Student taken into custody for choking attack
Danette Goulet
CORONA DEL MAR -- A 13-year-old Corona del Mar Middle School student was
taken into custody by Newport Beach Police on Tuesday for allegedly
choking a classmate in an attempt to steal a homework pass.
The boy he attacked spent two days in the intensive care unit at Hoag
Hospital following the May 23 altercation.
The boys’ names were not released because they are minors.
Principal Don Martin said students in a morning gym class had just
returned to the school’s tennis courts after running a lap when one
student grabbed another by the throat, demanding he turn over a homework
pass. The gym teacher had left the area to retrieve athletic equipment
and did not witness the incident.
The attacker was reported to have been going around to many other
students that day looking for a pass, which excuses a student from doing
his or her homework assignments for one night. The tickets are
distributed by teachers as a reward for various reasons, including good
behavior or citizenship.
Shortly after the choking attack began, the victim started to lose
consciousness. The attacker immediately released his hold on the boy, who
then fell backward and hit his head on the cement, witnesses told Martin.
“I think his intention was to scare the kid into giving him what he
wanted,” Martin said. “After just a few minutes, the kid lost air. When
he let him go, he fell backward and hit his head.”
The incident did not completely come to light until late last week
because students who witnessed the attack did not immediately come
forward and report it right away.
“There is a kind of pecking order thing with middle school kids,” Martin
said. “Girls are horrible in one way; boys are horrible in another. ...
With boys, it’s more physical.”
After the attack, the victim was sent to the school nurse and then home
with his mother. However, she rushed him to the hospital after the boy
reportedly became incoherent and vomited in the car, said Sgt. Mike
McDermott, spokesman for the Newport Beach Police Department.
The boy is no longer in the hospital, but has not returned to school.
“He has some memory loss of what happened,” Martin said. “He had good
recall except of the incident itself.”
Police said the victim suffered head injuries, most likely from the fall,
and is currently taking anti-seizure medication.
The attacker was suspended from school, but now faces much more serious
consequences.
He was taken into custody by police at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday on suspicion of
battery with great bodily injury.
The Orange County District Attorney’s Office will determine whether the
case should be handled formally with a hearing, or informally and
referred to the Probation Office. The district attorney’s decision, which
is made in conjunction with the probation office, usually takes six to
eight weeks, McDermott said.
If the student is found guilty, he could be put in a juvenile detention
facility until his 24th birthday, McDermott said, although that level of
punishment is usually reserved for more serious crimes.
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