Las Vegas Review-Journal

Police seek charges in child gun case

Boy, 9, brought firearm, ammunition to school, showed friend

- By Mike Shoro Las Vegas Review-journal

The father of a 9-year-old student who brought an unloaded gun to a Las Vegas elementary school Wednesday could face a child endangerme­nt charge, school district police said.

Clark County School District police Capt. Roberto Morales said Thursday that detectives were in the process of asking the district attorney’s office to consider charging the boy’s father based on the circumstan­ces of the case.

The gun didn’t belong to the father, but he had “authority over the weapon … so it’s his responsibi­lity to secure,” Morales said.

The boy brought the .22-caliber handgun and ammunition to Helen Marie Smith Elementary School on Wednesday morning and showed the gun to another student. A third student overheard the discussion and reported it to a teacher, he said.

Officials found an unloaded gun in the student’s backpack, with bullets and an ammunition magazine, Morales said. No threats were

GUN

made, he said.

Because of his age the student was referred to social services rather than being arrested.

District Attorney Steve Wolfson said Wednesday that he couldn’t recall an instance when his office charged a parent for a child bringing a gun to school, “but there could be circumstan­ces where we could bring charges.”

Requests for further comment Thursday were not returned.

Unlike the elementary school incident, in which the weapon was not fired, recent local cases of parents charged after children obtained guns have typically involved deaths.

In July, 26-year-old Michael Logan of Las Vegas pleaded guilty to charges of child abuse and prohibited ownership of a firearm. His 2-year-old son, Messiah, was killed May 30 in a shooting.

Logan had previously faced a manslaught­er charge before it was dropped in June.

Authoritie­s said a 10-year-old boy fired a shot from a 9 mm handgun inside Logan’s northeast valley home that left Messiah dead.

Logan’s attorney, Douglas Craw-

ford, had argued that his client was asleep at the time of the shooting and immediatel­y tried to render aid after he heard the gunshot. The attorney had accused investigat­ors of distorting statements from witnessesw­hosaidloga­nbroughtth­egun into his home.

Logan’s sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 9, court records show.

Last year the district attorney’s office charged the parents of 4-yearold Bradley Whitis after he died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in August.hisparents,ronaldand Kimberly Whitis, were each charged with child abuse after they allegedly left one of their guns unsecured inside of their house. Ronald Whitis also was charged with child abuse resulting in substantia­l bodily harm.

Court documents show Ronald Whitis pleaded guilty to a count of child abuse and was sentenced to three years of probation with two weeks of jail time. Kimberly Whitis pleaded no contest to a charge of aiding or permitting a child to use or possess a gun. She was required to complete community service and parenting classes, court records show.

Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter.

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