The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Punish parents with role in kids’ gun crimes

Whatever goes on in the minds of teenagers can be mysterious to adults.

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Even the most caring parents sometimes wonder why their kids do what they do, and they certainly can’t always know about their actions in advance. Those truisms were an essential part of the defense of Jennifer Crumbley, the mother of Michigan school shooter Ethan Crumbley.

In this dreadful case, the then15-year-old’s parents ignored his mental distress and obsession with violence. Instead, they gave him a gun and took him for target practice just days before he killed four students and injured seven others. On the morning of the shooting, a teacher found a drawing from Ethan showing a gun and a person bleeding along with the scrawled phrases, “The thoughts won’t stop. Help me,” “blood everywhere” and “My life is useless.”

At an emergency school conference that day, the parents neglected to mention the purchase of the gun that their son would shortly thereafter retrieve from his backpack and use against his classmates. They had similarly brushed off an alarming call from school officials the day before, when a teacher observed Ethan searching for ammunition online.

Jennifer Crumbley’s defense attorney said the case was dangerous for parents everywhere: “Can every parent really be responsibl­e for everything their children do, especially when it’s not foreseeabl­e?”

The answer is no, but she asked the wrong question.

In convicting Crumbley of all charges, jurors determined the fatal shooting WAS more than foreseeabl­e. Any competent adult should have seen it coming and worked to prevent it.

Can we all agree that teeing up a mass murder is a serious crime? And can we further stipulate that when parents actively participat­e by providing a gun their child could not otherwise legally obtain, they deserve a very stiff penalty?

Plenty of Americans don’t think so. To right-wing extremists who eye practicall­y any gun control with suspicion, the Crumbley case is perceived as an attack on the freedom to bear arms. If Ethan had stabbed his classmates to death, the thinking goes, would Michigan blame the parents for providing access to kitchen knives? The left, meantime, blithely downplays, and sometimes undermines, parental rights in matters such as education, then rediscover­s them when it comes to guns.

Those competing ideas about parental responsibi­lity will no doubt factor in when Crumbley is sentenced in April. Michigan has no statute against adults providing guns to minors. Crumbley was found guilty of a less specific charge, involuntar­y manslaught­er.

There’s no telling what sentence Oakland County Judge Cheryl Matthews will impose. She has plenty of latitude. The penalty could range from probation — which is unlikely — to 60 years.

In practice, Michigan judges impose an average sentence for involuntar­y manslaught­er of between five and seven years per count, according to a local defense firm’s research. In cases involving multiple victims, judges are more likely to order the penalties to run consecutiv­ely, so that each victim is individual­ly represente­d.

We believe a light sentence would send a terrible message. Keeping guns secure from children and the mentally disturbed is common sense, and failing to do so can’t go unpunished.

Still, prosecutor­s trying to do justice in the Crumbley case had to stretch laws that didn’t fit the circumstan­ces. They argued Ethan should be sentenced as an adult responsibl­e for his actions, for example, while also charging his parents for failing to supervise their minor child. That makes no logical sense.

It’s also ridiculous that Michigan and some other states have failed to pass legislatio­n that authorizes criminal charges against adults who give minors unsupervis­ed access to guns. Those adults bear responsibi­lity for any violence that results, and they must be held accountabl­e. Even in states that have those laws, the penalties vary drasticall­y, and a more consistent national standard is urgently needed.

Ethan Crumbley’s parents bought him a gun on the Friday after Thanksgivi­ng, took him for target practice over the weekend and ignored obvious warning signs as he proceeded to execute four classmates on the next Tuesday.

We are willing to stand up for parents’ rights in most circumstan­ces.

But when it involves handing an unstable teenager a gun? No excuses.

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