Family of slain Utah track athlete will sue school

8:05 am | June 27, 2019 | Go to Source | Author:


SALT LAKE CITY — The parents of Lauren McCluskey, the University of Utah track athlete murdered on campus last year, are filing a federal lawsuit against the school Thursday, saying her death could have been prevented had campus officials taken her numerous pleas for help seriously.

“No one has been disciplined or held accountable in the campus police or housing. The same culture prevails in the campus police. There is no significant change,” Jill McCluskey, Lauren’s mother, said in an email to ESPN Wednesday. “Initially we were not planning to file a lawsuit, but (university) President (Ruth) Watkins refused to take any responsibility or hold anyone accountable for the failures that resulted in Lauren’s murder.”

McCluskey was shot to death in October by a man she briefly dated, despite having warned campus police and housing officials numerous times that she feared for her safety. Her killer, Melvin S. Rowland, shot himself the same night.

The civil rights lawsuit, to be filed in Salt Lake City by Jill and her husband Matt McCluskey, asks for $56 million in damages. The McCluskeys, both professors at Washington State University, described the lawsuit as a “last resort to affect positive change” after the school announced in December that Lauren’s death could not have been prevented, despite numerous failures identified within the school’s internal investigation.

Lauren McCluskey, a 21-year-old senior from Pullman, Washington, was a heptathlete on Utah’s track team. She began dating a man she believed to be 28-year-old community college student Shawn Fields in September, but friends quickly grew concerned about his jealousy and controlling behavior. According to the lawsuit, one friend reported to a campus housing official that McCluskey had bruises the friend believed were caused by McCluskey’s new boyfriend.

Within a few weeks of when they started dating, McCluskey discovered that Shawn Fields was actually 37-year-old Rowland, a convicted sex offender who was on parole. She soon ended the relationship, but within days of doing so, she called campus police to say Rowland was stalking and harassing her. According to police and the school’s investigation, McCluskey, her mother and her friends contacted campus police and the school’s housing office more than 20 times, including once after Rowland sent her a text claiming to be a police officer in order to draw her away from her dorm the day he killed her. Despite the repeated calls, campus police never checked Rowland’s parole status or sought him for questioning, according to the school’s own investigation.

The lawsuit includes accusations that campus housing officials were told of numerous circumstances that should have forced investigations under the federal law known as Title IX, such as signs of domestic violence, Rowland’s possession of a gun and her friends’ stated fears for McCluskey’s life. Police said Rowland attempted to blackmail McCluskey by threatening to reveal compromising photos of her.

“Indeed, no University officials followed up with Lauren in any regard,” the lawsuit says. As of Thursday morning, university officials had not returned a phone call seeking comment.

On Oct. 22, McCluskey was on the phone with her mother while she crossed campus when Rowland abducted her, leaving her cell phone and backpack scattered on the ground as her parents heard her screams. She was found dead hours later, shot seven times. Rowland killed himself that night following a police pursuit.

The school conducted an investigation into McCluskey’s death and released a list of 30 recommendations to improve safety, but university president Watkins said in December when the results of the review were announced that the investigation did not “offer any reason to believe this tragedy could have been prevented.” Jill McCluskey told ESPN the statement made her “physically ill,” and that Watkins did not return messages when she sought to follow up.

Jill McCluskey told ESPN that she and Matt hope a settlement would compel insurance companies to take risk to female students into account and force universities to develop effective policies.

The McCluskeys said any damages recovered would go to the Lauren McCluskey Foundation, which contributes to causes associated with “campus safety, amateur athletics and animal welfare.”

The lawsuit names the university, the school’s Department of Housing and Residential Education, and the university Department of Public Safety, as well as campus police Chief Dale Brophy; campus police Sgt. Kory Newbold; campus Detective Kayla Dallof; campus police officer Miguel Deras; Todd Justensen, the associate director of the housing department’s Leadership Team; Heather McCarthy, the housing department’s area coordinator; and Emily Thompson, a resident director for the housing department, for their “deliberate indifference and failure to intervene.”


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