Cory DeWayne Tucker
Monday, October 15, 2007,
Monday, October 15, 2007, Cory DeWayne Tucker 16, Alcohol PoisoningCory Tucker was hanging out with a group of neighborhood friends the night of September 23, 2007. A 25-year-old neighbor, Richard Bryant, supplied alcohol to the group. On September 24, Cory was found dead. As always, my condolences to his family and friends
Cory Tucker was a student at Lakeview Fort Oglethorpe High School in Georgia.Fox 61 TV report A 16-year-old North Georgia boy is dead Monday, and his family says alcohol poisoning is to blame. Now the man who the family claims bought the booze is behind bars. Cory Tucker, a student at Lakeview-Fort Oglethorpe High, spent Saturday night drinking with his friends, according to his mother, April Tucker. But the next morning, Cory did not wake up. His best friend found him unresponsive. "And then, his friends came knocking on my door Sunday morning, and it was like it wasn't real. It was like it was a dream," Tucker said.But it wasn't a dream, and now this mother is facing the reality that her 16-year-old son is dead ..."Unfortunately, when you go to the funeral home and you have to start picking out caskets and making arrangements," she said, "you realize for sure your child is never coming home again."Because Tucker says authorities told her he made a fatal mistake with his friends Saturday night. We had no idea he wanted to drink," she said.Tucker says the drinking went on inside a home on Carol Drive -- just down the street from where Cory lived. Cups and beer cans litter the front yard."Doctors in the emergency room told us the amount of alcohol in his system could kill a grown man that drank on a daily basis," she said. Tucker says it was a grown man who bought her son and his friends the alcohol. Monday night, that man was arrested. According to guards at the Catoosa County Jail, Richard Allen Bryant, Jr., has been charged with contributing to underage consumption and involuntary manslaughter. "And the hardest part is knowing there's no one truly to blame but Cory," she said. "Ninety percent of the blame has to be on him because he's the one who drank it." And the rest of the blame, she says, falls on the neighbor she claims supplied the booze. She wants justice, although justice, she admits, will not ease the pain. "More than a nightmare," Tucker said. "The worst nightmare anyone could ever go through. I mean, your kids are supposed to bury you. You're not supposed to bury your kids." From the Chattanooga Times Free Press: RINGGOLD, Ga. -- The father of a 16-year-old boy who died from alcohol poisoning said he hopes his family's tragedy can remind other teenagers to avoid substance abuse and tragedies of their own."I hope all the other kids around the Chattanooga area see what happened," said Robert Tucker, whose son, Cory Dewayne Tucker, died Sunday. "Other kids, hopefully, learned from this," the distraught father said. A neighbor, Richard Allen Bryant Jr., 26, has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and five counts of providing alcohol to a minor for allegedly supplying liquor to a group of minors. He is being held in the Catoosa County Detention Center, and no bond has been set. Catoosa County Sheriff Phil Summers said it is suspected that alcohol was provided to children as young as 11 years old. He said five other minors apparently were drinking in an outbuilding behind a home on Carroll Drive in Catoosa County along with Cory Tucker. The teen was found lying face down on the floor Sunday morning, and his friends could not rouse him, the sheriff said. "This incident is sad for the families and difficult to understand that an adult would furnish alcohol to minors," Sheriff Summers said. He said police "constantly answer calls" to the neighborhood, and investigators are working to determine if any other adults should face charges. "It's a constant thing for the sheriff's office to have to deal with young people up there," Sheriff Summers said. "At some point, law enforcement can just do so much. It takes families to get involved. "Robert Tucker said his son and his friends frequently visited the neighbor's outbuilding to play video games, but he never suspected his son was abusing alcohol. Mr. Tucker said his son was always prompt with his chores, made good grades at Lakeview-Fort Oglethorpe High School and was recommended for the Governor's Honor Program. "I never smelled alcohol on his breath," Mr. Tucker said. "You always think it will never happen at your house, but now it's happening at mine."Mr. Byrant's mother, Johnnie Sue Bryant, said her son had purchased liquor on Saturday to celebrate his 26th birthday. She said her son didn't know minors were drinking until he awoke the next morning and found Cory Tucker dead. Ms. Bryant said her son was admired by neighborhood children, and he is "tore up inside" over Cory Tucker's death."I feel for the parents," Ms. Bryant said. "My son is in jail, and I feel like I'm going to lose him. But my loss is nothing compared to theirs, and I can't even tell them I'm sorry." Additional counselors have been at Lakeview-Fort Ogle-thorpe High School this week to help students cope with the teenager's death, officials said. Cadets from the school's ROTC program will provide special services at Cory's funeral today, said retired Lt. Col. Paul Harwart. Cory was platoon leader of his ROTC company and was being considered for company commander, Mr. Harwart said. "He's the kind of kid that would light up a room," Mr. Harwart said. "Everyone liked Cory." |