This video could be disturbing to some.

MATTHEWS, N.C. -- Just weeks after a deadly shooting at Butler High School, a parent says her son was viciously attacked at school and the entire incident was caught on camera. 

  • Latonia Henry is not happy with how school administrators handled the situation
  • She says the incident is a clear case of bullying
  • There was a deadly shooting at the same school in October

One student can be seen body slamming then punching a smaller student in the face. From the video, you can also see the assault escalates before other student break it up.

Latonia Henry is not happy with how school administrators handled the situation.

“I'm very angry. That's the best way to put it,” she said. “He did not fight back and was still suspended.”

She says school officials told her that her son was involved in a verbal altercation with the student and that he posted up.

“My son claims that he was actually protecting himself, trying to protect himself, but just didn't get an opportunity to,” she said.

RELATED: Students, Law Enforcement Talk Bullying After School Shooting

She says this is a clear case of bullying the school is doing nothing about. It started with words being said between the two students Wednesday in math class. That's when the bigger student in the video got physical with her son she says.

“He did admit to smacking him in his face twice and admitted that the teacher did nothing,” she said.

But Henry says that's the not the story the teacher allegedly told Butler's principal.

“They told the principal, as well as administrators, that my son was only hit in his arm,” she said. “I explained to both of them that I felt that had she handled the situation from the classroom that it would have never escalated to the bathroom.”

RELATED: Community Leaders Share Ideas to Stop School Violence

It's another concerning situation for a school still recovering from a deadly shooting last month. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Superintendent Clayton Wilcox addressed that very issue in a news conference Friday regarding new school safety measures.

“All too often kids said to us that when they reported to an adult the adults response actually made it worse for them, and so they had turned to each other, rather than turning to us, and we can't have that,” Wilcox said.

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