This Mom Was Jailed for Leaving Her Teen Home Alone. Now, She's Suing.
An appeals court rejected a qualified immunity defense.

More than four years after two police officers arrested and jailed a mom in Midland, Texas, for leaving her 14-year-old daughter home alone, the family finally has the green light to sue them both, a federal court ruled last week.
Midland Independent School District Officer Kevin Brunner is not entitled to qualified immunity for allegedly violating the Megan and Adam McMurrys' 14th Amendment rights—and their daughter Jade's Fourth Amendment rights—when he removed Jade from her home and refused to let her call her father. So too may the family sue Officer Alexandra Weaver, Brunner's subordinate, who was deprived of qualified immunity by a lower court and did not appeal.
In October 2018, Megan McMurry left for a brief trip to Kuwait. Her husband was to be stationed there for the foreseeable future with the Mississippi Army National Guard, and McMurry, a schoolteacher by trade, made the trek to meet with a local school to perhaps reunite the family overseas. Her neighbors, Vanessa and Gabe Vallejos, in their gated apartment complex offered to watch her two children—Jade, then 14, and Connor, then 12—while she was gone for a few days.
What should have been a benign trip turned into the beginning of a legal odyssey.
When another neighbor, a school counselor, couldn't drive Connor to school as planned, the counselor asked Weaver to take him. Weaver couldn't oblige, so someone else took him. But Weaver didn't stop there, putting an investigation in motion, alerting Child Protective Services (CPS), and going with Brunner to the family home to do a welfare check on Jade, who did online homeschooling. After Weaver conducted a warrantless search, they removed her from the home and took her to Connor's middle school for an interrogation while refusing her multiple desperate pleas to get in touch with her dad. Body camera footage shows her sobbing.
CPS closed the case after they were apprised of the details; particularly rich is that the cops breached protocol when they refused to contact the parents, which is supposed to be first priority. But the police continued pursuing McMurry, despite that the agency in charge of such matters had cleared her. The cops charged her with two felony counts of child abandonment, after which point she spent 19 hours in jail. She was placed on unpaid leave from her teaching job, supposedly until the ordeal concluded, though she was ultimately fired.
At trial, about a year later, she was acquitted in five minutes. Her battle for a remedy in the other direction, however, has taken years, and it's still barely begun. Though Weaver now works in financial services at a local hospital, Brunner is a lieutenant in the same police department. Last week's court ruling may finally set some sort of public reckoning in motion.
Those familiar with qualified immunity may know that the court's conclusion was not necessarily foregone. The doctrine shields local and state government actors from lawsuits (such as the McMurrys') if there is no court precedent on the books with very similar facts that rules very similar conduct unconstitutional. An officer may violate his own training and still receive qualified immunity. The idea is that civil servants need fair notice when they are violating the Constitution, although it's puzzling that we expect them to read case law and not their departmental guidance.
Potentially problematic for the McMurrys is that not everyone agrees there was a relevant, identical precedent on the books to avail them. But problematic for Officer Brunner, whose case was the only one before the court this time, is that his actions were so egregious that the McMurrys didn't necessarily need applicable case law. It should've been that obvious to him that what he was doing was unlawful.
"Weaver performed an illegal search in front of her supervisor (Brunner). And instead of settling for one constitutional violation (the search), Brunner went on to commit two more (unlawfully seizing JM and violating the McMurrys' due-process rights)," wrote Judge Andrew Oldham of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in a concurring opinion. "After taking custody of JM, Brunner prevented [Jade] from talking to her father and the Vallejos for a significant amount of time. All while [Jade] was crying and confused. Then CPS told Brunner that his safety concerns were baseless. And still, inexplicably, Brunner persisted and pushed for criminal charges against Mrs. McMurry."
Quite the saga. Recourse for the McMurrys is still not a given; defeating qualified immunity merely gives them the opportunity to state their case before a jury. The family may be in luck, however, if it's anything like the jury at McMurry's criminal trial, who will likely hear not only about Brunner's and Weaver's misconduct, but also the harms McMurry suffered as a result: a lost job, a day in jail, and the trauma around that—all for daring to leave a teenager by herself.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit..
