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Lawrence King, 15, was shot at a junior high school Tuesday. A classmate faces murder charge.
By Catherine Saillant and Gregory W. Griggs,
February 14, 2008
An
Lawrence King, 15, was declared brain dead by two neurosurgeons about 2 p.m. at
David Keith, an
Police said the suspect, whose identity was not disclosed because of his age, shot King at least twice at the beginning of the school day and then fled the campus. The boy was apprehended by police a few blocks away and is being held in Juvenile Hall. He is scheduled to appear in court today.
Ventura County Dist. Atty. Gregory Totten said prosecutors would decide whether the case should remain in Juvenile Court after reviewing the police investigation. Under state law, prosecutors can ask the court to try the suspect as an adult, he said. "In all probability he will be charged in adult court," Totten said.
But several students at the south
The teenager sometimes wore feminine clothing and makeup, and proclaimed he was gay, students said.
"He would come to school in high-heeled boots, makeup, jewelry and painted nails -- the whole thing," said Michael Sweeney, 13, an eighth-grader. "That was freaking the guys out."
"Their lives are both destroyed now," said student Hansley Rivera, 12.
Several students said that a day before the shooting, King and several boys had some kind of altercation during the lunch period.
If the suspect targeted King because of his sexual orientation, the case could rise to the level of a hate crime, authorities said.
"We've heard that and a lot of other things," Keith said. "But I can't say what the motive is until we finish our interviews."
Totten said he could not comment on the specifics of the case until he reviewed the police investigation. But a hate-crime enhancement is something that prosecutors would consider as they move forward, he said.
"It's something we will look at," he said. "But the case is going to be reviewed as a murder involving the use of a firearm, and that carries a potential sentence of 50 years to life."
"They had been doing a lot of counseling and a lot of work with [King] to help him deal with some of his concerns and issues," Dannenberg said. "But I can't go into specifics about what was going on."
Bullying in schools has long been a problem. But recent studies show that a student who comes "out" as gay or lesbian is far more likely to suffer abuse than others, said Kevin Jennings, executive director of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network based in New York.
A student thought to be gay was five times as likely to be threatened or injured by a weapon, a 2002 California Department of Education study said.
"This
About a quarter of the school's 1,000 students stayed home Wednesday due to fear of reprisals, Dannenberg said.
This is why we have to speak out, be ourselves, demand to be treated equally. Why it is up to everyone to decry ignorance and intolerance. Why everyone who believes that we are equal or at the very least that it is not up to us to judge how others live their lives must smack down those who use their faith as a justification for denying others their freedom to be who they are.
This is why we must learn to accept, whether we agree or not. And speak that truth to any and all who will listen.
This is what we all must fight against.
My thoughts are with his family.
