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Six-year-old Michigan girl shot and killed in classroom
By David Walsh
1 March 2000
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A six-year-old girl was shot and killed, apparently by a fellow
first grade student, a six-year-old boy, in a classroom at Buell
Elementary School in Mt. Morris Township, outside of Flint, Michigan.
Flint is a center of General Motors' auto production empire, located
sixty miles north of Detroit. The fatal shooting occurred Tuesday
morning.
Whether the shooting was intentional or accidental is not known
for certain. There are reports that the two children had a quarrel
prior to the incident. Authorities identified the weapon as a
.32 caliber handgun stolen in December.
According to one account, the shooting took place around 10
AM as students were filing out of a classroom. Allegedly, the
boy pulled out the gun and fired one shot at the girl, hitting
her in the neck. The boy reportedly then ran into a lavatory where
he hid the gun in a trash can.
The girl, Kayla Rolland, was taken to Hurley Medical Center.
She died at approximately 10:30 AM. School officials held the
boy until police arrived. He is currently in the custody of the
state child welfare agency, the so-called Family Independence
Agency.
No sooner had the first news reports of the tragic incident
emerged than the question was posed as to whether Genesee County
authorities might prosecute the alleged gunman. As
absurd as this might seem, there was good reason for the issue
to be raised.
The shooting follows by a few months the conviction in nearby
Pontiac of Nathaniel Abraham, who was only 11 at the time of his
alleged crime. Abraham was the first youth to be charged with
murder under a 1997 Michigan statute that allows children of any
age to be prosecuted as adults for serious crimes. Oakland
county authorities pursued the case against Abraham in order to
establish a precedent and legitimize the 1997 law.
These officials and the Michigan state legislators who framed
the law have, in essence, attempted to efface any legal or moral
distinction between children and adults. According to this line
of reasoning, human beings reach the age of reason
in elementary school. Supporters of the law have made clear they
would be prepared to prosecute children of kindergarten or first-grade
age.
The first response of Genesee County Prosecutor Arthur A. Busch
was to downplay the likelihood of bringing charges against the
boy. There is a presumption in law that a child ... is not
criminally responsible and can't form an intent to kill,
Busch told reporters. Obviously, he has done a very terrible
thing, but legally, he can't be held criminally responsible.
Whether Busch is more enlightened than Oakland County officials
or has simply been chastened by the unfavorable publicity the
Abraham case attracted is not clear. Nor can it be ruled out that
he might come under pressure to change his mind. Nonetheless,
it is telling that every television and print journalist felt
obliged to discuss the possibility of charges being laid. That
in itself reveals the barbaric state of the American justice system.
Whether the little boy is prosecuted or not, it is safe to
assume that the authorities will turn the tragic death of Kayla
Rolland into a pure police matter. Busch suggested that the individual
responsible for allowing the gun to fall into the boy's hands
might face charges.
Bill Clinton, fundraising in Florida, deplored the incident
and noted, as he had in his State of the Union address, that the
accidental gun death rate of children in America is nine
times higher than that in the other 25 biggest countries combined.
In the same speech Clinton sounded a familiar theme, insisting
that Americans had never had it so good. What are we to
do with this enormous amount of prosperity...? he asked.
These comments ignore an obvious point: if the population were
universally enjoying prosperity and happiness, such incidents
as the Mt. Morris shooting would either not occur, or they would
merely be isolated episodes.
In fact, this latest tragedy is the most recent in a series
of school shootings in the US. Since the mass killings at Columbine
High School in Colorado last May, in which 14 students (including
the two teenage gunmen) and a teacher were killed, there have
been numerous other incidents: on May 20, 1999, a 15-year-old
boy opened fire at a high school in Conyers, Ga., wounding six
students; on November 19, a 13-year-old girl was fatally shot
in the head in a school in Deming, New Mexico, allegedly killed
by a 12-year-old boy; on December 6, a 13-year-old student fired
at least 15 rounds at a middle school in Fort Gibson, Oklahoma,
wounding four classmates.
The epidemic of shootings cannot simply be ascribed to individual
weaknesses. The deep alienation felt by many of the younger generation,
the debased social atmosphere in which backwardness and violence
breed, the availability of fire-arms in massive numbersthese
are symptoms of a crisis of American society for which the ruling
elite has no solutions. Its only response is to lock more people
up.
Kip Kinkel, the 17-year-old, who opened fire at a high school
in Springfield, Oregon, has been sentenced to nearly 112 years
in prison; Andrew Wurst, 15, responsible for the death of a teacher
in Edinboro, Pennsylvania has been imprisoned for 30 to 60 years;
a 14-year-old student pleaded guilty but mentally ill for a shooting
in West Paducah, Kentucky and received a life sentence; Evan Ramsey,
16, who shot and killed a school principal and a fellow student
in Bethel, Alaska, is serving a 210-year sentence.
See Also:
Prosecutors continue legal
vendetta against 14-year-old Michigan boy
April 18 trial set for Nathaniel Abraham on new assault charges
[25 February 2000]
Michigan prosecutors bring
new charges against 14-year-old Nathaniel Abraham
[22 January 2000]
Michigan judge sentences 13-year-old
Nathaniel Abraham to juvenile facility
[14 January 2000]
13-year-old convicted of murder
in Michigan: Harsh truths about a repugnant verdict
[23 November 1999]
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