Marysville Appeal-Democrat

13-year-old who pointed finger gun might avoid original felony charge

- The Kansas City Star (TNS)

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – The 13-year-old Overland Park, Kan., girl who was arrested for pointing a finger gun at classmates has a chance of entering a diversion program to address her behavior instead of juvenile detention for a felony.

In her bright pink sweater, the bespectacl­ed girl entered the Johnson County courtroom Tuesday morning clinging tightly to her grandfathe­r’s hand. The two sat together in the front row next to a big red wagon full of colorful stuffed toys.

Prosecutor­s and the girl’s lawyer discussed the possibilit­y of participat­ing in a program that would allow her to avoid a felony charge before a judge in the Juvenile Division of the District Court of Johnson County. They agreed to return to court on Dec. 17.

Her mother, Vanessa Mccaron, last week told The Star that a boy in her daughter’s eighth-grade class at Westridge Middle School had asked her, if you could kill five people in this class who would they be? The girl formed a gun with her fingers and pointed at four other students one at a time, and then turned the pretend weapon toward herself.

Officials learned of the Sept. 18 incident through the school’s bully reporting tip line, police said.

She was arrested and charged with felony threatenin­g. Police said she was led out of the school by Principal Jeremy Mcdonnell. School resource officer Dana Harrison, who is an employee of the police department, handcuffed her outside the building and placed her in a police car before she was driven to a juvenile detention facility.

The Star does not identify juveniles charged with crimes.

The story has gone viral since The Star’s initial report, with most commenters saying the punishment is too harsh.

Overland Park Police Chief Frank Donchez confirmed Mccaron’s facts, but also said there’s more he could not disclose. He supports his officer’s decision to arrest the girl, saying schools need to be vigilant looking for signs of potential violence.

According to court documents, the girl “unlawfully and feloniousl­y communicat­ed a threat to commit violence, with the intent to place another, in fear, or with the intent to cause the evacuation, lock down or disruption in regular, ongoing activities ...” or created just the risk of causing such fear.

Her mother told The Star that the girl had been bullied for months by some of the classmates who provoked the incident. One time she was punched in the face on a school bus; another time she was left sobbing in the lunchroom, her mother said.

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