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#Michigan high school mass shooter
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The feces doesn’t fall far from the anus.
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kittyit · 8 months
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variety of sources linked for discussion
women, what are we thinking about this case? open discussion
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expfcultragreen · 8 months
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Dangerous precedent really; were the other students culpable for ignoring the signs, since the parents were...(and by the numbers more of the killers' waking hours are at school, than socializing with their parents, no?) The school shooter who shot them clearly thought so, and i believe thats the common thread among the school shooters...rage at their peers for not understanding them, for confronting them incessantly with an apparent, hostile-in-effect noncomprehension
When youre female assigned, violent behavior is strange enough that teachers/parents and by their cue, other kids, more or less assume "youre abused or unhinged or both," and essentially take pity on you by having some inkling of what its all about
What do these guys get? "Its your Y chromosome acting up, get used to it, deal, cope, man up...learn to house your violence for active service, or, choose your own adventure and become a monument to how badly you were failed and in turn failed everyone else...mass murder is always an option, youll get on the news, some people will even idolize you [🎵all the blame, the front page and the fame//but youll all know my name, and theyll think im insane]"
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rudethedoomer3 · 2 years
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Suspect in Oxford school shooting pleads guilty, including to rare terrorism count
The teenage student accused of killing four classmates in a shooting rampage at a Michigan high school last year pleaded guilty Monday to two dozen charges, including to terrorism — a tremendously unusual charge in a school shooting.
Ethan Crumbley, who was 15 when he opened fire at an Oxford, Mich., high school, was charged as an adult with one count of terrorism causing death, four counts of first-degree murder, seven counts of assault with intent to murder and 12 counts of possession of a firearm. Officials also took the rare step of filing involuntary manslaughter charges against Crumbley’s parents, who bought the gun allegedly used in the attack.
News of his plan to plead guilty emerged Friday, nearly 10 months after his lawyers said in court filings that they planned to pursue an insanity defense. His attorneys said in court Monday that they were withdrawing that notice.
The Nov. 30 shooting prompted extraordinary charges, including a state-level domestic terrorism count against the suspect.
“We are not aware of any other case anywhere in the country where a mass shooter has been convicted of terrorism on state charges,” Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald told reporters Monday.
Crumbley’s guilty plea to the first-degree murder counts could lead to him spending the rest of his life in prison. Ven Johnson, an attorney for some victims’ families in a lawsuit against Crumbley, said the plea was a “small step” toward obtaining full justice.
In court, Crumbley acknowledged that he had asked his father, James Crumbley, to buy the weapon for him and gave him his own money to pay for it. Ethan Crumbley said the gun was not kept in a locked location in the family’s home.
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the-foolish-scholar · 2 years
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The Emperor
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The Emperor tarot card is the father archetype of the tarot deck and the fourth card in the Major Arcana. The Emperor card shows a stoic ruler, sitting on a throne decorated with four ram heads. The four ram heads indicate the ruler’s connection with the first sign of the zodiac, Aries, which is related to planet Mars, the planet of action. The Emperor holds an orb in their left hand which stands for the kingdom that they rule. In the ruler’s right hand, there is an ankh, the Egyptian symbol of life. The red robe that they wear indicates energy, power, and passion for life. Underneath the robe, exists armor signifying protection from harm. The Emperor’s white beard represents the wisdom that comes along with age and experience. Over time the Emperor has learned what it takes to rule, establish power, and erect order for the benefit of the people. Behind the throne, there exists a mountain range, symbolizing the difficult journey that must be taken in order to obtain power. At the foot of the mountain range, a small river flows, providing the viewer with a sense of hope as it represents the emotional side of The Emperor, something that is challenging to reach but exists nevertheless.
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I didn’t post again on Sunday because of the Superbowl. I was too busy running errands in the afternoon to write. I don’t even know how to start this blog post. My mind is elsewhere. Life for me in El Salvador has been progressing well but I can’t stop thinking about what happened last night. I’m angry that this has become such a common occurrence in American society that I am no longer shocked to find out that there was another shooting.
I remember when Newtown happened so vividly. I was at the orthodontist’s office in the waiting room, scrolling through Instagram. I saw that picture of the mom crying while on the phone in a pair of under armor pants and a white long sleeve top. I turned to my mom shocked about what had happened. She told me to quiet down so that I did not scare the other kids in the waiting room. The next day at school our principal made an announcement assuring us that we were safe, which was comforting, but also just a blatant lie.
