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Arguments are taking place Tuesday over whether the parents of a former Oxford High School student who killed four classmates in a 2021 shooting should stand trial.
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The Michigan Supreme Court on Tuesday postponed the January trial for the parents of the teenager who's pleaded guilty to killing four students at his high school.
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Authorities say the teenager accused of killing four fellow students and injuring more at a Michigan high school is expected to plead guilty to murder next week.
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Intermediate school districts would hire dedicated mental health and safety staff under a bipartisan package introduced this week in the Michigan House of Representatives.
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A law firm says about 20 students at a Michigan high school where four students were killed in a mass shooting say their constitutional rights to safety and education have been violated.
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Organizers say nearly 600 people showed up to the demonstration in Oxford. There were an estimated 300 protests across the country, including ones in Detroit, Ann Arbor, Lansing, Traverse City, and Port Huron.
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Oxford Community Schools already faces multiple lawsuits for allegedly mishandling the situation that led up to accused shooter Ethan Crumbley’s rampage. The latest comes from the mother of one victim, senior Madisyn Baldwin.
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The money could be used for additional mental health staff, school security, additional learning time, legal fees, and the physical restoration of school buildings after an attack.
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The lawsuit alleges school staff "failed to properly identify a student with suicidal and homicidal tendencies" and failed to prevent the attack.
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An independent inquiry into the mass shooting at Oxford High School is being pushed back.