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A mother hugs her daughter in the aftermath of the Columbine shooting
on April 20, 1999.
Stunning new Columbine charges
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April 20, 2000 | LITTLETON, Colo. -- Attorneys for Rohrbough's family said they based the suit on
eyewitness reports by a teacher and law officer, the position of the body and autopsy results
showing the trajectory of the fatal bullet. The suit by Sanders'
family alleges that a sharpshooter had Klebold in his sights in the
library, but his supervisors wouldn't allow him to act. It
also contends the sharpshooter saw Klebold and Harris commit
suicide, and thus officers were aware the pair was dead three hours before
Sanders died, but failed to rescue him. The Rohrboughs' lawsuit, joined by five other victims' families, also alleges that most of the deaths in the massacre
could have been avoided. It says students could have easily fled
the library early on, but a 911 operator had teacher Patti Nielson
instruct them to stay put, and alleges they would have survived if they had not been told help was on the way. Sheriff's spokesman Steve Davis said there is no evidence to
substantiate the families' claims. But the new details have led many
to question the reason for the sheriff's department's delay in
releasing its official report on the Columbine investigation. A powerful voice has joined
the growing chorus of exasperation over
delays
in the long-awaited investigation
report. Principal Frank
DeAngelis shared his frustration in an
interview with Salon News, just
days before the flurry of lawsuits began. "We keep getting ready, I keep telling
the community, 'OK, we're about two
weeks away, we're two weeks away,' and
keep preparing them," DeAngelis said.
"There's only so many times you can get
so wound up saying, 'Oh, I'm ready
now, I'm ready,' and then all of a
sudden, 'No!' 'I'm ready.' 'No.' I think
there's a level of frustration." Jefferson County District Judge Brooke
Jackson granted access to the draft
report to families of two victims
Monday, and extended the ruling to
include
all victims' families Tuesday. The
families of Rohrbough and Kelly
Fleming had sued
the county for the information last
week, in order to assess wrongful-death
or negligence cases against the
sheriff's department before the statute
of
limitations runs out Thursday. By the end of the day
Wednesday, 15 families had filed
lawsuits against the department, and
as many as 20 are expected by the end of
the
anniversary deadline. In his interview before the lawsuit
filings, DeAngelis said his frustration over the
repeated delays was shared
by faculty, students and members of the
community. "I feel very badly for the families of
the murdered," DeAngelis said.
"Because they have been waiting over the
past year for that to come out. All
of a sudden, the parents were ready to
look at the police report before
Christmas, and then [the sheriff's
department] was saying in January, and
then it was going to be March, and then
April, now it's May, it may be the
summer. And you kind of build yourself
up -- they know it's not going to be
pleasant, but you kind of prepare
yourself for it, and then it's kind of a
letdown. "It's the same thing with me. That
police report will always be
associated with the 13 that were
murdered. And that's what's awful, but
at the same time, it's going to allow us
to see exactly what happened. From
that standpoint, I'm looking forward to
the police report." DeAngelis has a personal stake in the
report's release. In the days and weeks
after the killings, Columbine High
itself was forced to share some of the
blame, as some speculated that Klebold and Harris had been
bullied and tormented by school jocks.
Others wondered how DeAngelis could have
been unaware of the so-called Trench
Coat Mafia, which in those early days
was said to have been the clique that
hatched the killers. The principal was briefed on key
findings of the investigation throughout
the days and months following the
massacre, and has spent the past year
waiting for many of the notorious rumors
to be dispelled. "I said from day one, I
truly believe, that when the truth comes
out, I'll be exonerated from all
the accusations, and Columbine High
School will be exonerated," he said.
"People have said, 'Aren't you fearful
of this police report?' And I said,
'No, I want the truth, I want to know
what the investigation states.'" So many myths gained public currency last spring that most of the public
misunderstood key aspects of the case, which dominated national news for
months. Yet through it all, the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department
remained officially tight-lipped, taking no significant steps to correct the
rumors and responding only to limited questions. Some reporters were able to
crack the wall of silence, however, to reveal that the killers were not
members of the Trench Coat Mafia, and had not singled out jocks, African-Americans or Christians in their killing spree. Still, the school may not get the
exoneration it hopes for. Division
Chief John
Kiekbusch, the ranking officer overseeing the case,
said in September that the
report would offer
facts without conclusions and has
consistently repeated this mantra,
leading many to conclude that the report
will avoid many of the tragedy's
most burning questions, such as the
killers' motives and whether the
persistent charges of an abusive jock
culture within the school are true. DeAngelis is clearly hoping for much
more. "I think what we're going to find
out -- without me knowing what's in that
police report, other than what I've
read in the newspaper -- I think you're
going to find out that there were a
lot of myths out there," he said. "And I
think those myths are going to be
dispelled just by what they found out in
the police report. They're going to
find out that these two murderers did
not target a person. They just hated
everyone, and they were out to kill as
many people as possible. "And I think you're going to find out
that this whole Trench Coat Mafia, this
so-called organized gang, was a loose
term used for a group of kids who had
graduated a year before. The athletic
thing -- [critics of the school] want to
talk about two or three incidents that
occurred, and they keep referring to
those, and because of those two or
three, there's a jock problem. So I
think what the
police report will show is that, boy,
there were a lot of rumors out there,
and people just wanted to believe
[them]."
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