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Parents of Texas left-wing tranny high school shooter found not liable for negligence in civil trial
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Matt Rivers
2024-08-20 20:25:10 UTC
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A Texas jury found the parents of a school shooter not liable for negligence on Monday in a civil trial brought in connection with the 2018 shooting at Santa Fe High School.

However, the jury found gunman Dimitrios Pagourtzis liable and awarded the plaintiffs more than $300 million.

Dimitrios Pagourtzis killed eight children and two adults and wounded over a dozen others at the high school near Galveston in May 2018, when he was 17 years old, authorities said.

Survivors and family members of some of those who were gunned down had sued Pagourtzis’ parents, Antonios Pagourtzis and Rose Marie Kosmetatos, accusing them of failing to properly secure the family’s firearms and failing to act on their son’s declining mental state leading up to the shooting.

“Parents of a depressed child should safely store their guns,” plaintiffs’ attorney Clint McGuire said in opening statements. “If they don’t, and their child commits a school shooting with them, the parents share in the responsibility for those harms and losses.”

The parents testified they didn’t see any warning signs ahead of the shooting, and their attorney argued they could not be held liable for the son’s actions.

An attorney for Dimitrios Pagourtzis’ parents said Monday she was overjoyed by the jury’s decision.

“I think the parents needed to be vindicated and (it) needed to happen publicly,” the attorney, Lori Laird, said Monday evening.

McGuire told reporters Monday evening that he respectfully disagreed with the jury’s decision. Parents, he said, play a key role in preventing school shootings.

“We would have liked to (have) had the parents share in their responsibility for this. 
 Parents should know their kids better than anyone else, and they should be all of our first lines of defense,” McGuire said.

Laird, in her closing argument, had placed blame on Lucky Gunner, a Tennessee-based online retailer that sold Dimitrios Pagourtzis more than 100 rounds of ammunition without verifying he was old enough to buy it. Lucky Gunner was a defendant in the lawsuit until last year, when it reached a settlement with the families, the Associated Press reported.

On Monday, the jury said that of the conduct that led to the shootings, 80% was attributable to Dimitrios Pagourtzis and 20% was attributable to Lucky Gunner.

McGuire said the previous settlement was financially final, but the finding of liability was crucial. “The important thing from 
 the jury today is that they found that Lucky Gunner failed to use reasonable care by having no age verification for selling deadly ammunition to kids who can then take it and go shoot up a school or commit other types of shootings,” said McGuire, who also said he felt fortunate “to help provide some closure for the families about what happened and why it happened.”

In a email to CNN, Lucky Gunner’s CEO said the company was dismissed from the lawsuit more than two years ago.

“Lucky Gunner wasn’t a party to the trial, so it was easy for the jury to place some of the blame on us because we weren’t there to defend ourselves,” CEO Jake Felde wrote. The company isn’t responsible for paying any monetary damages from Monday’s verdict, he wrote.

https://www.cnn.com/2024/08/19/us/texas-school-shooting-parents-trial/index.html
Matt Rivers
2024-08-20 20:49:59 UTC
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HOUSTON, Texas – A jury reached a verdict Monday in the civil trial against the parents of accused Santa Fe High School gunman Dimitrios Pagourtzis.

The jury found Pagourtzis’ parents, Rose Maria Kosmetatos and Antonios Pagourtzis, not liable but did find their son, Dimitrios Pagourtzis liable for the shooting. The online ammo seller Luckygunner was also determined to share some liability. The jury’s verdict assigned 80 percent responsibility to Dimitrios Pagourtzis and 20 percent to Luckygunner.

“I am overjoyed, I think the parents needed to be vindicated and it needed to happen publicly,” said defense attorney Lori Laird. “Hopefully, they’ll be able to start their next steps forward in their healing as well.”

Seven of the 10 people killed during the 2018 mass shooting, and four of the survivors, sued the Pagourtzis, their son, and Luckygunner. The families argued they turned a blind eye to their son’s declining mental health and were reckless in how they stored guns in the home; citing it was the father’s 12-gauge shotgun and mother’s .38-caliber handgun used in the mass shooting.

Laird said the family did keep their guns locked in a cabinet and safe, and kept the keys hidden in a bedroom closet, but their son found the keys and stole the guns. Laird also said their son kept his burgeoning mental health problems hidden.

“(I am) not trying to take anything away from the pain and the suffering and the terrible things that happened to the plaintiffs, but my clients were also made victims of this event as well,” said Laird.

The jury did award a total of $300 million in damages. However, victims’ families had already settled with Luckygunner before the civil trial, so the online retailer will not be responsible for paying any new damages as a result of this verdict.

The financial burden falls to Dimitrios Pagourtzis who remains hospitalized and incompetent to stand trial in the civil case. An attorney for several of the families of the victims, Clint McGuire, said he feels the verdict still sends a message.

“We respectfully disagree with the outcome. We believe that parents should safely store their guns, we don’t believe that these parents did,” said McGuire. “If we can show that if you don’t safely store your guns if you don’t get your child’s mental health when the red flags are there, then lawyers such as ourselves are going to file a lawsuit, and we are going to put this in front of a jury.”

The foreperson of the jury spoke with reporters following the verdict. He declined to share his name, but said 10 out of the 12 jurors felt the Pagourtzis did take reasonable steps to store their weapons and believed testimony from psychiatrists that those in mental decline can hide their symptoms.

https://www.click2houston.com/news/local/2024/08/19/jury-deliberations-to-resume-in-santa-fe-civil-trial-against-accused-gunman-dimitrios-pagourtzis-parents/
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