Los Angeles Times

3 face charges in death of boy put in restraint

The autistic student was held facedown by school staffers near Sacramento last year.

- By Hannah Fry

Two administra­tors and a teacher who worked at a now-closed El Dorado Hills school are facing criminal charges in the death of a 13year-old autistic student at the school last year, prosecutor­s said Tuesday.

Guiding Hands School, a Northern California private school that served students with disabiliti­es for more than 20 years before it closed in January, made headlines when Max Benson died after being placed in a facedown restraint by school staff in

November 2018. The California Department of Education said the boy was held down for an hour and 45 minutes, according to Sacramento Superior Court records.

The school’s former executive director, Cindy Keller; former principal, Staranne Meyers; and special education teacher Kimberly Wohlwend have each been charged with a felony count of involuntar­y manslaught­er in connection with the boy’s death.

Wohlwend restrained Max on Nov. 28, 2018, at the school after the boy spit at another student, according to a civil lawsuit filed by the boy’s family against the school this month.

The lawsuit alleges that two teachers, including

Wohlwend, performed a takedown maneuver by holding Max’s hands behind his back, then dropping him to his knees and rolling him facedown. They restrained him on the floor, with Wohlwend holding the boy’s upper body while another teacher held his legs, according to the suit.

The suit says the boy urinated on himself and vomited while being held. At some point, authoritie­s say, Max stopped breathing and a school nurse performed CPR, continuing until paramedics arrived.

Based on medical reports provided to the family, the lawsuit contends that Max aspirated and went into cardiac arrest. He was taken to Folsom hospital, then to UC Davis Medical Center, where he died.

Prosecutor­s did not provide details as to how Keller and Meyers were connected to the incident. The three are expected to be arraigned in El Dorado County Superior Court on Wednesday, prosecutor­s said.

The deadly encounter sparked a lengthy investigat­ion by sheriff ’s officials and the Department of Education, which suspended the school’s state certificat­ion in December, barring it from accepting new students. In January, the department revoked the school’s certificat­ion, which meant public districts no longer could use special-education funds to pay for students to attend the school.

The school fought the department’s decision in court, arguing that it didn’t have evidence to support its actions and the move would bankrupt the school. However, administra­tors later decided to close the campus.

In court papers filed in January, the California Department of Education wrote that the school used restraints “in a manner inconsiste­nt with the law.”

“These violations are not limited to one student, one incident or one staff member,” the agency wrote. “The CDE is concerned that the violations related to restraints and emergency interventi­ons are ongoing.”

The teachers restrained him on the floor, with one holding the boy’s upper body while the other held his legs, the suit says.

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