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Teen in a critical state after controversial 'senior assassin' game

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A teenager from North Texas is in a critical condition after he has fallen from a vehicle that he supposedly played a controversial water gun game, which is often played by seniors of the high school.

The 17 -year -old Isaac Leal jumped onto the back of a jeep, which was withdrawn from an entrance to Arlington in Arlington on April 20, and later suffered to the ground, which, according to the local stations, suffered a serious head injury.

Raquel Vazquez, the boy's mother, told Kxas that she believed that Leal fell off after the vehicle had hit a bump on the street. She said that a young girl who drove with the jeep had reached high speeds for about five minutes before finally hit a bathroom, the outlet reported.

The incident occurred in the string game, which was known as “Senior Assassin” and was often played by graduates of the soon -to -be high school. The participants spray each other with water pistols, paintball or Airsoft weapons until a winner is present that was not soaked.

“Anyone who plays has to download this app,” said Isaac Leal's father, Jose Leal, to KTVT. “In this way you can tell you which place everyone is.”

Parents are looking for criminal investigations in the injury of the son

Leal, a baseball star at the South Grand Prairie High School, has vital livelihood after he suffered weeks before his Abitur in the head injuries, reported KTVT.

Both Jose Leal and Vazquez ask the authorities to carry out a criminal investigation of the incident. Jose Leal said KTVT that the driver had six twists over five minutes and added: “These are five minutes, of which he is holding on to his life.”

“I understand that accidents take place, but this was not an accident,” Vazquez told the station. “I couldn't go home because I couldn't imagine going home without going home.”

The Arlington police authority said that she was investigating the traffic incident that security cameras partially recorded but has not confirmed a bad game, KTVT reported. According to reports, the department said in a statement that “Mr. Leal would depend on the back of the vehicle when the accident occurred.”

USA TODAY has turned to Vazquez, Jose Leal and the Arlington Police Department to get a comment.

Officials previously warned of the 'Senior Assassin' Game

The latest injury is not “Senior Assassin”, “Water Wars”, “Senior Splashin” or similar games after warning teenagers, educators and state officials in the United States. Officials have also warned that their toy weapons could be confused with a real weapon.

The police in Sylvania, Ohio, warned in April that the students had made their toy weapons more realistic and the department received several concerns.

“These scenarios form clear risks of tragic results, including the possibility of civil servants or armed citizens who confuse students with actual threats,” wrote the department on April 18.

In 2024, a headmaster in Florida sent a video to the parents, in which she warned of the dangers of the trend and claimed that every student who took part in the school premises was exposed to it, Florida reported today, part of the USA today.

The police in several suburbs in Chicago sent notifications about the trend last year, reported WMAQ TV.

Contribution: Emilee Coblentz

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