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Suit: Student maimed after chemistry teacher arranges in-class sword fight

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An sa国际传媒官网网页入口 sophomore was seriously and permanently injured in 2022 after a former Volcano Vista High School teacher brought two swords to class and encouraged students to fight with them, a lawsuit alleges.

Identified only as a 16-year-old sophomore at the time, the student injured in the incident still suffers from physical and mental scars, said plaintiff鈥檚 attorney Jessica Hernandez.

鈥淧arents, when they send their kids to school, they think, 鈥楾he school is going to take care of my kid during the day until my child comes back to me,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淎nd the last thing you expect as a parent is for the teacher to be the one that puts this deadly weapon directly into a child鈥檚 hands.鈥

The suit filed in 2nd Judicial District Court on Friday alleges teacher Loviata Mitchell 鈥 and sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Public Schools 鈥 violated the sophomore鈥檚 constitutional rights.

It also alleges negligence by them, as well as by Volcano Vista assistant principal Manuel Alzaga for a report he wrote after the incident. The suit seeks undetermined damages and attorney fees.

APS spokeswoman Monica Armenta said Mitchell was terminated in July 2022, though she still appears to have her teaching license, according to an online state Public Education Department database.

In response to questions about the incident, Armenta said the district does not comment on pending litigation. An attorney representing the district could not immediately be reached for comment.

Roxie De Santiago, an attorney for Mitchell, also said her client could not comment on the suit because it was pending, but wrote in an email that 鈥済enerally, we believe in the justice system and trust (that) the truth of this situation will be revealed through that process.鈥

Alzaga is still listed as working at the school on its website. He also could not immediately be reached for comment.

鈥業鈥檓 in trouble鈥

During a morning chemistry class in May 2022, Mitchell announced she had a 鈥渟urprise鈥 for her students, according to the suit.

She pulled out two swords 鈥 one a katana, and the other a rapier-style sword 鈥 that the suit said she鈥檇 snuck into the West Side sa国际传媒官网网页入口 school. She told her students they were props, and had them rearrange their desks into a ring to fight in.

Students pulled out their phones and recorded as a pair of their classmates dueled with the swords, the metal clinking as they parried and jabbed at each other in the makeshift sparring ring while a timer on a TV monitor ticked down.

But the next duel turned bloody, according to the suit. After being chosen by Mitchell to fight another student, the suit said, the sophomore鈥檚 opponent cut her with the katana, opening a deep gash across her right hand, wrist and forearm. She started bleeding profusely.

鈥淚鈥檓 in trouble,鈥 Mitchell said right after the sophomore was cut, according to the suit. She then told the students to delete any video recordings they鈥檇 taken and to not tell anyone about what happened.

While the sophomore bled, the suit said Mitchell tried to call the school health office, but could not figure out how. The sophomore 鈥渂egan to feel nauseous and weak from blood loss,鈥 prompting another student to run to the health office.

A health assistant came to the classroom and provided the sophomore first aid and called 911. About half an hour elapsed before anyone called first responders, the suit says.

In a student accident report after the incident, according to the suit, Alzaga said Mitchell had 鈥渂rought a 鈥榩rop鈥 to school to show a lesson on metal and melding,鈥 and that a student accidentally cut the other student with the prop sword.

Alzaga further noted the injury did not violate school rules.

When asked if Mitchell violated either school or district policy, Armenta again replied only that the district does not comment on pending litigation.

Citing APS鈥 employee handbook, the suit says the district flatly prohibits anyone from bringing guns, knives or other weapons to school unless authorized to do so.

Since the incident, the now 17-year-old teen who was injured has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and still faces lingering pain in her hand and wrist, which suffered permanent damage, according to the suit.

She also struggles with basic tasks, including writing, preparing food and buttoning buttons.

鈥淭his injury has changed her entire life,鈥 Hernandez said. 鈥... As a 16-year-old, when you get hurt like this, and all of a sudden you can鈥檛 do the same things that you used to do 鈥 it鈥檚 really discouraging. It鈥檚 depressing. It鈥檚 isolating.鈥