Las Vegas Review-Journal

Prosecutor­s urge jury to convict father

Argue dad did nothing to thwart school shooter

- By Ed White

PONTIAC, Mich. — A prosecutor urged jurors to convict the father of a Michigan school shooter on Wednesday, saying he ignored the “easiest, most glaring opportunit­ies” to prevent the killing of four students, especially when confronted with his son’s violent classroom drawing.

Instead of taking Ethan Crumbley home, James Crumbley left Oxford High School with his wife and made Doordash runs, passing near their home during deliveries, prosecutor Karen Mcdonald said.

He didn’t check the house for a gun similar to one in the drawing until news of the shooting started to spread in the small community. That’s when he franticall­y called 911 and said the gun was missing — and his 15-year-old son could be the killer.

“There were 1,800 students at Oxford High School,” Mcdonald said. “There was one parent who suspected their son was a school shooter, and it was James Crumbley. You know what that’s called? That’s called foreseeabi­lity.”

Parents are not responsibl­e for everything their kids do, she said later, but “this is a very egregious and rare set of facts.”

A jury of six men and six women will resume deliberati­ons Thursday after meeting for roughly 90 minutes Wednesday.

Crumbley, 47, is charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er, accused of failing to safely secure the gun used by Ethan and not seeking help for the boy’s mental distress.

Parents in Michigan have a “legal duty” to exercise reasonable care to prevent their child from harming others, the prosecutor said.

“James Crumbley was presented with the easiest, most glaring opportunit­ies to prevent the deaths of four students and he did nothing,” Mcdonald said. “He did nothing — over and over and over again.”

The boy took the gun to school, killing four students and wounding seven more people on Nov. 30, 2021. Investigat­ors said a cable that could have locked the gun was still in its package.

Mcdonald demonstrat­ed for the jury how to use it, picking up the murder weapon, inserting a lock and removing the keys.

“Ten seconds,” she said, “of the easiest, simplest thing.”

Defense attorney Mariell Lehman rested her case after calling just one witness, Ethan’s aunt.

 ?? Mandi Wright The Associated Press ?? Closing arguments begin in the involuntar­y manslaught­er trial against James Crumbley, left, in Pontiac, Mich., on Wednesday.
Mandi Wright The Associated Press Closing arguments begin in the involuntar­y manslaught­er trial against James Crumbley, left, in Pontiac, Mich., on Wednesday.

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