Oxford parents again call for investigation; AG says she is willing to move forward
On Monday, another request for an investigation into the 2021 shooting at Oxford High School drew a response from the state attorney general.
Monday morning, parents and friends of the students killed and people injured almost three years ago during a shooting at Oxford High School held a press conference again calling for an independent civil investigation by the state.
“An investigation will reveal the truth to drive the change,” said Buck Myre, father of Tate Myre, one of the four students killed during the shooting.
In a separate press conference Monday afternoon, Attorney General Dana Nessel responded to their request saying her office is more than willing to move forward with an investigation.
“While my department has renewed the terms of what a proper investigation would require, we have never withdrawn that offer,” said Nessel. “It was our hope that an additional review could provide many of the answers that the families are still seeking today.”
Nessel said offers to assist in the criminal investigation with the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office and Oakland County Prosecutors office have been turned down, as well as any outside investigations.
“We share in the families’ fatigue over the constant fingerpointing and scapegoating in these investigations and wish our offers to participate on any level had been accepted years ago,” said Nessel. “Any complete investigation by my office would require a number of things.”
In August, the Oxford school board passed a resolution asking for a state-funded review of how emergency responders and the district responded on the day of the shooting.
“The Oxford Board of Education calls upon the Michigan Legislature to mandate and fund a comprehensive, independent review of the emergency response to the November 30, 2021 tragedy, including but not limited to relevant events and agencies during before, during, and after the tragedy,” the resolution read in part.
Nessel said that several things would need to happen before an investigation can begin.
She said the prosecutors office would need to turn over all evidence, testimony, documents and transcripts involved with the prosecution of all members of the Crumbley family.
Ethan Crumbley, the shooter, was sentenced to life in prison without parole on four counts of first-degree murder and one count of terrorism causing death.
Jennifer and James Crumbley, his parents, were each sentenced to 10 to 15 years in prison after being convicted of manslaughter.
Nessel said the Oxford school board would have to waive attorney-client privilege and would need willing participation of witnesses, including those who did not participate in the Guidepost Solutions investigation.
The Guidepost report on their investigation was released in August 2023. The comprehensive report detailed the events leading up to the tragedy, areas where the district was deficient in their prevention of the shooting and recommendations for future security upgrades at the school, but dozens of staff and administrators refused to participate in the investigation.
She said she would also need access to members of law enforcement and the prosecutors office, as well as approval and appropriation of funds from the state legislature for the investigation.
“We would need the cooperation of the Oakland County Sheriff (Mike Bouchard) and the Oakland County Prosecutor (Karen McDonald), as well as local law enforcement and be able to interview all of their relevant staff in order to evaluate their response and their investigation and prosecution,” Nessel said.
McDonald’s office later responded to Nessel’s comments.
“We are not aware of any action needed by my office to activate the Attorney General’s authority, but we will do everything possible to enable such an investigation,” McDonald said in a statement. “And my office will fully cooperate with any such investigation.
She added, “There is so much we can learn, and we owe it to the students who were killed and those who were injured, their families, the Oxford community, and our children to do everything we can to prevent future shootings. An independent investigation remains a critical, missing piece in that process.”
Oxford students Tate Myre, Hana St. Juliana, Justin Shilling and Madisyn Baldwin were killed in the Nov. 30, 2021 shooting and seven others were wounded, including a teacher.
Trent Myre, brother of Tate Myre, again called on the state to open their own investigation.
“Our goal here today is not about blame or retribution, it is about change; change that comes from transparency and accountability,” he said. “The state must step up and do what it should have done three years ago.”
“To drive change properly we need to have data, not opinions,” said Steve St. Juliana, father of Hana St. Juliana, about the need for a full investigation. “The time for excuses has passed. We need our state leadership to take action to prevent more Michigan students from becoming victims to this epidemic.”
He added, “We should not have to be sitting up here repeatedly saying do a damn investigation.”
Nessel said that even if legislation is created and her office is allowed to conduct their own investigation, it is not guaranteed they will get the answers families are looking for.
“The authority of the Oakland County Prosecutors office and the authority of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department is exactly the same as our authority,” said Nessel. “So my question is, if those entities could not get these people to cooperate, how will we be able to do it?”