Parents of alleged Michigan school shooter arrested in Detroit
Prosecutors charged each parent with four counts of involuntary manslaughter in connection with campus mass shooting.
Police in the United States have arrested the parents of a teenager accused of murdering four fellow high school students north of Detroit, Michigan.
Authorities began searching for James and Jennifer Crumbley after Oakland County prosecutors on Friday charged each parent with four counts of involuntary manslaughter in connection with the campus mass shooting.
The prosecutors said the Crumbleys bought the gun for their son as a Christmas present and then ignored warning signs that may have presaged such a massacre.
Detroit police said in the early hours of Saturday that they had taken the couple into custody.
The police found the two at what “looked like a residential building”, Detroit police spokesman Rudy Harper said.
“We arrested them,” Harper said when asked if the parents turned themselves in, adding they were trying to escape when they were caught.
Detroit Police Chief James White said the couple had not broken into the building where they were arrested, but had been let in by somebody, adding that the person who helped them in may also face charges.
‘They cannot run’
The couple’s 15-year-old son, Ethan Crumbley, is being held without bail and has been charged as an adult on suspicion of carrying out the deadliest US school shooting of 2021 on Tuesday at Oxford High School, about 60km (40 miles) north of Detroit.
Crumbley’s parents were expected to appear for a Friday afternoon arraignment but stopped responding to calls from their lawyers, according to Oakland County Undersheriff Mike McCabe, prompting a manhunt by the Sheriff’s fugitive apprehension team.
After they failed to appear, the US Marshals Service said it had taken on the case and was joining Oakland County officials in the search.
“The action of fleeing and ignoring their attorney certainly adds weight to the charges,” Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said in a statement on Friday. “They cannot run from their part in this tragedy.”
Even so, lawyers for the parents issued a statement on Friday saying they intended to return for their arraignment.
“They are not fleeing from law enforcement,” lawyers Shannon Smith and Mariell Lehman said.
‘It’s criminal’
Four days before the shooting, Ethan Crumbley accompanied his father to a gun shop, where James Crumbley bought a 9mm handgun, prosecutors said.
Ethan Crumbley posted photos of the gun on social media, writing, “Just got my new beauty today.” The next day his mother posted that the two of them were “testing out his new Christmas present,” Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald said.
McDonald detailed several other warning signs that she said the parents failed to act on.
On November 21, a teacher found Ethan Crumbley searching for ammunition on his phone. His mother later texted him, “LOL, I’m not mad at you. You have to learn not to get caught.”
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.”
School officials summoned the Crumbleys and instructed them to get their son into counselling within 48 hours, McDonald said. The parents “resisted” the idea of taking him home from school and did not search his backpack nor ask him about the gun, she said.
After the Crumbleys left the meeting without their son, Ethan Crumbley was returned to class and later walked out of a bathroom with the gun, killing four students and injuring seven other people, authorities said.
“The notion that a parent could read those words and also know that their son had access to a deadly weapon that they gave him is unconscionable – it’s criminal,” the prosecutors said.
Under Michigan law, the involuntary manslaughter charge filed against the parents can be pursued if authorities believe someone contributed to a situation where there was a high chance of harm or death.
Parents in the US are rarely charged in school shootings involving their children, even as most minors get guns from a parent or relative’s house, according to experts.