
injuries7
victims*Mary Ann Woodham
perpLuke Woodham
weapons* Marlin Model 336 [.30-30-caliber](30-30-winchester) lever-action rifle
motive* School bullying (major)
* Infidelity (ex-girlfriend)<ref>{{Cite AV mediaurlhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LCfQ8_tMSZ8title=Luke Woodham's Confession Videodate=2023-04-10last=WLBT 3 On Your Sideaccess-date=2025-12-06via=YouTube}}{{efn"The second time, this is what pushed me over the edge [...] She'd always flirt with other guys, she'd always do [?] that kind of crap right to my face, she'd always tell me how cute other guys were."
dfenJoel Myrick (Assistant Principal and U.S. Army Reserve major) armed with Colt 1911 .45 auto
verdictLife in prison + 140 years
charges*First-degree murder

Pearl, Mississippi, U.S.

  • Lydia Kaye Dew
  • Christina Menefee
  • Knife and baseball bat (mother's murder)
  • Childhood abuse (minor)
  • Infidelity (ex-girlfriend){{efn|"The second time, this is what pushed me over the edge [...] She'd always flirt with other guys, she'd always do [?] that kind of crap right to my face, she'd always tell me how cute other guys were."

"Finally she went on a choral music trip and she flirted with one of the guys there. She let him watch her change and all this kind of crap and they hung all over each other and she came back here and told me all of this [...] and then she dumped me again. And ever since then, I've never been the same."}}

  • Second-degree murder
  • Third-degree murder
  • Attempted murder
  • Assault

The 1997 Pearl High School shooting occurred on October 1, 1997, at Pearl High School in Pearl, Mississippi, United States. The gunman, 16-year-old 11th grade student Luke Woodham (born February 5, 1981), shot and killed two students and injured seven others at the school after killing his mother by bludgeoning and stabbing at their home earlier that morning.

Shooting

The incident began on the morning of October 1, 1997, when Luke Woodham fatally stabbed and bludgeoned his mother, 50-year-old Mary Ann Woodham, as she prepared for a morning jog. An autopsy report revealed that she had eleven slash wounds and seven stab wounds, including stab wounds to the heart and lungs. At his trial, Woodham claimed that he could not remember killing his mother.

Woodham then drove his mother's Toyota Tercel to Pearl High School. Wearing a trench coat to conceal the rifle he was carrying, Woodham entered the school and gave a manifesto to Justin Sledge. Sledge, realizing what was about to occur, gathered some friends and hid in the safety of the library while the shooting took place.

During the trial, one former student would testify under oath that "he was in the commons with classmate Justin Sledge when Woodham walked up and spoke to Sledge. Justin Sledge then told him, "no matter what I heard, no matter what I saw, don't turn around. Just keep going forward. I didn't see anything. I just heard gunshots."

Woodham then fatally shot 17-year-old senior Lydia Kaye Dew and 16-year-old fellow junior Christina Michelle Menefee, his former girlfriend, then went on to wound seven others.

The school's assistant principal, Joel Myrick, retrieved a .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol from his truck and, spotting Woodham attempting to flee the parking lot after the shooting, shouted for him to stop. Woodham lost control of his vehicle, and Myrick ordered him out of the car at gunpoint and detained him until police arrived at the scene.

Religious and esoteric involvement

Less than a week after the shooting, police arrested six other students, charging them with conspiracy to commit murder. Justin Sledge had gone on a local news report and read from the notebooks of writings given to him just before the shooting. Minutes before Woodham started the shooting, he had given Sledge a manifesto containing the following:

The text also referenced The Gay Science by Friedrich Nietzsche. Further examination of the notebooks revealed an account of when Woodham and a friend, Grant Boyette, had tortured his dog Sparkle to death, several months prior to the shooting:

Prior to the shootings, Woodham had met Boyette, another of the six charged with conspiracy to murder, and supposedly accepted an invitation to join a group Boyette had formed and called "the Kroth". During the summer of 1997, the supposed members of the Kroth allegedly made plans to terrorize Pearl High School. The plans ultimately involved Woodham entering the school and opening fire.

Days after the arrest, an antagonistic note claiming to be written by “The Alliance of the Immortalz“ was pinned to a memorial near the school sign. Justin Sledge denied any involvement in the act as well as any knowledge of, or connection to, “the Kroth” or the “Alliance of the Immortalz.” Regardless, Sledge was widely blamed for the act. Following the shooting, Sledge spoke at a prayer vigil held to mourn the dead students, for which he received a suspension from the school district. Sledge says his comments at the memorial were mischaracterized but still "clearly inappropriate".

On October 8, 1997, Sledge, Boyette, and the others were arrested on suspicion of conspiring with Woodham to commit the shooting.

Woodham claimed that Boyette had told him he had "potential to do something great," and promised him that he could get his ex-girlfriend back through black magic.

Sledge, who is now an academic specializing in philosophy and religion, argues that the media and police's claims that he was part of a satanic cult lacked evidence, exemplifying the broader Satanic Panic trend of the 1980s and 1990s.

