Parents of Oxford High School shooting victims call for state-led investigation

Parents of Oxford High School shooting victims demand state-led investigation

(CBS DETROIT) — With the third anniversary of the Oxford High School shooting approaching, the parents of the victims are demanding a state-led independent investigation so that data can be collected and used to create solutions. 

On Monday, the families of the four students killed in the Nov. 30, 2021 shooting — Madisyn Baldwin, Hana St. Juliana, Tate Myre and Justin Shilling — called on Michigan lawmakers to mandate and fund an independent investigation into the events that led up to the shooting. 

The families say it's been three years of excuses from all governmental agencies.

"We are infatuated with pointing the figure at the tool for this violence instead of thinking about why are people feeling this way. Why are people getting to the point where they want to do evil things," said Buck Myre, Tate Myre's father. "We are not thinking about the part of it, the whole prevention part of it. We are only addressing the gun stuff. We are not trying to get better systematically. That's what this investigation will expose."

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has on several occasions offered to conduct an investigation but has been rejected by the Oxford Community Schools board each time. 

An independent investigation by Guidepost Solutions was released in October 2023 and says all levels of Oxford Community Schools "bear responsibility" and failed to provide a safe environment for students. Families of the shooting victims say the Guidepost investigation "lacked subpoena power, resulting in many school employees being advised by their attorneys to not participate, leaving crucial questions unanswered." 

The shooter, Ethan Crumbley, was sentenced in December 2023 to life without the possibility of parole, while his parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley, were sentenced in April to 10-15 years in prison after being found guilty of involuntary manslaughter

Monday's press conference was the first time the families spoke without their attorneys. 

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