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Columbine "coverup"
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April 21, 2000 | "On at least one particular item, I
affirmatively believe they were involved
in a coverup," Peter Grenier said.
"Absolutely, yes. A human being directly
told us that," he said. "A human being
affirmatively demonstrated a coverup." He said the department has been
extremely uncooperative, forcing the
family to hire private detectives. "Our
case is based on a lot of lengthy,
expensive private investigation," he
said. "No one from the sheriff's office
would tell us anything." The Sanders lawsuit contained a host of
major new allegations, including claims
that a sharpshooter had Dylan Klebold in
his sights in the library, but his
supervisors wouldn't allow him to act.
It also contends the sharpshooter saw
Klebold and Eric Harris commit suicide,
and thus officers were aware the pair
were dead three hours before Sanders
died, but failed to rescue him. Because of confidentiality agreements,
Grenier said he was unable to be
specific about the identity of the
sharpshooter, the item covered up or the
witness to it. "It will all come out in
discovery," he said. Earlier this week a judicial ruling
granted the 15 families who were
preparing lawsuits access to the
sheriff's long-delayed "Final Report,"
but Grenier says the ruling came far too
late to inform his filing. Neither the
Sanders family nor its legal team has
seen the report or the other newly
available material. He expects to
discover additional surprises within
that data. "I hope to God there's
something useful," he said. Many victims' families have expressed
anger about the long delay in releasing
the final report on the Columbine
investigation. Brian Rohrbough, father
of Daniel Rohrbough, recently lamented
on NBC News that he feared he would have
to sue the sheriff's office to learn how
his son died. Sam Kamin, a law professor at the
University of Denver, said the various
lawsuits may well achieve their stated
goal of bringing new evidence to the
public. "If this gets far enough that
they do discovery, more information
about this may come to light," he said. However, the families may be
facing an uphill battle, he said, stressing that he had not read the suits and
was offering a preliminary reaction based
on knowing key points. "It's going to be difficult," Kamin
said. "It's going to be tough to ask a
jury to say we know better than a SWAT
team how to handle this situation."
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