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK. 🙂
HERE====)> http://WWW.WORKSFUL.COM
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,000 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job csx10 online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,125 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link————————————————>>> http://Www.RichApp1.Com
I’m currently generating over $35,100 a month thanks to one small internet job, therefore I really like your work! I am aware that with a beginning cdx05 capital of $28,800, you are cdx02 presently making a sizeable quantity of money online.
Just Check ———>>> http://Www.Salaryapp1.com
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.RICHSALARIES.COM
Juries need to be able to reverse the charges, find the accuser so much at fault that they pay whatever penalty they were pushing on the defendant.
I suppose there must be some juries which acquit faster than 5 minutes, but it's hard to imagine how.
They had to walk to the jury room, sit down, take a vote, then fill out whatever piece of paper the judge gives them. Then they walk back to the courtroom. So five minutes sounds about right.
I am making $92 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning $16,000 a month by working on a laptop, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply.
Everybody must try this job now by just using this website. http://www.LiveJob247.com
The SHAME was that the judge did not acquit her from the bench as a matter of fact and law. It is hard to believe that a judge would allow a jury to have to make that decision when it was too obvious to all concerned. Less than 3% of all trials end in acquittal. That is because the JURY believes that the accused MUST have done SOMETHING or they would not be there (regardless of the law requiring beyond reasonable doubt that doubt almost never exists because of PERCEPTION). Judges need to GROW SOME BALLS when they KNOW that the prosecution is WRONG.
With regard to the suit. IF all is as told, As a juror, I would award the mother's entire amount she would have earned in career and retirement against EACH officer, I would award the same amount against the DEPARTMENT that officer served in to the child and again to the father as direct losses caused by them. I would then award the same exact amount to EACH FAMILY MEMBER from the prosecutor's office for prosecuting an obviously innocent person. Then I would add an additional 1 million dollars for every hour the mother was in jail and for every hour the child had been separated from home. An additional amount equal to BOTH of those the the father and brother.
Then, I would begin to address the PUNITIVES for the unlawful search and unlawful kidnapping. Most probably my award as a juror would bankrupt the city/COUNTY altogether. AS IT SHOULD.
So true.
But, we need to fix this court invention of immunity to the law which causes so many problems. Texas almost tossed immunity in 1969, but the Governor Smith vetoed the bill on grounds that the state couldn't afford the liability. Being that Texas has an impressive history of corruption, he may have been right but he should have helped fix the problem.
She left the country because her husband was going to Kuwait, in 2018? Seriously?
Also, what's with the terrible writing? They left their 14y/o daughter and 12y/o son. Mom was jailed for leaving two kids home alone, not "her teen". Not "all for daring to leave a teenager by herself" but two kids, one of whom was not yet a "teenager". Why obfuscate the story so much?
Anywho, 12 and 14 home "alone" (with apparently some neighborly supervision) isn't something that should be generally a jailable offense. Hope they win.
34
The relevant question is whether the cops violated the law. If so, what consequences should they face?
Here's a hypothetical - parents leave their 8-year-old child in a building filled with strange adults with dubious qualifications who pretend to be "teaching" the child but who do all sorts of unrelated activities and who, when they actually get around to teaching, don't do such a good job of it.
Child neglect?
I love your framing of public schools. Yes, definitely child neglect, at least modern public schools.
As to whether the cops violated the law, IANAL, but if they did, they (and CPS) should be punished as child abusers and put on the registry. That'll teach 'em.
The 12 year old was in school during the day. The adult neighbors were watching the kids as needed in the evenings.
IT is a regular offense WHEN CPS is involved, even at 15 years old. CPS is PAID federal money to take away children, IT is an INDUSTRY, nothing to do with helping any family at all. Your name comes to their attention and they WILL TAKE YOUR KIDS because the department earns its money for doing that.
I'm not sure what you're trying to say besides CPS BAD, but I agree CPS BAD.
Some people hire 14 year olds to babysit younger kids. Should that be illegal?
