The top prosecutor handling the case of the 6-year-old child who brought a gun to school and shot his teacher in Newport News, Virginia, told news outlets on Wednesday that the law doesn’t suggest the child should be charged with a crime. 

The review of the case is ongoing but it appears likely the child won’t be charged, based on the prosecutor.

“We don’t believe the law supports charging a 6-year-old with a criminal offense as serious as this one,” Commonwealth’s Attorney for Newport News Howard Gwynn told ABC News affiliate 13News Now.

The first grader took his mother’s gun to school and shot and seriously injured 25-year-old Abigail Zwerner on Jan. 6. He was taken into custody and has received mental health treatment in a hospital, according to his family’s attorney.

Gwynn also told NBC News on Wednesday the “prospect that a 6-year-old can stand trial is problematic.”

Gwynn said a decision about whether to charge anyone else, such as the boy’s parents, had not yet been made.

The gun was legally purchased by the boy’s mother, police have said. An attorney for the child’s family, James Ellenson, said the gun was stored with a trigger lock on the top shelf of a closet and the family does not know how he got it. 

It is a misdemeanor in Virginia to leave a loaded gun accessible to a child under the age of 14.

“The parents have continued to cooperate with the authorities and continue to pray for the welfare and good health of all involved,” Ellenson said in a statement to USA TODAY on Thursday.

Experts have said it was highly unlikely the 6-year-old would face criminal charges. In some states, children under certain ages can’t be charged with exceptions for certain types of violent crimes. Virginia has no such minimum age requirement, but questions about the child’s competency to assist in his defense and to understand the consequences of his actions have been raised.