Kids these days go to school knowing that they run the risk of dying. So many mass shootings have happened since I was a child that I can’t even keep track of them anymore. I used to be able to remember all the different shootings, where they happened, the name of the shooter, and how many had died; but now I can barely remember them. I remember Newtown because it was the first school shooting that I ever heard about. I remember Parkland because it created the March for Our Lives. I remember Oxford because it happened in Michigan. And now I will remember MSU because Evan FaceTimed me to tell me that there was a shelter in place and I will remember how he had to lay down in the dark with his door barricaded for hours.  
This wasn’t even Evan’s first time dealing with this sort of thing. While no shots were ever fired, when he was in middle school two of his classmates developed a plan to lock everyone in the gym and shoot their fellow students. When Evan was in high school, a bullet was found on school grounds, snapchats of it circled around, and everyone was terrified. This time, it got a lot more real. Ever since my brother was in middle school, he was acutely aware that it could happen at any moment and last night it finally did.
It was so frustrating to be so powerless last night. All I could do was text him and hope that he would answer. Thankfully he did, every time. But others weren’t as lucky. And my heart breaks for them. I don’t want to accept this as the status quo, even though it has been for the past decade.
Today I met with students at the University of Central America to have a conversation about how we can reimagine education and academia. I spoke with them about my work with the Urban Cohort and I talked about the violence that exists within America’s education system. I shared with them a mindfulness exercise to do in moments where they felt stressed or unsafe. I've shared the same exercise with students I've worked with back home in the states. I don’t know what else there is to do at this point. All I can do (by myself) is try to minimize the anxiety and emotional harm our children experience. No matter what politician I vote for, no matter what I say on social media, no matter what I do, nothing changes. More kids will die. More teachers will die. Our communities will continually be attacked by these ‘lone wolfs’ who have the might of the gun lobby supporting them.
I wish I knew a solution. But I don’t. I don’t know if anyone does right now. Nothing that would work with the current power structure in place anyway. If we want to eradicate this issue, we need to get serious. We need to stop treating this from a downstream approach and start treating this from an upstream approach. When you see one baby floating down a river, you jump in and save it. When you see hundreds of babies floating down a river, you walk upstream and find out who’s putting them there.
I’m just shouting into the void and echoing a bunch of arguments that have already been said and that you’ve probably read dozens of times over. It almost feels pointless to say anything at this point. But we must keep talking about it. It’s the only way we might be able to come up with an innovative approach and actually solve this problem.
I think a good place to start is to start asking why. Why have we sat around and accepted this for so long? Why have the protests to stop this issue failed? Why do those in power not use it to create change? And then we should start asking how. How do we show those in power that we won’t sit around and take this any longer? How do we construct a movement that will preserve itself? How do we force those in power to make change? And when we ask how, we should also ask who has succeeded in the past? And when we know who, we should ask what did they do to succeed?
History is often taught from the top down rather than the bottom up. It is pertinent that we remember that President Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act into law because the activists in the Black community got organized, holding a series of boycotts and protests, demanding that he do it.
Read up on your history. Work in your communities. Talk to your neighbors. Create unity instead of division. Change the world.
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uinterview · 6 months
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A Michigan jury has declared James Crumbley, the father of a high school shooter, guilty of involuntary manslaughter.
Full Story Here: https://uinterview.com/news/james-crumbley-found-guilty-of-involuntary-manslaughter-in-sons-high-school-mass-shooting-case/
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katslefty · 6 months
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xtruss · 8 months
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Check Your State: Here Are The Active Shooter Training Requirements For Schools And Law Enforcement
— By Lexi Churchill and Lomi Kriel | February 8, 2024 | Frontline
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Santa Fe , Texas — May 21: Crosses line the lawn in front of Santa Fe High School on May 21, 2018 in Santa Fe, Texas. The crosses are a memorial to the victims of the May 18 shooting when 17-year-old student Dimitrios Pagourtzis entered the school with a shotgun and a pistol and opened fire, killing 10 people. Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images
After a teenage gunman killed 10 people at Santa Fe High School in 2018, Texas lawmakers mandated that all school police officers receive training to better prepare them for the possibility of confronting a mass shooter. The law, which required that such training occur only once, didn’t apply to thousands of state and local law enforcement officers who did not work in schools.
