
Julian Brockert
Julian Brockert was just 15 when he took his own life in March 2025. His father says bullying at school played a central role — and now he’s fighting for accountability so no other family has to experience the same pain.
On the morning of January 4, 2024, tragedy struck Perry High School in Perry, Iowa. Seventeen-year-old Tristan Boos opened fire inside the school, killing one sixth-grade student and injuring four others before taking his own life.
It was the first school shooting of 2024 — and one that has since reopened painful but necessary conversations about bullying, mental health, and school accountability.
According to interviews with classmates and investigative reporting from NPR and USA Today, Boos had been bullied for years. He was frequently mocked for his appearance, socially excluded, and targeted online — creating a dangerous mix of isolation and emotional distress that went unnoticed until it was too late.
This shooting follows a tragic and familiar pattern seen in other acts of school violence: a young person who felt invisible, rejected, and worn down by repeated harassment. In many of these cases, bullying isn’t the sole cause — but it’s a significant contributor.
Bullying doesn’t just hurt in the moment — it rewires how young people see themselves and others. According to the CDC and U.S. Department of Education:
What happened in Perry wasn’t just an act of violence — it was a failure to intervene.
At The Echo Movement, we believe that every tragedy like this is a call to action. The answer isn’t just tougher security — it’s stronger relationships, better mental health access, and earlier emotional support.
We need:
This wasn’t random. It was preventable.
The Perry High School shooting is a heartbreaking reminder of what happens when warning signs go unnoticed and victims of bullying fall through the cracks. Behind every act of violence is a long, often invisible buildup of pain.
We’re building the Echo Movement with the same bold energy you see in the world’s most forward-thinking platforms.
Julian Brockert was just 15 when he took his own life in March 2025. His father says bullying at school played a central role — and now he’s fighting for accountability so no other family has to experience the same pain.
After a violent school assault was filmed and posted online, 14-year-old Adriana Kuch died by suicide. Her story sparked national outrage — and a renewed demand for digital accountability, empathy, and action.
Aubreigh Wyatt was only 13 when bullying and online harassment drove her to end her life. Her story is a heartbreaking reminder of how quickly cruelty can escalate—and how urgently we need to listen, act, and protect. This is her story, and this is why The Echo Movement exists.