Man convicted of a fatal school shooting arrested for domestic assault in Jacksboro, Tenn.

JACKSBORO, Tenn. - A man convicted of a fatal school shooting when he was a teen has turned himself in to police for an alleged domestic incident.

Kenneth Bartley was in custody Saturday morning after a manhunt for him started on Thursday. Bartley had threatened to strangle his mother over an argument about money, and then ran away before police arrived, police said.

Bartley's mother, Rita Broyles, told them the man became violent with her when she would not give him $70 for a taxi, The Knoxville News Sentinel reported.

"Kenneth put his arm around Rita's neck and told her he would make her pass out if she did not give him the money," according to the arrest warrant. Broyles said her son then took the cord from his headphones, wrapped them around her neck and told her "she knew he could do it."

Bartley was 14 when he fatally shot the assistant principal and injured two other staff at Campbell County Comprehensive High School in 2005. This year a jury in the shooting case convicted him of reckless homicide. He had served nearly seven years in prison awaiting trial, so he was sentenced to time served and went free in April.

Bartley was booked into jail on an assault charge Saturday.

Bartley was sentenced to a year on supervised probation in September as part of a plea deal after he was charged with domestic assault and resisting arrest following two incidents at his father's home in June in July.

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