Salt Lake father faces charges after 4th grader brought his gun to school

A Salt Lake man is facing criminal charges after his fourth grade son brought his gun to school. Police say the father was not legally allowed to own a gun because of a previous conviction.

A Salt Lake man is facing criminal charges after his fourth grade son brought his gun to school. Police say the father was not legally allowed to own a gun because of a previous conviction. (James R. Martin, Shutterstock)


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SALT LAKE CITY — The father of a fourth grade student who brought a gun to school is now facing criminal charges after investigators determined that he also shouldn't have had a gun.

Timothy Paula Taumua, Jr., 29, was charged Wednesday in 3rd District Court with possession of a gun by a restricted person, a second-degree felony, and providing a handgun to a minor, a class B misdemeanor.

On April 17, Salt Lake police were called to North Star Elementary, 1545 N. Morton Drive, on a report that a fourth grade student had brought a handgun to school and had shown it to other students.

The boy told police that he "found the gun on the side of his parents' bed and put it in his backpack" and that he had seen his father carrying it around for the past month-and-a-half, according to charging documents.

Another family member told police the gun was believed to be in a lockbox and they didn't know the boy had taken it.

Prosecutors say Taumua was convicted of aggravated assault in 2020, and thus was not allowed to possess a firearm. Taumua was also previously convicted of possession of a gun by a restricted person in 2019, and attempted possession of a gun by a restricted person in 2017, according to court records.

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Pat Reavy interned with KSL NewsRadio in 1989 and has been a full-time journalist for either KSL NewsRadio, Deseret News or KSL.com since 1991. For the past 25 years, he has worked primarily the cops and courts beat.

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