Current:Home > FinanceI think James Crumbley will walk free in manslaughter trial – because society blames mothers -InfinityFinance
I think James Crumbley will walk free in manslaughter trial – because society blames mothers
View
Date:2025-04-27 18:33:29
James Crumbley is on trial for involuntary manslaughter in Michigan, charged after his son fatally shot and killed four of his classmates at Oxford High School. His wife – the shooter's mother – Jennifer Crumbley, was found guilty of the same crime last month.
The jury in James Crumbley's trial has listened to several days of testimony. The trial is likely to conclude this week, and the jury may reach a verdict by Friday.
But I'll be surprised if James Crumbley is convicted.
Why? Because our culture routinely assigns responsibility for the behavior and safekeeping of children to mothers, even when fathers are involved in the lives of their children, and hold – or should hold – equal responsibility for their care and actions.
Crumbley parents' charges an uphill prosecution
The Crumbleys are the first parents in America to be charged with involuntary manslaughter after a mass shooting. Their son, 15, on Nov. 30, 2021, killed four students, injuring six more and a teacher, with a weapon his parents purchased for him just four days prior.
The shooter pleaded guilty in 2022 and was sentenced to life without parole. He is appealing the sentence.
Oakland County prosecutor Karen McDonald and her team have argued that the Crumbleys had ample reason to know their son needed therapy and missed copious warning signs, even on the day of the shooting, when they were summoned to school because their son had made alarming drawings on a school worksheet: a dead body with the caption "the thoughts won't stop, help me." The Crumbleys didn't take their son home after that meeting, or tell the school that he had access to a handgun. Hours later, he started shooting.
Legal experts had predicted it would be an uphill climb for prosecutors.
The prosecution described Jennifer Crumbley as an aloof and uncaring parent ambivalent to her son's mental distress, more wrapped up in horseback riding and an extramarital affair than in her troubled son.
Jennifer Crumbley argued the opposite, testifying that she was an involved mom who cared deeply about her son, who had, in her telling, never displayed signs of serious mental illness or distress. (James Crumbley did not take the stand in his own defense.)
But the forewoman said the jury found it persuasive that Jennifer Crumbley had been the last adult to handle the gun the shooter used; they had visited a gun range together three days before the shooting. I'd wager her own testimony that her son was a normal kid with no significant problems – that she wouldn't have done anything differently in the days before the shooting – didn't help.
Jennifer Crumbley ignored signs:Jennifer Crumbley found guilty in Oxford school shooting. One moment swayed the jury.
Mothers and fathers
A 2014 Buzzfeed investigation turned up a trend that was alarming, but not surprising: Mothers are sentenced to longer prison terms for failing to prevent abuse of their children than the men who had abused them, even when the mothers were also victims of the abuse.
One prosecutor told Buzzfeed that mothers are expected to sacrifice themselves for their children, so if a child is harmed, or worse, killed, the mother must have failed.
It resonates, because this is an instinct most mothers have. It's an instinct most parents have. But the penalty for mothers who fail to meet this standard, it seems, is much steeper.
We have a term for men who decline to participate in the lives of their children: "deadbeat dads." And while deadbeat dads certainly aren't applauded, there is no comparable term for mothers – for a mother to abandon her children is a stigma that can't be dismissed with an alliterative name.
In custody cases, a child's mother is automatically designated the primary, most suitable caregiver. When a mother loses custody, it's widely assumed that she must have done something really bad.
It's not just courts. Consider the COVID-19 pandemic, when women left the workforce en masse to care for their children, and men did not. Women perform the majority of child care, even when we earn more than our husbands. Or that women's wages suffer when we take time away from work to care for children.
Nothing short of torture:I witnessed Alabama execute a man using nitrogen gas. It was horrific and cruel.
Weighing blame
Legal experts told Detroit Free Press courts reporter Tresa Baldas that James Crumbley might appear more sympathetic than his wife. She was unfaithful. He cried at the police station.
But James Crumbley purchased the gun for his son, just four days before the shooting. Jennifer Crumbley, testifying in her own trial, said that securing the family firearms was James Crumbley's job. (He has said the gun was hidden in an armoire, and that bullets were hidden in another drawer in the armoire.)
At issue in both trials is a series of text messages their son sent to a friend, claiming he had told his parents he was in distress and asked them for help. Jennifer and James Crumbley both said they never saw those messages, that their son didn't ask for help, that they were unaware of his distressed state.
A jury believed Jennifer Crumbley ought to, at least, have secured the family weapons. That she should have done something differently.
So I wonder how a jury will weigh James Crumbley's responsibility. If the shooter's mother was responsible for the gun, doesn't his father, who bought it for him, bear some of that weight? If his mother should have noticed something, shouldn't his father?
If James Crumbley is convicted, it won't mean our culture has shaken off its bad old ideas about maternal responsibility. But it would be an acknowledgement that fathers aren't spectators in their own homes. And that in this case, two adults could have prevented this awful tragedy.
Nancy Kaffer is the editorial page editor of the Detroit Free Press, where this column first published. Reach her at [email protected]
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- 4 plead guilty in Illinois girl's murder-for-hire plot that killed her mother and wounded her father
- 7 giant tortoises found dead in U.K. forest, sparking police appeal for info to solve the mystery
- Fundraising off to slow start in fight over Missouri abortion amendment
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Mariska Hargitay, 'Law & Order: SVU' stars celebrate 25th anniversary milestone in NYC
- Anti-abortion activists brace for challenges ahead as they gather for annual March for Life
- Kids of color get worse health care across the board in the U.S., research finds
- Average rate on 30
- Blazers' Deandre Ayton unable to make it to game vs. Nets due to ice
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Maryland Black Caucus’s legislative agenda includes criminal justice reform and health
- Singaporean minister charged for corruption, as police say he took tickets to F1 races as bribes
- Asa Hutchinson's anti-Trump presidential campaign mocked by DNC
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- A transforming robot is about to land on the moon, where it will die
- In larger U.S. cities, affording a home is tough even for people with higher income
- Woman alleges long-term heart problems caused by Panera Bread's caffeinated lemonade
Recommendation
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division wants to issue electronic driver’s licenses and ID cards
Patriots coach Jerod Mayo lays out vision for new era: 'I'm not trying to be Bill' Belichick
Donkey cart loaded with explosives kills a police officer and critically injures 4 others in Kenya
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Reba McEntire to sing national anthem at Super Bowl, plus Post Malone and Andra Day performances
Did Jacob Elordi and Olivia Jade Break Up? Here's the Truth
South Carolina roads chief Christy Hall retires with praise for billions in highway improvements