• On May 11, an intruder hopped the fence of a playground at a Nashville elementary school and raced inside.
  • Kindergarten teacher Rachel Davis tackled the man to protect the students, breaking her elbow.
  • In a Tuesday hearing, the intruder will face charges including assault and trespassing.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The kindergarten teacher started getting suspicious as soon as she heard a man on the sidewalk mumble he wanted to cut across the playground.

The teacher, Rachel Davis, told him no; he’d have to go the the front door of school if he wanted to get in for any reason.

Suspicion turned to anxiety when the man disappeared for a minute, came back and started walking around in circles on the morning of May 11. The guy was only about 20 feet away from 32 kindergarteners outside for recess at Inglewood Elementary School in Nashville.

“You get that fishy feeling,” said Davis, 30. “To play it safe, I said, let’s line the kids up… so we can all go in.”

In California:15-year-old student dies after being stabbed by intruder at California high school  

The moment the other teacher opened the door, the man hopped the fence and raced toward the door, Davis said.

“I need to get inside! I need to get inside!” he shouted.

Davis, terrified, planted her 5-foot-5, 130-pound body in front of the door, saying loudly, “No sir! You cannot come through this door. I need you to leave the playground.”

‘Run! Go inside now!’

When Davis first saw the man, she thought he might be a parent, and she instructed him to stay on the sidewalk and walk around the building to the front door. There, he could push a buzzer to tell an office staffer what he needed.

The man walked away, but returned, prompting the teachers to start getting their students inside, Davis said. About half the 32 kids made it inside before the man jumped the three-foot-high fence.

“Get help!” Davis urged the other teacher, and soon, school secretary Katrina “Nikki” Thomas was outside standing with Davis between the man and the door, trying to stop the intruder from getting in.

The man lunged toward the door, bumping three kids, Davis said.

So she got behind him and wrapped both arms around him, squeezing him as hard as she could to stop him from getting inside. 

Davis’ students, frozen, stared at her and the man until she shouted at them: “Run! Go inside now!”

On May 11, 2022, an intruder hopped this three-foot fence at Inglewood Elementary School in Nashville and rushed toward the school's doors

The man continued lunging toward the door, eventually making it inside the stairwell with Davis still wrapped around his back, she said.

The man broke free and started running toward the first-grade wing – and something snapped inside Davis.

“I was going to do anything in my power to protect these kids, not just my kindergarten kids,” she said. “All these kids feel like my kids.”

Kindergarten teacher Rachel Davis at Ascension Saint Thomas Midtown hospital after getting a cast on her left arm May 11, 2022, the day she tackled an intruder in her school and broke her left arm

Davis ran after the man and launched herself at him, tackling him. Both of them ended up falling backward, crashing on the floor onto Davis’ left elbow, breaking it, she said.

The intruder got up, and Davis, the secretary, Thomas, and school bookkeeper Shaquita “Shay” Patton-Thomas all restrained the man in a corner for more than 10 minutes until police arrived, Davis and Principal Ashley Croft said.

Active shooter drills:Kids going back to school in a pandemic are met with another trauma  

That was a long 10 minutes, Davis said. The four wrestled and jostled, with the intruder alternating between calm and highly agitated.

The intruder, who smelled of alcohol, said he had used drugs, adding he felt paranoid that someone was out to get him, Davis said.