Va Tech massacre at center of 2 court appeals
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this April 8, 2008 file photo, Virginia Tech president Charles Steger gestures during a luncheon with graduate students at the school in Blacksburg, Va. The parents of two Virginia Tech students who successfully sued the state for the deaths of their daughters in a 2007 campus massacre now want to hold Steger accountable for failing to alert students and faculty of the first shootings on campus. Attorneys for the parents are asking the state Supreme Court to overturn a lower courts ruling that dismissed Steger from their wrongful death lawsuit. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)(Credit: AP)RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The state moved Thursday to reverse a wrongful death verdict in the 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech while the parents of two students killed want the university’s president to stand trial for failing to alert the campus when the first gunshots rang out.
The separate appeals were filed in the state Supreme Court within 24 hours of each other.
A jury in March found the state negligent in the deaths of Erin N. Peterson and Julia K. Pryde and awarded their families $4 million each. A judge in June upheld the negligence finding but reduced the jury’s award to $100,000 for each family, the highest amount allowed under a cap on damages against the state.
The women were among 32 faculty and students killed on April 16, 2007, on Tech’s Blacksburg campus. Student gunman Seung-Hui Cho also killed himself in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
While the actions that morning of Steger, campus police and other university leaders were put under the microscope in a courtroom, the president and other officials were dismissed from the case before trial, leaving the state as the lone defendant. Attorneys for the parents argued successfully that Steger and other university officials waited too long after the first two students were shot in a dormitory to alert the campus of the violence. The gunman was still at large.
In his appeal, attorney Robert T. Hall cites a policy adopted by Tech’s Board of Visitors that recognizes the school’s responsibility to provide a safe campus for its students.
“The policy required university relations and the university police to make the campus community aware of crimes … in a timely fashion and in such a way as to aid in the prevention of similar occurrences,” Hall wrote in the appeal, filed late Wednesday and provided to The Associated Press.
In its appeal, the state said the parents failed to support their claims and cited trial errors, including the judge’s instructions to jurors in which they were told the university “should have reasonably foreseen” Cho’s actions and had a duty to immediately warn the campus of a gunman who remained at large. The state said university officials had no statutory duty to do so and there were no assurances Pryde and Peterson would have survived even if they were warned earlier.




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