Four years later, officers who descended on Uvalde’s Robb Elementary School, a vast majority of whom were not school police, repeatedly acted in ways that ran contrary to what active shooter training teaches, waiting 77 minutes to engage the gunman. An investigation published in December by ProPublica, The Texas Tribune and FRONTLINE revealed that about 30% of the 116 state and local officers who responded in May 2022 did not get active shooter training after graduating from police academies. Of those who had, many received such instruction only once in their careers, which at least eight police training experts say is not enough.
As part of the investigation, the news organizations conducted a nationwide analysis to examine active shooter training requirements and found critical gaps in preparedness between children and law enforcement. While at least 37 states require active shooter-related drills in schools, typically on a yearly basis, no states mandate such training for officers annually.
Instead, decisions about active shooter training are often left to individual school districts and law enforcement departments, creating a patchwork approach in which some proactively provide such instruction and others do not.
The month after the news organizations’ investigation was published, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland’s office released a scathing report that detailed a slew of failures during the Robb Elementary response. While visiting Uvalde, he told reporters that law enforcement agencies should immediately prioritize active shooter training.
The federal report recommended that officers receive eight hours of such instruction annually. Only Texas, however, comes close to meeting the Department of Justice’s suggested standards, according to the newsrooms’ nationwide analysis. Last year, the state mandated that all officers, not just school police, take 16 hours of active shooter training every two years.
About a dozen states also increased training requirements after the Uvalde shooting, but many continue to fall short of what police training experts say is needed.
The gaps in training requirements begin before officers’ first day on the job.
While police academies in nearly every state require some form of active shooter training, five states — California, Georgia, Ohio, Washington and Vermont — do not require it for all recruits. A spokesperson for the police standards agency in Washington did not respond to a request for comment. A Vermont spokesperson did not respond to questions about whether expanding active shooter training to all officers in police academies is being considered. Officials with police standards agencies in the other three states said they are considering adding active shooter training to their police academy curriculum.
Once officers graduate from police academies, the lack of training requirements becomes more pronounced.
Only two states — Texas and Michigan — have laws that require active shooter training for all officers once on the job. While Texas requires recurring instruction, training in Michigan is given once after officers graduate from police academies. Some states mandate active shooter training one time in a particular year, leaving out officers who were not employed at the time. Other states require training only for school police, as Texas did before the Uvalde shooting, and only two of them — Illinois and Mississippi — require it more than once.
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While a majority of states require frequent active shooter-related drills in schools, 13 don’t require such instruction. They include Colorado and Connecticut, which had two of the worst mass shootings in history: the 1999 Columbine school massacre and the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary. Spokespeople for the education departments in both states said districts are conducting drills despite the absence of a state mandate but did not provide records that confirm their assertions.
Active shooter training can be expensive, but state lawmakers should commit to providing the necessary instruction if they want law enforcement to be better prepared for a mass shooting, police training experts said. John Curnutt, assistant director at Texas State University’s Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training Center, said Uvalde is a “horrible example” of when training was needed but hadn’t been practiced enough.
“There’s a higher price that’s paid than the one that we probably could have paid upfront to get ready for it,” Curnutt said.
Statewide Active Shooter Training and Drill Requirements as of 2023
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Source: State laws and regulations compiled by ProPublica, The Texas Tribune and FRONTLINE. Information is current as of December 2023. Lucas Waldron/ProPublica
About This Research:
To confirm the most up-to-date active shooter training requirements for law enforcement and schools across the country as of 2023, we contacted education departments and law enforcement standards agencies in every state. We examined both state laws and regulations.
In our analysis of schools, we included all mandated lockdown and active shooter drills, though some education departments said other types of drills can help prepare students and staff as well. In addition to the 37 states that explicitly require active shooter-related drills, we noted several others that have laws mandating safety drills but allow districts to decide which types of drills to conduct. We did not include those in our total count because the options could range from active shooter drills to earthquake drills.
