In the quiet suburbs of Sumner County, where rolling hills give way to manicured lawns and Friday night lights illuminate high school rivalries, an age-old teenage ritual known as “Class Wars” has long been a rite of passage—juniors versus seniors in a barrage of harmless hijinks like toilet paper cascades and flour bombs. But on the evening of September 23, 2025, what started as a flour-dusted driveway prank at a Hendersonville home escalated into a violent confrontation that left a 16-year-old girl bruised and breathless, her neck marked by fingerprints from a man sworn to protect his community. Jamie K. Cossler, 58, a 28-year veteran division chief with the Hendersonville Fire Department, was arrested hours later on charges of aggravated assault, a Class C felony carrying up to 12 years in prison. Now a former public servant after his abrupt retirement, Cossler appeared before Judge C. Ron Blanton in Sumner County General Sessions Court on October 8, his stoic demeanor cracking under the weight of bodycam footage and teen-shot videos that have galvanized parents, educators, and law enforcement into a chorus of condemnation—and calls to bury the “Class Wars” tradition once and for all.
The incident unfolded around 10:45 p.m. on a balmy fall night, in the 100 block of New Shackle Island Road—a sleepy cul-de-sac lined with ranch-style homes and pickup trucks, just a stone’s throw from Drakes Creek Park. Cossler, a lifelong Sumner County resident and father of two grown sons, had reportedly endured a string of “Class Wars” pranks in recent weeks: eggs splattered on his mailbox, shaving cream smeared across his garage door, and yard signs upended like fallen soldiers. Frustrated but resigned, he had even posted a tongue-in-cheek sign on his lawn weeks earlier: “Class Wars Welcome—Bring Your Own Cleanup Crew.” But on this night, as a group of five Gallatin High School juniors—three girls and two boys, ages 15 to 16—crept up under cover of darkness armed with rolls of Charmin and bags of Gold Medal flour, Cossler’s patience snapped like a taut hose line.
According to the Gallatin Police Department arrest affidavit, obtained by WSMV through Tennessee’s public records act, the teens scattered flour across Cossler’s driveway and draped toilet paper from his oak trees when floodlights snapped on, bathing the scene in harsh white. “What the hell are you kids doing on my property?” Cossler bellowed from his front porch, according to witness statements, his voice carrying the gravel of a man who’d barked orders at structure fires for decades. The group bolted, laughing nervously, but one girl—identified in reports as “Victim A,” a 16-year-old cheerleader with no prior record—tripped on a root and stumbled 80 yards down the road, gasping for breath amid the chaos. Cossler, clad in a Hendersonville FD T-shirt and jeans, gave chase on foot, closing the gap in seconds. Video footage from one boy’s iPhone, shaky but damning, captures the pivotal moment: Cossler lunges, grabs the girl by the collar, spins her around, and clamps his right hand around her throat in a chokehold while slapping her across the face with his left. “She said she almost blacked out—felt like her windpipe was crushed,” the affidavit quotes the teen, her words scrawled in a detective’s neat script. Bruises bloomed purple on her neck and a welt swelled her cheek; she was treated at TriStar Hendersonville Hospital for minor injuries and released by midnight.
Cossler’s account, relayed through his attorney during the October 8 hearing, paints a different picture: one of a homeowner defending his domain from trespassers. “Mr. Cossler acted to detain the vandals until police arrived—he feared for his property and safety,” defense counsel Lisa Langford argued before Judge Blanton, submitting a neighbor’s Ring doorbell clip showing the teens’ earlier egging. Cossler himself, seated in a gray suit two sizes too tight, offered a measured apology laced with regret. “I’ve served this community for nearly 30 years—pulled babies from burning cribs, revived heart attacks on I-65. I never meant to hurt that girl; I just wanted them off my land,” he said, his voice steady but eyes downcast. Blanton, a no-nonsense jurist with a reputation for swift bonds in Sumner County’s overburdened docket, set bail at $15,000—10% cash option—and ordered no contact with minors or the victim. Cossler posted bond by noon, returning to his home under a cloud of yellow police tape still fluttering from the scene.
