Categories: USA

Parkland school shooting survivor Anthony Borges clashes with family in court

A heated argument erupted in court Thursday between the most seriously injured survivor of the 2018 Parkland school massacre and some of the families of the 17 people killed, following a fight over conflicting plea deals each side recently reached with the shooter, with opposing lawyers accusing each other of lying.

The immediate conflict is over a June settlement between survivor Anthony Borges and his parents with Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter Nikolas Cruz that would give Borges rights to Cruz’s name and likeness, approval of any interviews he might do and a $400,000 annuity left to Cruz by his deceased mother.

Attorneys for the families of slain students Meadow Pollack, Luke Hoyer and Alaina Petty, as well as survivor Maddy Wilford, quickly responded by reaching their own $190 million settlement with Cruz.

Anthony Borges listens to testimony in a Broward County courtroom on September 5, 2024. AP

But as Circuit Judge Carol-Lisa Phillips learned Wednesday, the mutual animosity began during negotiations over a $25 million settlement reached in 2021 with Broward County Schools, when the families of those killed insisted that Borges receive $1 less than they would receive as recognition that they suffered the greater loss.

Borges’ attorney, Alex Arreaza, believes his client deserved $5 million from the prize pool because Borges will have to pay medical bills throughout his life.

This led to his client being kicked out of the group when he refused to budge.

The fight continued as negotiations over a $127 million settlement were reached between the families and surviving victims and the FBI.

The Borges eventually reached their own colonies.

Tom Hoyer, Luke Hoyer’s father, sits in court as families of the Parkland school shooting victims debate whether Borges has the right to unilaterally negotiate a settlement that would grant him rights to Cruz’s name and legacy. AP
Borges, 21, was shot five times in the torso and legs. The once-promising soccer star nearly bled to death. AP

Borges, 21, was shot five times in the torso and legs. The once-promising soccer star nearly bled to death.

“The Borges are tired of being treated like second-class citizens,” Arreaza said after the hearing. “We never wanted to talk about it before, but the reality is that they excluded us from the group because they wanted to dictate to us what we should get, and the Borges have every right to ask for what they asked for.”

But David Brill, the lead attorney for the Pollack, Hoyer and Petty and Wilford families, said Arreaza insulted the families by telling them he was tired of hearing about their deceased loved ones and exaggerated the amount of Borges’ future medical bills.

Borges, 21, was shot five times in the torso and legs. The once-promising soccer star nearly bled to death. AP
Borges’ lawyer, Alex Arreaza, presents his arguments in court on September 5, 2024. AP

“This bad blood, on our side, we have repeatedly done what was right for the Borges, despite this history, at every turn, even in this case. And this is the thanks we receive,” Brill said after the hearing.

Phillips had to intervene several times during Thursday’s 90-minute session as both sides shouted at each other and accused each other of dishonesty.

In her excitement, the judge even half-joked that the level of animosity was so high that she felt like she was presiding over a contested divorce — and she was granting it.

Borges and his parents reached a settlement with Nikolas Cruz, the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter, that would give Borges the rights to Cruz’s name and likeness. AP

The immediate struggle over the dueling colonies takes place in two parts.

First, Brill argued that state law prevents Borges from acquiring the rights to Cruz’s name and likeness and any money he might make from his story, because Cruz was stripped of them when he was convicted.

In any event, Brill said, no single person should have the right to decide whether Cruz should be allowed to give interviews.

That amount should go to all the families and survivors, he argued, which would ensure that Cruz is never heard from again. Cruz, 25, is serving a life sentence in an unnamed prison.

Second, he said, Arreaza violated a verbal agreement to collaborate in their lawsuits against Cruz, to split the annuity money and to donate it to charity, if that ever came to fruition.

A Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student looks at one of the memorials created for the victims of the February 28, 2024 school shooting. AFP/Getty Images
Demolition crews tear down a building at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on June 17, 2024. Getty Images

Instead, Brill said, Arreaza quietly got the killer to settle without telling anyone until it was done.

Arreaza insists that Brill is lying about a verbal contract and that Borges needs the money from the eventual annuity to help pay for his future medical care.

He insists that state law does not prevent Cruz from signing his name and future earnings, but also said that Borges would never agree to let Cruz give an interview, so the other families should not worry about it.

Heather Schoengrund and Andrew Pollack, the parents of Meadow Pollack, one of the students killed in the 2018 shooting, pose with their daughters’ friends as they prepare for prom on May 5, 2018. AP

Phillips said she would decide later whether Borges, the families or someone else owned Cruz’s publicity rights, but urged the parties to negotiate a settlement over the annuity.

Otherwise, she will hold a hearing that she says will be painful for both the families and Borges and will once again give Cruz the attention he desires.

She said she was particularly saddened that Thursday’s hearing came a day after four people were killed in a Georgia school shooting and that she believed the parties were letting their animosity toward each other overshadow the immense tragedy they have all experienced.

“Everyone should focus on their thoughts,” she told the lawyers. “Is that what everyone wants to focus on?”

New York Post

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