FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. – E.E. Smith High School student Kwavonne Lamar Williams was shocked when he returned to class for the first day of school this week.

Literally.

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Police contend Williams blocked the classroom door at the school on Monday to prevent students and teachers from leaving or entering the room, and he refused to budge, the Fayetteville Observer reports.

“Williams did not listen to teachers or administrators who told him to move, ‘which caused a disturbance interfering with the teaching of that class and adjacent classes,’ the warrant said,” according to the news site.

A school official summoned a Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office deputy who works as the school’s resource officer, but Williams allegedly refused to listen to his instructions, as well.

The Observer reports:

The school resource officer told Williams multiple times to get out of the way of the classroom, the warrant said. After Williams refused to move, the school resource officer attempted to detain him using handcuffs.

Williams refused to be handcuffed. He and the school resource officer became involved in a struggle. The warrant said the school resource officer then deployed a Taser on Williams.

The officer eventually arrested the 18-year-old for misdemeanor disorderly conduct on school grounds, and another misdemeanor for resisting an officer.

The court set Williams’ bail at $3,000.

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The Observer, the only media outlet to cover the arrest, did not provide context to why the teen refused to move from the classroom doorway.

Many folks who commented on Facebook wondered why.

“I think there is more to this story,” Krystle Sydnor posted. “However, it looks like the school to prison pipeline is working just fine. … A child doesn’t deserve jail over being disruptive in school and definitely not a charge.”

“There is more to this story!” Arline Forde commented. “I’m tired of getting partial stories.”

“If he didn’t want to learn, why didn’t he just stay home?” Vivaldna Husamudeen questioned.

“Tasers do serve a purpose. For this to happen on the very first day of school, if I were the superintendent, I would … ban him from every school in Cumberland County and if I did not get support, I would resign,” Fred Petty wrote. “Enough is Enough. Students are not in charge of any school. That officer was the authority in that situation. He was on his assignment. The student should have been on his – getting an education.”

“He has problems that need to be addressed, where are the parents?” Stephanie White posted.

“He probably wanted a suspension. I think they should have to do community service when suspended,” Page Taylor added. “A vacation isn’t punishment.”