Rashunda McLendon, the mother of 12-year-old Jada West, has spoken publicly for the first time about the agonizing final months of her daughter’s life, painting a picture of a gentle child who endured relentless ridicule after transferring to a new school. Jada, a sixth-grader at Mason Creek Middle School in Douglas County, Georgia, had only been at the institution for two months when she was fatally injured in a fight that erupted at a bus stop on March 5, 2026. She died three days later on March 8 from severe brain trauma and related complications.

According to McLendon, the difficulties began almost immediately after the family relocated to the Villa Rica area and Jada enrolled at Mason Creek in January 2026. “She was a sweet, quiet girl who just wanted to fit in,” McLendon said in interviews with local media and during a March 16 press conference organized by her legal team. “But from the first weeks, she came home telling me kids were making fun of her clothes, her hair, the way she talked—everything. She didn’t want to cause trouble, so she tried to ignore it. I reported it to the school more than once, but nothing really changed.”

The bullying, McLendon explained, was not always physical at first. It took the form of mocking comments in hallways, exclusion from group activities, and whispered insults that followed Jada throughout the day. She described her daughter as increasingly withdrawn, often eating lunch alone and reluctant to talk about school. “I thought if we gave it time she would adjust,” McLendon said. “I never imagined it would turn into something that took her life.”

The fatal confrontation occurred after school on March 5. Cellphone video that has circulated widely shows Jada and a 14-year-old classmate exchanging blows near the Ashley Place bus stop in Villa Rica. Multiple students can be heard laughing, cheering, and egging on the fight while no adult appears to intervene. Witnesses later told investigators that the altercation had roots in earlier tensions that day—possibly beginning on campus—and carried over to the bus ride home. Jada was knocked to the ground at least once, stood back up, and then collapsed as she attempted to walk away. Emergency services transported her to a local hospital before she was flown to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite, where she fell into a coma. Doctors diagnosed catastrophic brain injury, uncontrollable seizures, and cardiac arrest before pronouncing her dead.

The absence of any adult intervention during the fight has become a central point of outrage. Georgia school-bus policy requires drivers to maintain order and report incidents, yet no monitor was assigned to the route that afternoon. Video evidence shows more than a dozen students gathered around the two girls, some recording on phones, others shouting encouragement. “You can hear them laughing like it’s entertainment,” McLendon said, her voice breaking. “My baby was fighting for her life and they were cheering. No teacher, no driver, no one stopped it.”

Attorneys Ben Crump, Harry Daniels, and Gerald Griggs, representing the family, have demanded answers about why the school allegedly failed to act on prior bullying reports and why the older student involved was allowed on Jada’s bus despite reportedly not living in the designated zone. They question whether transportation protocols were followed and whether the district’s anti-bullying policy—mandated by state law—was adequately enforced. “This was not a one-day incident,” Crump stated at the press conference. “This was a pattern of torment that the school knew about and did not stop. When children are allowed to bully without consequence, the outcome can be tragic—as we see here.”

The Douglas County School System issued a statement expressing deep sorrow and describing Jada as “a vibrant, respectful student who brought light to those around her.” Officials emphasized cooperation with law enforcement but have not publicly addressed specific allegations of unreported or unaddressed bullying complaints. Villa Rica Police confirmed the fight took place off school property, which limits the district’s direct disciplinary authority over the incident itself, though questions persist about oversight during student transit.

Community response has been swift and emotional. Vigils have been held, hashtags like #JusticeForJada trend locally, and parents across the county have shared similar experiences of bullying dismissed or inadequately handled. Mental-health professionals note that prolonged ridicule can cause profound emotional harm, lowering self-esteem and increasing vulnerability to physical confrontations. In Jada’s case, the family believes the cumulative stress may have contributed to her inability to recover from the injuries sustained.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is assisting the Douglas County District Attorney’s Office and Villa Rica Police in reviewing the case. An autopsy is ongoing to establish the precise cause of death, and authorities continue to interview witnesses and examine video evidence. The family has not ruled out civil litigation against the school district for alleged negligence in failing to protect Jada from known harassment.

McLendon’s words have resonated far beyond Douglas County. “She was my only baby girl,” she said. “She didn’t deserve this. No child does.” Her plea for accountability has amplified calls for stronger enforcement of anti-bullying measures, mandatory bus monitors on middle-school routes, and better systems for tracking and responding to harassment reports.

As the investigation proceeds, Jada West is remembered as a kind, soft-spoken girl who loved drawing, spending time with family, and dreaming of becoming an artist. Her death has left a void that words cannot fill and raised painful questions about how schools safeguard the most vulnerable students. For Rashunda McLendon and a grieving community, the hope is that Jada’s story will force lasting change—so no other mother has to endure the same unimaginable loss.