Lodi News-Sentinel

Report: Schools failed Parkland shooter

- By Brittany Wallman and Paula McMahon

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—A report released Friday suggests the Broward County School District mishandled the case of student Nikolas J. Cruz, the Parkland school shooter, during his final two years in school.

Cruz had requested to return to the special education program in the Broward schools, the report reveals for the first time, and the district did not respond properly.

As the shooter awaits trial, questions swirl about whether school employees did everything they could — and everything legally required — to prevent the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

A consultant, Collaborat­ive Educationa­l Network of Tallahasse­e, found that the school district largely followed the policies and laws in place when educating Cruz, but failed on two occasions.

Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer ordered the 46page report released on Friday, but it leaves many questions unanswered. Much of the content was blacked out at the school district’s request, apparently including any details that would explain the district’s mistakes. Circuit Judge Patti Englander Henning also ruled that the school district could release the report.

Cruz’s attorneys argued unsuccessf­ully in court that the report would hinder his right to a fair trial. Scherer agreed with attorneys for the South Florida Sun Sentinel and other media outlets, who argued that the taxpayer-funded report should not be hidden from view.

The report suggests the district did not follow laws or policies in place when school employees attempted to transfer Cruz, then a junior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas, back to a special education campus.

Cruz refused, and removed himself from the special education program. The report reveals for the first time that at some point afterward, he changed his mind and asked that his special education services be restored. The district did not respond properly to his request, the report says.

The revelation bolsters criticism from some special education experts, who said the district should have done more for Cruz, who had emotional and behavioral problems.

Cruz’s attorneys said the report is a “whitewash” commission­ed by the school district to absolve it of responsibi­lity for how it handled Cruz’s complex psychologi­cal problems.

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