Yes, of course it should be. It's not very sensible to leave a 14yo home alone for more than an hour or two. I certainly wouldn't leave one to babysit my kids.
As for leaving children of any age home alone for days, it's an obvious no-no. Everyone involved in this case is an idiot, apart from the kids. If you need to leave your kids for a few days to go to another country, then you arrange with friends, neighbours, or relatives to have them stay, not just to pop round occasionally and check on them. That's completely obvious.
Fuck off slaver.
Some people hire 14 year olds to babysit younger kids. Should that be illegal?
No. Not at all.
Even though I think the number of 14 year olds today who are independent enough to take care of others is vanishingly small compared to the 80s/90s when I was growing up.
Hmmm. The hidden issue--what should happen to the DA that prosecuted her and the judge that even let it get to a jury. The DA should be disbarred, and the judge should be removed from the bench.
I wonder if the grand jury - especially a Texas grand jury - would have indicted her if they'd seen the CPS report? I'm assuming they *didn't* see it, because if they had why on earth would they still indict?
Grand juries are a rubber stamp. There are no consequences to a bad indictment and it gets everyone out of the courtroom faster to just go along with whatever the prosecutor asks for.
Yup, thats what I did but the reverse; voted against most prosecutions. Didn't matter since I was in the minority.
But I and the rest of jury had good reason to want to get out earlier; didn't want to be caught in Baltimore after dark leaving the federal courthouse. During my time the federal prosecutors office of bmore in their rush to get some of that all too important media coverage released the name of a grand jury foreman in a major gang case - there response to us, "our bad". And lets say the "guards" while excellent at keeping me out without a mask weren't exactly the guys you'd want protecting you from armed assailants.
I certainly understand the problem, but if the prosecutor is blackmailing the grand jurors – “it sure would be unfortunate if you spent so much time considering these cases that you’d go home at an unsafe hour” – then they should say they’ll adjourn at a reasonable time each day *and* consider the cases carefully.
If the prosecutor balks, and wants grand jurors to make indictments without proper consideration of the case, the answer is not to indict at all.
Or to present anyone who leaks a grand juror’s name.
I would be cheesed off if I got indicted because the grand jury was in too much of a rush to give my case careful consideration.
I’ve read stories about Texas grand juries declining to indict – of course many of those had a cop as a suspect so the fix may have been in, but one of them was a suspect who had actually (IIRC) shot a cop.
I strongly suspect that this grand jury didn't know that CPS said never mind. Of course, even if they didn't know it they still shouldn't have indicted.
A great attorney once said that "any decent prosecutor can get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich". Remember that grand juries do NOT hear any defense nor do they hear any mitigating circumstance or anything that would absolve the person in any way. They hear ONLY what the prosecutors want them to hear.
The defense usually does not even exist yet AND even if it did has NO RIGHT to presence nor to defend at grand jury.
An accused could have a passport stamp proving they were not in the country and they hove no right to show it at grand jury. Prosecution may have never asked for the "defendant's" alibi. That simple. Yet when in trial most jurors believe that the person MUST BE GUILTY because they are there being tried.
I would reform the system to say that if the grand jurors believe the prosecution misled them (eg, by suppressing evidence), or that any of its witnesses lied to them, they could demand the appointment of a special prosecutor.
Hey, check out pp. 6-8 of the 5th Circuit opinion:
https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca5/21-50888/21-50888-2022-12-07.html
The cop claimed that he couldn't be sued because the grand jury independently considered the case and decided to indict. The court replied that there was an "asymmetry of information presented to the grand jury and information known to Brunner at the time of the alleged misconduct," thus "the indictment of Ms. McMurry did not ratify Brunner’s actions as reasonable" as confirmed by the trial jury's verdict.
That brunner and weaver were not immediately fired shows that there are rotten thugs in management.
A FOURTEEN year old not mature and responsible enough to spend the day home by herself as she does her online schoolwork? What gives with THAT???
