As a high-schooler, Texas mass murderer Devin Kelley was perpetually in trouble and finished at the bottom of his class, according to a new report.
Kelley, who Sunday opened fire on a church service in Sutherland Springs, Texas, killing 26 and wounding 20, was suspended from New Braunfels High School six times, according to records obtained by the San Antonio Express-News.
He was sent to an alternative school during the first suspension in 2006, an exile that arose from a drug-related incident and lasted two months, the outlet reported.
Kelley was suspended another two times during his junior year and on three more occasions during his senior year for infractions such as “insubordination,” ”profane language/gestures” and “dishonest/false records,” according to the Express-News.
By the time he graduated in 2009, his grade-point average was just 2.3 and he ranked 260 out of 393 in his graduating class. Records also state that he had attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, the paper reported.