|
From our October 19, 2000,
edition.
CISD
Trustees rule in favor of punishment
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
In
a 4-2 vote, the Clarendon ISD Board of Trustees last Friday upheld the
punishment of a local student who brought a gun to school.
The
decision means the 17-year-old Clarendon High School senior will have to
remain in the Alternative Education Program (AEP) until October 31, 2000.
Criminal
charges against the boy are pending and will be determined by a Grand
Jury, which is not scheduled to convene until November 13, 2000, according
to County Attorney Stewart Messer. Formal charges have reportedly not been
filed.
The
case stems from the October 3 arrest of the student who reportedly left
his .12 gauge shotgun in his vehicle after going dove hunting. A random
search of the school parking lot by trained dogs alerted on the
student’s vehicle, and school officials found a dead dove, several
rounds of live ammunition, and the gun in the vehicle.
The
student reportedly became ill while hunting with a friend and forgot he
had the gun in the car when he went to school the next day.
During
Friday’s special meeting, CISD trustees listened to a tape recording of
the expulsion hearing held the week before, which featured testimony from
CHS Principal Larry Jeffers and the boy’s attorney, Jerry Courtney. At
that time, CISD Superintendent Monty Hysinger ruled that the student
should be placed in AEP for a period of four weeks beginning on the date
of the incident.
AEP
excludes a student from participating in extracurricular activities and
restricts his contact with other students. Basic instruction and
counseling are provided in a separate building on the CISD campus. Under
the law, the student could have faced one full calendar year of expulsion
without AEP being used to continue his studies, school administrators say.
Following
the taped hearing, each side was given an opportunity to state its case to
the Board of Trustees. Courtney said that all evidence showed the boy had
forgotten the gun was in the car and that he did not “knowingly”
possess the gun under the definition of the penal code.
“[The
student’s] only sin was in getting sick and forgetting the shotgun,”
Courtney said, urging the trustees to overturn Hysinger’s ruling.
Jeffers
said CISD was charged with protecting the safety of the students and that
disciplining this student was not an easy decision. He said he was hired
to make Clarendon schools safe even though sometimes those decisions break
his heart.
“Everyone
needs to know that guns are absolutely, positively not allowed in
school,” he said.
Hysinger
told the board that he and Jeffers must deal with student discipline
problems everyday.
“Every
single student can tell us he forgot or he can tell us some other
excuse,” he said. “I know I personally have been asked to look the
other way in this situation. But we did the right thing, we did the legal
thing, and we did the ethical thing. And we were very compassionate and
very considerate in our decision.”
The
board then deliberated in closed session for approximately 45 minutes
before coming back to vote in favor of the administration. Board members
in favor of upholding the action were Lance Thornberry, Weldon Sears,
James Shelton, and Joe Lemley. Voting against were Reneé Betts and Marvin
Thompson.
Following
the vote, the board informed the student he had the right to appeal the
decision to the district court. As of Tuesday morning, Courtney said his
client was not planning to appeal.
|