After his conviction Woodham converted to Christianity, and said the following in a letter written to evangelical minister David Wilkerson:

Trials and incarceration

There were separate trials for the murder of Woodham's mother and the school shooting. Woodham's lawyer argued at both trials that Woodham was insane at the time of the killings. Jurors rejected Woodham's insanity defense at his first trial for the murder of his mother, and he was sentenced to life in prison on June 5, 1998. His second trial took place on June 12, and he was found guilty of two counts of murder and seven counts of attempted murder, with the jurors once again rejecting the insanity defense. He was given two life sentences for the murders and seven 20-year sentences for his attempted murder convictions. He is currently serving three life terms plus an additional 140 years in prison. He will be eligible for parole in 2046, when he is 65 years old.

Conspiracy charges against the members of the Kroth who were minors were dropped by Judge Robert Goza "at the request of District Attorney John Kitchens, who said Mississippi's conspiracy law would make proving the accusations difficult." Grant Boyette, who was 18 at the time, was convicted and sentenced to the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman boot camp for six months and five years of supervised probation.

Less than three days after his last conviction, Woodham was removed from the Forrest County Jail in Hattiesburg. On June 15, 1998, Woodham entered the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) system in the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility (CMCF) in Rankin County. While at CMCF Woodham underwent evaluation so he could be assigned to a permanent facility. Several weeks later, he was moved into the Mississippi State Penitentiary (MSP) in Sunflower County. In 2010, Woodham made a request to Governor of Mississippi, Haley Barbour, asking for clemency; however, his request was rejected.

, Woodham is incarcerated in Unit 2 of SMCI as MDOC #R4682. His location last changed on May 23, 2025.

Aftermath

As a result of this incident, the state of Mississippi made murder on school property a capital crime.

References

References

  1. WLBT 3 On Your Side. (2023-04-10). "Luke Woodham's Confession Video".
  2. "The Avenger".
  3. Hughes, Jay. (1998-06-06). "Miss. Teen Given Life In Murder Of Mother". The Washington Post.
  4. CHUA-EOAN, HOWARD. (June 24, 2001). "MISSISSIPPI GOTHIC".
  5. "Luke woodham and the pearl high school massacre".
  6. Leigh, Natasha. (2024-03-09). "The 1997 Pearl High School shooting".
  7. Baxter, Jenn. (2020-12-27). "Luke Woodham and the Pearl High School Massacre".
  8. Administrator. (2015-04-17). "Luke Woodham - Criminal Justice - IresearchNet".
  9. admin. (2007-04-18). "Va. Tech brings back Pearl shootings".
  10. Carter, Josh. (2021-06-17). "The making of a Mississippi school shooter".
  11. "Miss. School Shooting Trial Begins".
  12. "Miss. Schools Eye Security After Conn. Shooting".
  13. [http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2012/dec/17/desoto-county-other-mississippi-school-districts/ DeSoto County, other Mississippi school districts, review safety procedures » The Commercial Appeal]
  14. Sack, Kevin. (October 9, 1997). "Southern Town Stunned by Arrests in Murder Plot". The New York Times.
  15. Gladwell, Malcolm. (12 October 2015). "Thresholds of Violence".
  16. Carter, Josh. (17 June 2021). "The making of a Mississippi school shooter".
  17. Holland, Gina. (October 15, 1997). "Teen Led Satanic Cult That Plotted Murders, Prosecutors Tell Court".
  18. (2011). "Encyclopedia of School Crime". Abc-Clio.
  19. "Justin Sledge FAQ".
  20. (2015-04-17). "Luke Woodham – Criminal Justice – IresearchNet".
  21. (June 11, 1998). "Woodham testifies he was involved in satanism". CNN.
  22. "FAQ".
  23. (May 22, 2009). "David Wilkerson Today Blog". [[David Wilkerson]].
  24. (June 12, 1998). "Teen guilty in Mississippi school-shooting rampage". CNN.
  25. (July 23, 1998). "Conspiracy Charges Are Dropped in Mississippi School Shootings". The New York Times.
  26. "[http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=BX&s_site=sunherald&p_multi=BX&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB625556A198386&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM WOODHAM INDUCTED INTO PRISON SYSTEM]." ''[[Sun Herald]]''. June 16, 1998. A8 Front. Retrieved on July 22, 2010.
  27. Linedecker, Clifford L. ''Babyface Killers: Horrifying True Stories of America's Youngest Murderers''. [[Macmillan Publishers (United States). 0-312-97032-3, {{ISBN. 978-0-312-97032-1.
  28. link. (2013-10-04 ." ([https://web.archive.org/web/20150415113738/http://www.mdoc.state.ms.us/InmateDetails.asp?PassedId=R4682 Archive]) [[Mississippi Department of Corrections]]. Retrieved on July 20, 2010.)
  29. "[http://www.wjtv.com/story/21258467/luke-woodham-asking-for-clemency Luke Woodham Asking for Clemency] {{Webarchive. link. (2014-03-22 ." ''[[WJTV]]''. July 28, 2011. Retrieved on March 22, 2014.)
  30. link. (2013-10-04 " ([https://web.archive.org/web/20150415113738/http://www.mdoc.state.ms.us/InmateDetails.asp?PassedId=R4682 Archive]). [[Mississippi Department of Corrections]]. Retrieved on April 15, 2015.)
  31. Perline, Irvin H. and Jona Goldschmidt. ''The Psychology and Law of Workplace Violence: A Handbook for Mental Health Professionals and Employers''. Charles C Thomas Publisher, 2004. {{ISBN
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