For law enforcement, we collected information about how many hours of active shooter training are required for recruits going through police academies and for officers once they are on the job. We also asked for statewide data showing how many officers had taken such courses, but few states could provide that information. While we included only states’ current training mandates, four states — Alabama, North Carolina, Maine and Pennsylvania — required officers to train in a particular year but then not again, meaning that only those who were employed at that time received the one-time instruction.
— This article is produced in collaboration with ProPublica and The Texas Tribune.
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meret118 · 8 months
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A jury has found Jennifer Crumbley, whose son killed four students at a Michigan high school mass shooting in 2021, guilty of manslaughter ― a crime she was charged with because she and her husband gave her then 15-year-old son a gun despite his behavioral issues.
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andtheghost · 8 months
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If you agree with this, I never NEVER want to hear the word autonomy come out of your mouth.
EVER.
This idea that people other than the one/ones committing a crime should be held accountable is dangerous, except in rare cases, and we’re slowly (and not so slowly in some cases) being taught to accept it.
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Mass shooter and proud member of the NRA’s “well regulated militia.” Republican endorsed killings.
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trmpt · 8 months
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okgooglenews · 8 months
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Trials of Michigan school shooter’s parents set to test limits of who’s responsible for a mass shooting - CNN
* Trials of Michigan school shooter’s parents set to test limits of who’s responsible for a mass shooting  CNN * Oxford school shooting: Jennifer Crumbley gets emotional during faculty impact statement | LiveNOW  LiveNOW from FOX * Jennifer Crumbley defense cites Taylor Swift as prosecutors argue mother is responsible in school massacre  Fox News * Jennifer Crumbley, mother of Oxford High School shooter, on trial  CBS News * Teacher Locked Eyes With Shooter: 'That's When I Knew it Was Him'  Court TV http://dlvr.it/T1tCB3
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sparrowwright · 11 months
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The Panopticon
School’s Architectural Responses to Violence May Determine Our Future
On December 14th, 2012, Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, was host to an unspeakable horror. After murdering his mother at home, 20-year-old Adam Lanza shot and killed 26 people, 20 of which were children between the ages of 8 and 6 (Britannica). What ensued was a nationwide period of mourning that affected the entire school industry. It was such a shock that even president Barack Obama called for stricter gun safety measures, although his legislation was struck down by the U.S. Senate (Sandy Hook School Shooting, HISTORY).
After the tragedy of Sandy Hook Elementary, it was completely torn down and renovated from scratch (Britannica). The architect, Jay Brotman, designed the new Sandy Hook Elementary with an organic-feeling touch. The lovely wood façade of the school’s entrance illudes to its naturally-decorated interior, lush with massive windows that let in natural light and colorful murals. Looking inside, you couldn’t tell that it was built to stop a school shooting, but it very much was.
“The ubiquitous black globes of cameras in the ceiling are a reminder that this is also a school designed with the unthinkable in mind.” Says Grabar. “The glass In the double-row of doors is bulletproof, a feature that costs 10 times what normal glass does. Each classroom door is propped open with a wall magnet, which is connected to a centralized lockdown button that sends all doors swinging shut at once. The below-grade rain garden doubles as a mote that limits the school to three entry points and allows child-level windows to stand, on the outside, high above the ground” (Grabar).
Brotman’s approach to preparing this iteration of Sandy Hook is to make the precautionary features nearly invisible. “You’re not going to raise a good person in a prison.” Says Brotman. Unfortunately, it seems that his vision is not ubiquitous.
Fruitport High School in Fruitport, Michigan, was renovated by Bob Szymoniak (“Fruitport Designs New $48M High School with Places to Hide from Mass Shooters”). His renovations include cement half-walls to hide behind, long, curved hallways meant to shelter children from gunfire, small corners invisible from the hallways meant as a hiding spot, and last but not least, something that Szymoniak calls an “Educational entry panopticon” (Grabar).
This school was built for violence. There is no disguise, no prettying-up, no delicate touch. Its militarism is clear, and its purpose explicit. Entering this school, you know exactly what those hallways were built for, what the black ceiling cameras are there to survey, and who the educational entry panopticon is meant for. This school is built like a prison.
Increased militarism has always, in almost every case, been applied and enforced more strictly to black and Latino communities. In schools with a more than 50% student body of color, it becomes 18 times more likely that the school they go to will be enforced by police, metal detectors, and offensive measures (Patrick).
