Current:Home > NewsPredictIQ Quantitative Think Tank Center:Counselor recalls morning of Michigan school attack when parents declined to take shooter home -Zenith Money Vision
PredictIQ Quantitative Think Tank Center:Counselor recalls morning of Michigan school attack when parents declined to take shooter home
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-11 08:02:12
PONTIAC,PredictIQ Quantitative Think Tank Center Mich. (AP) — The parents of a Michigan school shooter declined to take their son home hours before the attack, leaving instead with a list of mental health providers after being presented with his violent drawing and disturbing messages, a counselor testified Monday.
A security camera image of James Crumbley with papers in his hand at Oxford High School was displayed for the jury.
“My hope was they were going to take him to get help,” Shawn Hopkins testified. “Let’s have a day where we spend time with you.”
But “there wasn’t any action happening,” he said.
James Crumbley, 47, is on trial for involuntary manslaughter. He is accused of failing to secure a gun at home and ignoring signs of Ethan Crumbley’s mental distress.
No one checked the 15-year-old’s backpack, and he later pulled out the handgun and shot up the school, killing four students and wounding more on Nov. 30, 2021.
On the trial’s third day, prosecutors focused on the morning of the shooting.
The Crumbleys had met with staff who gave them a drawing on Ethan’s math assignment showing a gun, blood, and a wounded person, along with anguished phrases: “The thoughts won’t stop. Help me. My life is useless.”
Hopkins said he arranged for the Crumbleys to come to the school and met with Ethan before they arrived, trying to understand his mindset. The boy told him: “I can see why this looks bad. I’m not going to do” anything.
“I wanted him to get help as soon as possible, today if possible,” Hopkins said. “I was told it wasn’t possible.”
Hopkins testified that he told them he “wanted movement within 48 hours,” and thought to himself that he would call Michigan’s child welfare agency if they didn’t take action.
Just a day earlier, Jennifer Crumbley had been called when a teacher saw Ethan looking up bullets on his phone, the counselor said.
Hopkins said Ethan wanted to stay in school. The counselor believed it was a better place for him, especially if he might be alone even if the Crumbleys took him home.
“I made the decision I made based on the information I had. I had 90 minutes of information,” Hopkins said.
Hopkins said James Crumbley never objected when his wife said they couldn’t take Ethan home. And he said no one disclosed that a new gun had been purchased just four days earlier — one described by Ethan on social media as “my beauty.”
The Crumbleys are the first U.S. parents to be charged with having criminal responsibility for a mass school shooting committed by a child. Jennifer Crumbley was found guilty of the same involuntary manslaughter charges last month.
Ethan, now 17, is serving a life prison sentence for murder and terrorism.
veryGood! (831)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Body-cam footage shows police left an Ohio man handcuffed and facedown on a bar floor before he died
- 'I haven't given up': Pam Grier on 'Them: The Scare,' horror and 50 years of 'Foxy Brown'
- US abortion battle rages on with moves to repeal Arizona ban and a Supreme Court case
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Antiwar protesters’ calls for divestment at universities put spotlight on how endowments are managed
- Will Power denies participating in Penske cheating scandal. Silence from Josef Newgarden
- The Daily Money: What is the 'grandparent loophole' on 529 plans?
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Man, dog disappear in Grand Canyon after apparently taking homemade raft on Colorado River
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Athletic director used AI to frame principal with racist remarks in fake audio clip, police say
- School principal was framed using AI-generated racist rant, police say. A co-worker is now charged.
- Brittany Mahomes and Patrick Mahomes’ Red Carpet Date Night Scores Them Major Points
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- The windmill sails at Paris’ iconic Moulin Rouge have collapsed. No injuries are reported
- New reporting requirements for life-saving abortions worry some Texas doctors
- BNSF becomes 2nd major railroad to sign on to anonymous federal safety hotline for some workers
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Brittany Mahomes and Patrick Mahomes’ Red Carpet Date Night Scores Them Major Points
The Best Waterproof Jewelry for Exercising, Showering, Swimming & More
As Netanyahu compares U.S. university protests to Nazi Germany, young Palestinians welcome the support
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Soap operas love this cliche plot. Here's why many are mad, tired and frustrated.
Kim Kardashian joins VP Harris to discuss criminal justice reform
The Daily Money: What is the 'grandparent loophole' on 529 plans?