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Michigan Supreme Court looking at case of girl’s death in UP gym

FILE - In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2020, file photo, The Michigan Supreme Court's Hall of Justice is seen in Lansing, Mich. SANTA FE, N.M. _ Court majorities are at stake beyond Washington, D.C., as voters chose justices for state supreme courts that have been thrust into politicized clashes over voter access and the emergency powers of governors fighting the coronavirus outbreak. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, wants to flip control of the states Republican-majority high court. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File) (Carlos Osorio, Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

GWINN, Mich. – The Michigan Supreme Court heard arguments Thursday in a dispute over whether an Upper Peninsula school is liable for the death of a 4-year-old girl who was accidentally killed in 2015.

The family of Amarah Filizetti is trying to persuade the Supreme Court to reverse the opinion of the Michigan Court of Appeals.

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Amarah, the daughter of a cheerleading coach, died when a 325-pound panel fell on her at Gwinn High School. Staff were in the process of putting the panel in place to shield a portable stage in the gym.

With some exceptions, schools have immunity under Michigan personal injury law. The appeals court ruled in favor of Gwinn, saying leaning a stage cover panel against the wall before it fell doesn't fit an exception.

“This is not a building defect. This is not part of the building,” Gwinn attorney Tim Mullins told the Supreme Court.

An attorney for the family, J. Paul Janes, said a jury should be allowed to hear the case.

“Amarah’s injuries were the direct result of the dangerous and defective condition itself — the unsecured, detached massive wall panels leaning precariously against the wall. Part of the building fell on her,” Janes said in a court filing.


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