“I thought about a 12-year-old girl living in Washington, D.C. … who told me that she begins her day flanked by law enforcement officers, standing in line waiting to go through a metal detector.” Kayla Patrick says. “She’s only in middle school, and yet this Black child is made to feel like a criminal walking through the school doors” (Patrick).
I think now is a good time to be reminded of the line that Brotman said about his design for the Sandy Hook Elementary School.
“You aren’t going to raise a good person in prison.”
Are these designs conductive of a kind classroom atmosphere? Do these prisonlike attributes make students feel like they are safer instead of in more danger? How will children being raised in these environments later grow and develop as people?
Truly, there is no way to know for certain how a panoptic school will weigh on a developing mind, but there is evidence to believe that it will not be good. There is no age where kindness becomes obsolete. If we as a society and as a country want to stop cruelty, we should not treat people with cruelty, especially not potential victims of a horrific crime. People should not be reminded of their fragile mortality every day at school, and staff members should not be reminded that the lives of their students may be at risk. If we want to raise good people, people with healthy minds and kind hearts, we should not raise them in a prison.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ray, Michael. "Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting". Encyclopedia Britannica, 7 Dec. 2022, https://www.britannica.com/event/Sandy-Hook-Elementary-School-shooting. Accessed 13 December 2022.
Grabar, Henry. “How Do You Design a School for the Era of Mass Shootings?” Slate Magazine, 27 Aug. 2019, slate.com/business/2019/08/school-shootings-design-architecture-sandy-hook-columbine.html?src=longreads.
Editors, History com. “Sandy Hook School Shooting.” HISTORY, www.history.com/this-day-in-history/gunman-kills-students-and-adults-at-newtown-connecticut-elementary-school#:~:text=In%20the%20aftermath%20of%20the%20Sandy%20Hook%20shooting%2C. Accessed 13 Dec. 2022.
“Fruitport Designs New $48M High School with Places to Hide from Mass Shooters.” WZZM13.com, 2019, www.wzzm13.com/article/news/new-high-school-in-fruitport-designed-with-subtle-spaces-for-students-to-hide/69-6ee8154f-76a6-45bd-87c5-e3c60a0dce2f. Accessed 13 Dec. 2022.
Patrick, Kayla, and Kayla Patrick. “It’s Time to Consider Removing Metal Detectors from Schools Now.” The Education Trust, 14 Jan. 2021, edtrust.org/the-equity-line/its-time-to-reconsider-removing-metal-detectors-from-schools-now/#:~:text=However%2C%20there%20is%20no%20evidence%20to%20support%20that. Accessed 13 Dec. 2022.
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recentlyheardcom · 1 year
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The Michigan Supreme Court made history Friday in letting the unprecedented charges stick against James and Jennifer Crumbley, the parents of the Oxford school shooter who must now stand trial for their alleged roles in the deaths of four students murdered by their son in 2021.The Crumbleys are the first parents in America charged in a mass school shooting as prosecutors seek to hold them criminally liable for buying their son the gun that he used in the massacre, and, for never telling the school about the weapon when they were summoned over his troubling behavior.The parents, who are facing involuntary manslaughter charges, have been fighting for two years to get the charges dismissed. Their final appeal was before the Michigan Supreme Court, which after seven months of receiving the request, opted not to hear their case.In a one-paragraph order released early Friday morning, the state's highest court wrote: " … it is denied, because we are not persuaded that the question should be reviewed by this court."To avoid a trial, the Crumbleys, who have been jailed for almost two years now on involuntary manslaughter charges, could still cut a deal in the case and plead guilty in exchange for potential leniency. However, the prosecution would have to agree to any such agreement, and the judge would have the final say.Neither side can comment on the latest ruling as there is a gag order that prohibits both the defense and prosecution from publicly speaking about this case.The Michigan Supreme Court's decision comes just days after an Oakland County judge concluded that the couple's son, Ethan Crumbley, is eligible for life without parole for his crimes when he is sentenced in December.The Crumbleys have long maintained that they kept the gun properly stored, and had no idea their son would carry out a mass shooting.But the prosecution, which conceded from the get-go that this was a difficult case, alleged the Crumbleys were irresponsible parents who ignored a mentally ill child and bought him a gun instead of getting him help. In the months before the shooting, the boy had told his mom and a friend he was hearing voices and seeing demons in the house.More: Judge: Crimes of Oxford school shooter Ethan Crumbley qualify for life without paroleProsecutors also argued that the Crumbleys — more than anyone