The convicted mother of a Michigan school shooter is seeking a new trial
over witness deals
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[February 01, 2025]
By ED WHITE
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — The first U.S. parent to be held criminally
responsible for a mass school shooting committed by a child asked a
Michigan judge to throw out her conviction Friday, arguing that her
trial was spoiled by the prosecutor's failure to disclose key details
about two major witnesses.
Nick Ejak and Shawn Hopkins, employees at Oxford High School, were not
given immunity in the fatal shooting of four students in 2021. But they
had agreed to speak to prosecutors when promised that their words would
not be used against them.
The four-page deal was not shared with Jennifer Crumbley's lawyer before
her 2024 trial.
Crumbley's appellate attorney argued Friday that the failure to produce
the agreement was a fundamental violation of rules that prosecutors must
follow.
If the defense had known about the agreement, Crumbley's trial lawyer
could have questioned Ejak and Hopkins about it during cross-examination
and tried to cast doubt on their credibility, Michael Dezsi said.
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“They dangled that carrot over those witnesses to get them to
cooperate,” Dezsi said of prosecutors.
Crumbley, 46, is serving a 10-year prison term for involuntary
manslaughter. Prosecutors said she had a duty to protect Oxford students
from her 15-year-old son, who was given a gun as a gift just a few days
before he committed the mass shooting.
Ejak and Hopkins met with Ethan Crumbley and his parents two hours
before the shooting. A teacher was alarmed by Ethan's drawings of a gun,
a bullet and a wounded man on a math paper, accompanied by despondent
phrases.
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Jennifer Crumbley talks to her attorney, Monday, Feb. 5, 2024 in
Pontiac, Mich. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, Pool, File)
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Ejak and Hopkins believed Ethan would go home after the morning
meeting, but they didn't object when the parents said he would stay
at school. No one — staff or parents — checked the teen's backpack
for a gun.
Assistant prosecutor Marc Keast said his office had no obligation to
turn over agreements with Ejak and Hopkins, who were not charged
with crimes.
“Their attorneys reached out to us,” Keast told Judge Cheryl
Matthews. “There was no promise. There was no threats. There was no
discussion about testimony. We talked about what they did, what
happened on Nov. 30th.”
Matthews suggested that the failure to produce the agreements likely
was a violation by the prosecutor's office. But she also noted that
the testimony of Ejak and Hopkins was a “very small part” of the
evidence against Jennifer Crumbley.
The judge didn't immediately make a decision about granting a new
trial. Matthews rejected other arguments in a nine-page opinion
Thursday.
Jennifer Crumbley's husband, James Crumbley, was convicted of
involuntary manslaughter at a separate trial and is also serving a
10-year prison term. Ethan Crumbley, now 18, is serving a life
sentence for murder and other crimes.
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