The Columbus Dispatch

School district faces suits after shootings

Superinten­dent, principal in Michigan among those named in two lawsuits

- Corey Williams

lawsuits seeking $100 million each have been filed against a Michigan school district, its superinten­dent and others after four students were fatally shot and others wounded at Oxford High School, a lawyer announced Thursday.

The lawsuits were filed in federal court in Detroit by Jeffrey and Brandi Franz on behalf of their daughters, Riley, a 17-year-old senior who was shot in the neck Nov. 30, and her sister Bella, a 14year-old ninth grader who was next to her at the time, attorney Geoffrey Fieger said.

They’re the first known civil suits filed in connection with the shooting. Named in the suits are the Oxford Community School District, Superinten­dent Tim Throne, Oxford High School principal Steven Wolf, the dean of students, two counselors, two teachers and a staff member.

The Associated Press sent an email

Thursday seeking comment from the district.

Ten students and a teacher were shot at the school in Oxford Township, roughly 30 miles north of Detroit.

Ethan Crumbley, a 15-year-old sophomore at the school, was arrested at the school and has been charged as an adult with murder, terrorism and other crimes. His parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley, later were charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er and arrested.

Personal-injury lawyers have expressed doubt that the school district could be successful­ly sued for letting Crumbley stay in school. That’s because Michigan law sets a high bar to wring liability out of public schools and other arms of government.

“You have to show that the administra­tion or faculty members were grossly negligent, meaning they had a reckless disregard for whether an injury was likely to take place,” said attorney A. Vince Colella.

The gun used in the shooting was bought days before by James Crumbley and their son had full access to it, prosecutor­s said.

The morning before the shooting school officials met with Ethan Crumbley and his parents after the school aftwo ter a teacher found a drawing of a gun, a bullet and a person who appeared to have been shot, along with messages stating “My life is useless” and “The world is dead.”

The Crumbleys “flatly refused” to take their son home, Throne has said.

The Franz family lives in Leonard, just northwest of Oxford. One of the lawsuits criticized school officials for not expelling, disciplini­ng or searching Crumbley prior to the shooting which allowed Crumbley to return to his classroom “and carry out his murderous rampage.”

The lawsuit also said the school district “knew or should have known that the policies, procedures, training supervisio­n and discipline” staff members named in the suit “were inadequate for the tasks that each defendant was required to perform.”

On Wednesday, a statement posted on the district’s website by Throne said that after all the facts have been obtained and released through the course of the prosecutio­n, he will recommend to the Oxford Board of Education that the district initiate a review of its entire system “as other communitie­s have done when facing similar experience­s.”

 ?? JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP ?? Handwritte­n messages are left at the memorial site Tuesday outside Oxford High School in Oxford, Mich., after a 15-year-old opened gunfire at the school one week earlier, killing four classmates and injuring seven others.
JAKE MAY/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP Handwritte­n messages are left at the memorial site Tuesday outside Oxford High School in Oxford, Mich., after a 15-year-old opened gunfire at the school one week earlier, killing four classmates and injuring seven others.

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