Michigan school shooter's mom says she was not responsible for guns
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[February 02, 2024]
By Brad Brooks
(Reuters) -The mother of a Michigan boy who shot and killed four
high-school classmates in 2021 testified in her own defense on Thursday,
saying she was not responsible for buying or storing the gun used in the
killings.
Jennifer Crumbley, 45, took the stand in what is believed to be the
first trial to target a parent of a school shooter. She and her husband,
James Crumbley, 47 - for whom a separate trial is to start in March -
are both charged with involuntary manslaughter.
The couple's son, Ethan, who was 15 at the time of the shooting at
Oxford High School near Detroit, pleaded guilty in 2022 to two dozen
counts, including four of first-degree murder. He was sentenced to life
in prison without parole in December.
Prosecutors allege that Jennifer and James Crumbley knew their son was
mentally in a "downward spiral" and posed a danger to others, yet
allowed him to have access to firearms, including the 9mm pistol he used
to kill classmates.
Asked by her lawyer, Shannon Smith, who was responsible for securely
storing firearms in the family home, Jennifer Crumbley replied: "My
husband is."
"I just didn't feel comfortable being in charge of that, it was more his
thing," Crumbley testified. "So I let him handle that."
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She said James Crumbley kept the 9mm pistol secured in its case with a
cable lock, and that the key for that lock was hidden inside one of
several decorative beer steins inside the family home. Jennifer Crumbley
said she did not know in which stein the key was hidden.
Jennifer Crumbley said that while her son had been anxious about getting
into college and what he might do with his life, at no point did she
think his problems were "to a level where I felt he needed to go see a
psychiatrist."
Prosecutors will cross-examine Jennifer Crumbley on Friday.
WAKE-UP CALL FOR PARENTS
Prosecutors said as the trial opened that Jennifer and James Crumbley
failed to do several "tragically small and easy things" that could have
prevented the school shooting.
They argued that the guns in the home were not securely stored and that
the parents should have responded to signs their son was having mental
health issues.
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Jennifer Crumbley, the parent of accused Oxford High School gunman
Ethan Crumbley, is escorted into the courtroom by an Oakland County
Sheriff during a court procedural hearing in Rochester Hills,
Michigan, U.S., February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
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Gun safety experts have said they hope the Crumbley trials serve as
a wake-up call for parents around the country to better secure
weapons in their homes. About 75% of school shooters obtained the
guns they used in attacks within their own homes, government
research has shown.
Prosecutors say James Crumbley purchased the 9mm handgun used in the
attack four days before his son carried it out on Nov. 30, 2021.
On the morning of the shooting, a teacher discovered drawings by
Ethan Crumbley that depicted a handgun, a bullet, and a bleeding
figure next to the words "Blood everywhere," "My life is useless,"
and "The thoughts won't stop - help me."
The Crumbleys were called to the school on the morning of the
shooting, and told that Ethan needed counseling and they needed to
take him home, prosecutors have said. They said the parents resisted
the idea of taking their son home and did not search his backpack or
ask him about the gun.
But Jennifer Crumbley rejected that version of the school meeting in
her testimony. She said that she, her husband and the teachers in
the meeting mutually agreed that Ethan could remain in school that
day, and that at no point did she think he was a danger to his
fellow students.
The meeting "was pretty nonchalant, it was pretty brief," Crumbley
testified, adding that school staff in the meeting said they "didn't
feel my son was a risk."
Ethan Crumbley was returned to class and later walked out of a
bathroom with the gun and began firing, prosecutors say.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Longmont, Colorado; editing by Donna
Bryson and Leslie Adler)
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