James Crumbley was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter for his role in the 2021 Oxford High School shooting in Michigan, where his son Ethan killed four students.
This verdict follows a similar conviction of Ethan’s mother, Jennifer Crumbley, marking the first time U.S. parents have been held legally responsible in a school shooting by their child.
The prosecution highlighted the parents’ lack of response to Ethan’s disturbing drawings and their failure to secure the handgun used in the shooting.
Despite Ethan’s visible signs of mental distress, his parents did not take immediate action to address his needs or inform the school about the recently purchased gun.
Ethan Crumbley has already pleaded guilty to murder and terrorism, with his trial revealing he had unmonitored access to the gun and expressed a desire for help with his mental issues in his journal.
The Associated Press has the story:
James Crumbley, father of student who killed 4, guilty of manslaughter in Michigan
Prosecutors focused on two key themes at the father’s trial: the parents’ response to a morbid drawing on Ethan Crumbley’s math assignment a few hours before the shooting, and the teen’s access to a Sig Sauer 9 mm handgun purchased by James Crumbley only four days earlier.
Ethan made a ghastly drawing of a gun and a wounded man on a math assignment and added disturbing phrases, “The thoughts won’t stop. Help me. My life is useless.”
But James and Jennifer Crumbley declined to take Ethan home following a brief meeting at the school, and staff didn’t demand it. A counselor, concerned about suicidal ideations, told them to seek help for the boy within 48 hours.
Neither he, nor his parents, told school officials about the gun they had just bought, according to trial testimony.
Hopkins had hoped Ethan would spend the day with his parents. But when that was ruled out, the counselor felt the teen would probably be safer around others at school.
“James Crumbley is not on trial for what his son did,” prosecutor Karen McDonald told the jury. “James Crumbley is on trial for what he did and for what he didn’t do.”
He “doesn’t get a pass because somebody else” actually pulled the trigger, she said.
When James Crumbley heard about the shooting, he rushed home from his DoorDash job and looked for the gun.
“I think my son took the gun,” he said in a frantic 911 call.
Investigators found an empty gun case and empty ammunition box on the parents’ bed. A cable that could have locked the gun was still in a package, unopened.
Ethan told a judge when he pleaded guilty to murder and terrorism that the gun was not locked when he stuffed it in his backpack before school.
Defense attorney Mariell Lehman tried to emphasize that James Crumbley did not consent to any gun access by his son.
“He did not know he had to protect others from his son,” she told jurors. “He did not know that it was reasonably foreseeable that his son would commit these offenses. He had no idea what his son was planning to do.”
But the judge allowed the jury to see excerpts from the teen’s handwritten journal.
“I have zero help for my mental problems and it’s causing me to shoot up the … school,” Ethan wrote. “I want help but my parents don’t listen to me so I can’t get any help.”