At fourteen my Dad was the school bus driver. Yep. He drove the thing, to and from school, picking up the others of all ages on the way in every morning, and dropping them off at their homes on the way back out in the afternoon.
Few years ago I met a woman who was 82 at the time Mother of a friend of mine, her youngest daughter. As we chatted after breakfast I was curious about her life in rural Oregon farm country. At one point in the converstion she told me "at fourteen years old my father traded me off to the widower farmer up the lane for a tractor h had that Dad needed. We married and had sic chidren together. Most of my "step children" were older than I am" I asked her if she had any regrets... Absolutely NOT! My life has been wonderful. Her husband was in his mid-fifties when they married, and lived a strong and good man for some forty more years.
I know a woman of fourteen years of age, and she can/does manage the household with six younger siblings and does just fine with it. Takes far better care of them than many adults I knos could.
When I was growing up in California I remember the county passing a new law that babysitters (or even older siblings left in charge of younger ones) had to be at least twelve years old.
These school bullies are full of their own imagined self-importance and should be employed on a production line of some sort rather than being "responsible" for humans wrongly placed under their care.
This was nothing to do with the kid being home alone during the day. It was because the parents were away for several days.
Your defence of child abuse says more about you than about child abuse. Perhaps reconsider telling that story you made up?
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit.. ???? AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)> http://www.worksclick.com
A 14 year old can't stay home alone, but can decide to mutilate their body with a sex change surgery. The libs have made the the world truly insane.
More made up nonsense from monomaniacs. Why are you so obsessed with sex change surgeries? Apparently you're the only person who doesn't realise what you want for yourself.
Dear Davedave,
Please shutshut the fuckfuck upup. There is a clear correlation in Liberty Lover's comment since they both relate the decision making ability and the capability to evaluate information.
The decision making required to decide to call the neighbor if you have an issue at 14 is much less that that required to decide upon irreversible life changing surgery.
I had my first job at 14. (yes, I started paying social security taxes at 14) It was good for me and helped develop the work habits that lead to a successful career as an engineer. I stayed home by myself and my younger sister (with my grandparents next door) from 12 often. Amazing, I had dinner ready when my mom got home from work.
The current trend appears to be that childhood should be extended until 30. There is no basis for for this. GROW UP.
Ah, another one who wants a sex change but can't admit it to himself.
It is called projection. You are the one with the problem of wanting a sex change operation.
ROFL. Keep digging.
you are really a very weird person.
Preventing a detained child from contacting her guardian should count as kidnaping, punishable by 10 years imprisonment.
If a citizen of another country (even an adult) had been detained and had been prevented from contacting her consul, the U. S. could get sued in the World Court.
But a minor citizen can't contact her parents when she's being detained?
I guess your consul is more important than your father.
But there’s no war on the family!
Seriously, what do you expect when you deny the unique status of a married mother and father raising the next generation? When having children is merely a lifestyle option, unconnected to marriage? When there’s no difference between two married parents – Mom and Dad – and a single mother shacking up with different men one after another?
Do you expect the traditional authority of the traditional family to survive unimpaired?
No, if children are just random people arbitrarily connected to some adults, without any special bond of authority or responsibility on the part of the adults, then the state will take over much of the upbringing of the children – to make sure they develop habits of dependency regardless of parental wishes, learn about drag queens regardless of parental wishes, and in general get cared for by the benevolent state despite the whining of their temporary caregivers. All families being equal, the government can’t acknowledge the superiority of any family form, and must treat the mom-and-dad married parents as if they were as suspect and incompetent as the serially-fornicating single mom.
Well, she's not an ugly kid or anything, so I am surprised they released her. Usually CPS will let an ugly kid get beaten to death over years by drunken skid parents, but if a good-looking kid's folks have one dish in the sink then it's off to underground sex slavery for *that* kid.
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit.. ???? AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)> http://www.worksclick.com
My mothers neighbour is working part time and averaging $9000 a month. I'm a single mum and just got my first paycheck for $6546! I still can't believe it. I tried it out cause I got really
desperate and now I couldn't be happier. Heres what I do..
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:) https://www.richsalary.com