The fallout was swift and seismic. By dawn on September 24, Cossler tendered his resignation from the Hendersonville Fire Department, where he’d risen from firefighter in 1997 to division chief overseeing training and EMS protocols. “In light of recent events, Chief Cossler has chosen to retire effective immediately to focus on his family and legal matters,” department spokesman Lt. Mark Clemons stated in a terse release, emphasizing an internal review cleared him of any on-duty misconduct. The move spared the department a formal termination but drew fire from the International Association of Fire Fighters Local 4321, which represents Sumner County’s 250-plus firefighters. “Assaulting a child—no matter the context—has no place in our ranks. This erodes public trust at a time when we’re begging for volunteers,” union rep Carla Ruiz told FOX 17 from the stationhouse on Main Street, her turnout gear slung over a chair like a discarded shield.
“Class Wars,” a boisterous tradition dating back to the 1980s in Sumner County’s tight-knit school district, has always walked a razor’s edge between fun and folly. Juniors from Gallatin High, Station Camp, and Hendersonville High target seniors’ homes with biodegradable barrages—TP, silly string, water balloons—escalating to all-out “wars” during homecoming week. Parents once chaperoned the chaos, but in recent years, social media amplification has turned pranks viral, drawing crowds and cops. Sumner County Schools Superintendent Beth Brown issued a district-wide email on September 25: “These activities are not sanctioned and pose real risks—trespassing, property damage, and now violence. We’re partnering with law enforcement for zero-tolerance enforcement.” Gallatin PD logged 27 prank-related calls in September alone, up from 12 in 2024, including a senior’s Mustang keyed with “Junior Forever” and a flour-dumped pool that cost $800 to drain. The victim’s father, a 45-year-old HVAC technician who spoke anonymously to NewsChannel 5, seethed at the hearing: “My daughter’s got nightmares—can’t even look at a fire truck without flinching. Shut this ‘war’ down before it claims a life.”
Community reaction has cleaved along generational lines. At a packed Sumner County Commission meeting on October 2, over 150 residents jammed the Gallatin courthouse annex—seniors decrying “thugs in training,” parents defending “harmless hijinks,” and teens in hoodies protesting Cossler’s “vigilante BS.” One commissioner, Republican David Collins, floated a resolution for misdemeanor vandalism fines starting at $500, but it stalled amid debates over free speech versus public safety. Social media erupted: #EndClassWars trended locally with 25,000 posts, blending memes of flour-faced kids with raw teen testimonials (“We thought it was funny till the chokehold”). Cossler’s neighbors, a mix of retirees and young families, rallied quietly—a casserole brigade to his door, whispers of a defense fund hitting $4,200 on GoFundMe. “Jamie’s the guy who shoveled my walk after that ’21 ice storm,” said 72-year-old widow Evelyn Hargrove to WSMV. “Kids crossed a line; he just reacted wrong.”
Legally, the case inches toward indictment. Davidson County—no, Sumner County District Attorney Ray Whitley, overseeing a docket swollen by opioid busts and DUIs, faces pressure to elevate charges; aggravated assault requires proving “serious bodily injury,” but the girl’s hospital notes cite only “moderate bruising.” Cossler’s prelim hearing is set for November 12, with Langford hinting at a self-defense motion under Tennessee’s castle doctrine. Experts like Dr. Harlan Yates, a Vanderbilt criminology prof, weigh in: “Property defense ends where physical restraint begins—especially on a minor. This could set precedent for prank prosecutions.” Yates notes Sumner County’s juvenile arrests spiked 15% post-2023, tying into broader Tennessee trends where rural mischief meets urban enforcement.
For Cossler, the man once hailed at Hendersonville’s annual chili cook-off for his award-winning venison stew, life post-badge is a shadow shift. Divorced since 2018, he now tinkers in his garage workshop—restoring a ’72 Chevy Nova—while dodging stares at Publix. “I lost my career, my rep, over flour?” he muttered to a supporter outside court, per a WKRN pool report. The girl, back in algebra class but skipping pep rallies, journals her trauma in a locked notebook, her parents eyeing therapy at Centerstone. As October’s leaves turn crimson over Shackle Island, “Class Wars” flickers on in whispers— a flour packet here, a TP roll there—but the spark of September 23 has scorched the fun from it. In Sumner County’s heartland, where heroes wear helmets not halos, one chokehold has rewritten the rules: Pranks aren’t child’s play anymore; they’re a felony’s fuse.
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