OAKLAND COUNTY, Mich. — School shooter Ethan Crumbley will face students who witnessed the massacre at a sentencing hearing Thursday, when he appears in court for a hearing that will decide part of his prison sentence.
In addition to student testimony about the 2021 shooting, prosecutors may show video footage from the attack that killed four people. The footage has never been publicly disclosed.
The prosecution will try to convince the judge that the shooter deserves life in prison without the possibility of parole for his crimes. The victims’ families are expected to be in the courtroom.
The video and students’ testimony are part of Crumbley’s so-called Miller hearing, a mandatory proceeding during which the judge will decide whether a life without parole sentence is appropriate for the teenager, who murdered four students and injured six students and a teacher in the shooting at Oxford High School in Oxford Township, Michigan. The hearing is expected to last two or three days.
‘The difficult home life of Mr. Crumbley’
Crumbley was 15 when he carried out his crimes, using a gun his parents had bought him as an early Christmas present. Because of his age, he is entitled to a hearing during which both sides will argue why he should — or should not — get life without parole.
The prosecution has argued life without parole is a fitting punishment for Crumbley, who pleaded guilty to everything he was charged with, admitting he intended to cause panic and fear and that he detailed his plan in his journal the day before the shooting, writing: “I will cause the biggest school shooting in Michigan’s history. I have fully mentally lost it.” He also wrote: “The first victim has to be a pretty girl.”
But Crumbley’s defense team believes he deserves an opportunity at freedom one day, given his age, health challenges and difficult home life.
“The Miller hearing will give the court, as well as the public, a good inside look into the difficult home life of Mr. Crumbley and what challenges he was facing,” Paulette Michel Loftin, Crumbley’s attorney, previously told the Free Press. “I believe that the hearing will show that Mr. Crumbley is worthy of an out date, and that there is potential for rehabilitation inside the Michigan Department of Corrections.”
Why Crumbley gets a hearing
The U.S. Supreme Court and Michigan Supreme Court have held that mandatory sentences of life without parole for juveniles are unconstitutional and require the Miller hearing, which is named after the 2012 Miller v. Alabama case before the U.S. Supreme Court. It involved Evan Miller, a 14-year-old from Alabama who was sentenced to life without parole for beating a man to death with a baseball bat during a robbery. The high court held the sentence was unconstitutional and amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.
The ruling has since required courts to hold Miller hearings for juveniles facing a sentence of life without parole. In Crumbley’s case, Oakland County Circuit Judge Kwame Rowe will consider several factors in reaching a decision, including:
- Crumbley’s background and mental and emotional development.
- His home life, family environment and character.
- His record while incarcerated.
- The circumstances of the crime, including the extent to which Crumbley was involved and how his family or peer pressure may have played a part.
The prosecution has argued that Crumbley’s parents are also to blame for the tragedy, alleging the couple ignored their son’s mental health issues and instead of getting him medical help, they bought him a gun.
The parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley, are facing involuntary manslaughter charges and deny wrongdoing. They maintain their son is the only one responsible for the deaths, and that they had no way of knowing he would carry out a school shooting. Their case is pending before the Michigan Supreme Court.