I also bet she's not taking advice from cray,cray Smith.I bet she’s not saying that now.
That to me was the final nail in the coffin.
I also bet she's not taking advice from cray,cray Smith.I bet she’s not saying that now.
That to me was the final nail in the coffin.
They should not have even considered buying a gun for a CHILD if it had to be hidden from said child. If child was mature enough to have a gun, they should be mature enough to look at a gun locked in a case.I think the jury had big problems with JC telling the truth so when she testified that James took the gun from her car and hid it, she didn't know where in the house it was.
If you believe that JC has been truthful throughout the trial and is telling the truth now than her hands are clean.
The problem with that is it's all the jury had,JC's testimony and no one to refute it.
What the jury did have though is evidence and testimony that JC brought the gun and ammo to the shooting range, shot the handgun and put it back in her car.
We then have her boyfriend testified that before she got to the school meeting on the 30th she told Brian that the gun was in her car.
That is 2 days after the shooting range.
The jury placed Jennifer ,by evidence admitted at trial, as the last person in possession of the gun before EC got it.
"On Thursday, Jennifer said that James was the one who put the firearm in her vehicle when she went to the gun range. She also said he was the one to take it back inside and hide it after she was done shooting with her son. In her testimony, she said she didn't know where James hid the gun and didn't ask because it was his responsibility.'
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Jennifer Crumbley testifies she trusted James to handle family's guns - and not much else
Jennifer Crumbley didn't trust her husband to wake up on time or find a job, but she did trust him to be responsible for guns, according to testimony.www.fox2detroit.com
The jury foreperson is 26, a hair stylist and a mom.thanks, was looking for ages, only one juror has their age listed in that link, I'll look elsewhere
I was just thinking about DK and his English paper earlier today. I’ve read A Mother’s Reckoning by Sue Klebold, and the most interesting part comes at the very beginning, when she describes the moment she learned about the school shooting. She almost immediately begins to worry and wonder the seemingly impossible—is her son responsible. And that’s because despite her claims to the contrary, there were plenty of red flags and his graphic story was just one of many.Really surprised at the verdict — thought this would be mistrial, and glad to see that it wasn't. But, have been thinking a lot about Columbine… curious why Klebold's and Harris’ parents were never charged or were they and then charges dropped-- never went to trial? Was it because K&H are dead? idk. DK wrote a story about killing students and his teacher got alarmed and alerted his parents. strange... moo
How did EC get the gun/ammo @ 5am if it was hidden in his parent's bedroom armoire and they were sleeping?
From Ethan's time in court and JC's trial, what has been said about how Ethan got access to the gun?
The jury asked whether they could infer anything by the prosecution not bringing in the shooter, or anyone else who could answer how he got the gun.
To begin, it was a different time, a different state, with different circumstances, and different people in charge of legal proceedings.… curious why Klebold's and Harris’ parents were never charged or were they and then charges dropped-- never went to trial? Was it because K&H are dead? idk. DK wrote a story about killing students and his teacher got alarmed and alerted his parents. strange... moo
Edited to add - The gun had to have been inside the home. So I don’t know what the foreperson is talking about - what is the relevance of JC being the last person seen with the gun at the shooting range????
JMO
AFAIK The juror didn’t reference the shooting range, but just that JC was the last adult to be in possession of the gun.So in EC’s Miller hearing, the state’s psychologist testified that EC told her he set his alarm for 5 am so he could get up while his parents were asleep in order to get the gun and bullets. It’s not clear if the gun was inside the home or in the car still at that point.
It was James who ran home after the shooting and opened the gun case to check if the gun was in there. So he moved it from where it was into the kitchen or bed (I can’t recall exactly) to check it. And that’s where LE found it.
Edited to add - The gun had to have been inside the home. So I don’t know what the foreperson is talking about - what is the relevance of JC being the last person seen with the gun at the shooting range????
JMO
I read that book, and was appalled at all the red flags the Klebold mom refused to see. The parents were very indulgent IMO and, like JC, the mom is in denial about her role. Completely oblivious. She blames the other teen almost entirely. She’s fixated on her perfection as a parent. Even her reaction to the murders seems shallow and vacant.I was just thinking about DK and his English paper earlier today. I’ve read A Mother’s Reckoning by Sue Klebold, and the most interesting part comes at the very beginning, when she describes the moment she learned about the school shooting. She almost immediately begins to worry and wonder the seemingly impossible—is her son responsible. And that’s because despite her claims to the contrary, there were plenty of red flags and his graphic story was just one of many.
Here’s an essay his English teacher wrote about how she handled the story DK wrote and how his parents responded to her concerns.
Opinion: I Taught At Columbine. It Is Time To Speak My Truth.
Dylan Klebold had written about a “god-like figure” dressed in black, brutally gunning down fraternity-type boys. The narrator seemed to revel in the graphic violence he was depicting, but it was the final passage that was particularly disturbing, where Dylan conveyed unabashed awe and reverence for the killer.
I recall the word I used to describe the horror I felt when I read their son’s work: visceral. I told them about the content of the story, the alarming imagery of people being gunned down. I told them about the disturbing tone. I shared that I had made a copy and given it to Dylan’s guidance counselor, who was at conferences as well.
Mrs Klebold has endured the unendurable, and it was hard not to sympathize with a mother in her grief. But I was unprepared to read her version of our meeting, published in O Magazine in 2009, a decade after the shootings. She wrote that at the parent-teacher conference, I never described the contents of the story that had shaken me so badly, only calling them “disturbing.”
I was astonished all over again when Mrs. Klebold then came out with an expanded set of claims in a 2016 memoir, A Mother’s Reckoning ** :** Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy. Dylan’s mother now recalls that she and her husband had only “asked for details” of the story rather than for the story itself. She claims I called the paper “shocking” but refrained from going any further, saying only that “the paper contained dark themes and some bad language.”
A Mother’s Reckoning goes on to suggest that the Klebolds asked me if they should have been concerned — and claims I said I “thought it was under control,” that I’d asked Dylan for a rewrite and “planned to show the original to Dylan’s guidance counselor,” again contradicting what both I and the guidance counselor attested earlier to having happened. The book claims I promised to call if I thought the story was “a problem,” even though I’d thought so, and said so, from the beginning. By Mrs. Klebold’s own accounting, I had already told them as much.
The shooting at Oxford most reminds me of is Thurston High in Springfield OR in 1998. Kip Kinkel was “hearing voices” (which the parents didn’t address), clearly depressed, and they bought him a gun. Although I don’t recall the incessant cries for help that we’ve had in Ethan’s case, the parents clearly didn’t handle his mental issues. Kip killed them and students. It turns out, he has schizophrenia.
So EC was no clearer either? It's just that it was 5am. Ok but the state never claimed that parents saw or knew he had taken the gun. ( just that it was a foreseeable risk as evidenced by James's panic to check gun was still at home)So in EC’s Miller hearing, the state’s psychologist testified that EC told her he set his alarm for 5 am so he could get up while his parents were asleep in order to get the gun and bullets. It’s not clear if the gun was inside the home or in the car still at that point.
It was James who ran home after the shooting and opened the gun case to check if the gun was in there. So he moved it from where it was into the kitchen or bed (I can’t recall exactly) to check it. And that’s where LE found it.
Edited to add - The gun had to have been inside the home. So I don’t know what the foreperson is talking about - what is the relevance of JC being the last person seen with the gun at the shooting range????
JMO
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