else — could have prevented the shooting had they informed school officials that they had bought their son a gun on the morning they were summoned to the school over his troubling behavior. On the morning before the shooting, Ethan Crumbley had drawn a gun and a human body bleeding on his math worksheet, along with the words, "The thoughts won't stop. Help me."The Crumbleys went back to their jobs after the school meeting and promised to get him help, never disclosing they had bought him a gun.Two hours later, Ethan Crumbley emerged from a bathroom and opened fire in the hallways, killing four students and injuring seven others, including a teacher."While the shooter was the one who entered the high school and pulled the trigger, there (were) other individuals who contributed to the events on Nov. 30, and it’s my intention to hold them accountable as well,” Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald said two days after the shooting, referring to the Crumbleys.But the defense countered the charges were overreaching, unwarranted, and could set a dangerous precedent for parents everywhere who could be held accountable for their childrens' actions."Of course, the desire to hold someone accountable for the tragedy that occurred at Oxford High School on November 30, 2021 is certainly understandable, but 'the temptation to stretch the law to fit the evil is an ancient one, and it must be resisted,' " defense attorney Shannon Smith argued in prior court filings.The defense has long argued that the initial district judge in the Crumbley's case abused her discretion in binding the couple over for trial, maintaining the decision to charge them was "clearly erroneous," sets a dangerous precedent and will "cause injustices.
"The Michigan Court of Appeals disagreed, concluding in March that the judge did not abuse her discretion and upheld the charges.So the Crumbleys appealed to the Michigan Supreme Court, maintaining that the prosecution could not prove that they caused the students' deaths and that the only one responsible was their son, who pleaded guilty to the murders last year."Certainly, after every school shooting, the media and those affected are quick to point to so-called 'red flags' that were missed by those in the shooter’s life. But the truth of the matter is, one cannot predict the unimaginable," attorney Mariell Lehman, who is representing James Crumbley, wrote in her filing to the Supreme Court.Smith, who is representing Jennifer Crumbley, echoed that in her filing, arguing the rationale for charging the Crumbleys “should be particularly troubling” and “begs the question of when a parent will cross the subjective line of 'good parenting' and render (themselves) criminally liable for the independent acts of a teenager.“In this case, Smith argued, it was the teenage son who terrorized a school with deadly violence, not the parents.Ethan Crumbley’s "acts, without a doubt, constitute intentional misconduct,” Smith wrote in her filing with the Supreme Court. “As made clear by his 21-page journal, (Ethan) did not, in the spur of the moment, embark on the homicidal rampage; to the contrary, (he) planned the attack well in advance.“And, Smith argues, his parents had no way of knowing this.The Oakland County Prosecutor's Office disagrees, arguing that the Crumbleys, more than anyone else, could have prevented the shooting had they paid attention to their son's mental health, alleging the boy was spiraling out of control but got no help from his parents.After the shooting, police discovered the journal in Ethan Crumbley’s backpack. In it, he detailed his plans to shoot up his school, writing, among other things:“The first victim has to be a pretty girl with a future so she can suffer like me," and, “I will kill everyone I f------ see”“I have fully mentally lost it after years of fighting with my dark side. My parents won’t listen to me about help or a therapist.”In the journal, he also apologized to his parents for what he was about to do:“I’m sorry for this, Mom and Dad. I’m not trying to hurt you by doing this. I have to do this … I love you, Mom. I love you, Dad."In his final entry, he wrote in large, bold letters: “Forgive me.”The Crumbleys say they never knew of the journal's entries until after the shooting. When they heard them in court, they hung their heads and wept.Contact Tresa Baldas: [email protected] article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan Supreme Court won't hear case of James, Jennifer Crumbley
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cavenewstimes · 1 year
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Oxford school shooter was 'feral child' abandoned by parents, defense psychologist says
By ED WHITE Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year]   PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — A teenager who killed four students at his Michigan high school in 2021 was like a “feral child,” deeply neglected by his parents during crucial years and mentally ill, a psychologist testified Tuesday at a hearing to determine if the mass shooter will get a life prison sentence. Ethan…
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