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Parkland shooting victims could receive just $9000 each after court caps school liability

Students gather during a for the victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Florida (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)
Students gather during a for the victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Florida (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

The victims and families of the Parkland school massacre could receive less than $9,000 on average after the Florida Supreme Court capped the school district's liability.

Justices ruled in favour of Broward County Public Schools that argued the 2018 shooting was a single incident, rather than a separate occurrence for each time the trigger was pulled, according to the Associated Press.

With state law capping civil liability of government agencies at $300,000 per incident, families of the 17 people killed and 17 wounded would only have access to $9,090 if that total was split evenly between the 33 legal complaints.

The families had argued that the school district should be liable for $200,000 for each plaintiff, according to the Miami Herald. Any jury award above the $300,000 capped by state law for a single incident would have to be approved by Florida's legislature and the governor.

The court said mass shootings should be seen as a single “incident or occurrence”, based on a 2010 ruling in a Florida Department of Children and Families case in which a man shot and killed his wife and her four children.

“Today’s decision in no way devalues the lives of those injured or killed as a result of mass shootings, or the harm suffered as a result of such tragedies,” the court wrote on Thursday.

“It is a decision that is rendered within the narrow confines of Florida law relating to the Legislature’s limited waiver of sovereign immunity.”

Nikolas Cruz, who is awaiting trial on first-degree murder charges, faces a possible death sentence for the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

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