
One of the elementary school students who viciously attacked a pregnant woman in Chicago has been outed by his own mother.
Corshawnda Hatter and her two children were jumped by a group of students outside Orville Bright Elementary School on Monday (November 17).
Hatter told CBS that her legs are still bruised and that it’s hard for her to walk days after the attack.
Highlights
- A mother and her 9-year-old son were jumped by a group of elementary school students in Chicago.
- Mayor Brandon Johnson described the attack as “incredibly traumatic” and “horrific.”
- Following the incident, the mothers of two children involved publicly called out their kids’ actions on social media.
The incident reportedly began when the 33-year-old mother was walking by the elementary school with her two children, a 9-year-old boy and a 6-year-old girl, as per WBBM.
A Chicago mother and her son were brutally beaten by a group of elementary school students
The group of students reportedly chased the family while calling them names, until they began beating them.
Surrounding Hatter, the students pushed her against a fence as her son wrapped his arms around her in an attempt to protect her.
Hatter and her son were then pulled to the ground as the group continued punching them. Her son was beaten, and she said one of the children pulled her daughter’s hair.

“I felt helpless, because I was down on the ground, and he was down on the ground, and he’s looking at me, screaming, like, ‘Mommy, please help me. Help me.’ I couldn’t get up myself. I couldn’t do nothing,” Hatter said.
Hatter’s partner, Devon Lee, the father of her two children, told CBS that she suffers from sickle cell disease (SCD), a genetic blood disorder.
Sickle cell disease affects about 100,000 people in the United States. It causes red blood cells to form a “C” shape, making them stick together and preventing oxygen from reaching a person’s tissues and organs, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
Symptoms include episodes of severe pain, most often in the back, legs, and arms, as well as fatigue and swollen joints.
The incident took place on Monday outside Orville Bright Elementary School

“So, I guess they seen a little weakness in her, because she’s, you know, kind of walking a little slow,” Lee said. “They have no right to put their hands on an adult.”
Authorities said the mother and her son had to be hospitalized due to the severity of the beating.
A video capturing the attack has shaken the South Deering neighborhood, prompting community members to protest in solidarity with the family.
The children involved reportedly have a history of aggressive behavior that has affected other families in the past.

Hatter explained that her son has been bullied for the past two years at the public school because children make fun of the way she walks and talks as a result of her sickle cell disease.
Amid backlash from community members toward the children, their parents, and school authorities, one mother recorded a video in which she made her son face the consequences of his actions.
The mothers of some of the children involved forced them to take accountability for their actions

“You know the whole city of Chicago is looking for you, right?” the mother asked her child, who could be seen standing in the background.
“You and your little friends, ‘cause you were wrong yesterday. So now they’re looking for you. Did you know that, right?” she continued. “You know I’m not helping you, right?”
The mother added text over the video that read, “Waking up as a parent to one of them bad a** mfs in Chicago.”

The mother, Corshawnda Hatter, said the students had been bullying her son for years

“This is not the first time the kids have done this,” one of the protesters, Shanice Davis, told WBBM.
According to Davis, many of the students have been left to raise themselves and have vandalized cars and harassed both adults and children in the past.

“We’re meeting families out here that their children have been bullied and been beat on,” stated Joseph Williams, a Chicago Police District Council member.
“Accountability is going to be key, because if this has been going on we gotta make sure this principal is held accountable for her actions as well.”
Williams added that people should have documented the alleged previous aggressions from the children and that their parents should have been called to the school.
Chicago Public Schools said they were “horrified” by the attack and are working with City agencies to support the family
