SALT LAKE CITY ā Utah’s Supreme Court revived a case against a Park City High School girls’ tennis coach in a ruling on Thursday, deciding charges filed against her after a physical confrontation with a student should not have been dismissed.
The charges against Lani Wilcox, 65, were dismissed in May 2023 after 3rd District Judge Richard Mrazik ruled that she was justified because she was defending herself or others.
Now, the state Supreme Court ordered those charges against the former coach ā aggravated child abuse, a third-degree felony, and interrupting the use of a communication device, a class A misdemeanor ā to be considered again.
The judges found that prosecutors disproved Wilcox’s claim that she was defending others on the tennis court. This is the first time the high court has addressed the second stage of pretrial justification hearings since the process became law in 2021, providing a way for a judge to decide if a defendant was justified under self-defense laws.
According to the order, Wilcox told a 16-year-old athlete that she would be playing on the junior varsity team in an upcoming match, and the girl became upset and left the court. Later, the girl returned and approached Wilcox, saying she felt calm and ready to practice, but the coach told her that since she had missed most of practice, she could not play the next day in any match.
The order says the conversation escalated and the student-athlete slapped Wilcox, leaving a red mark on her cheek. A photo provided by Wilcox shows the marks on her face.
Afterward, the coach wrapped both arms around the student; Wilcox testified that she restrained the girl so she would not injure the coach or anyone else because the student “was very, very angry.”
Wilcox then lost her balance and fell to the ground, hitting her head and causing a concussion, before the student pushed her coach’s arms away and stood up, the order said.
The order explained that the details of how the student was restrained are disputed. The student claims Wilcox’s arms were around her neck, restricting her breathing, and she had red marks on her neck; Wilcox said she intended to restrain the student by her shoulders, and any neck contact was inadvertent and happened during the fall.
An assistant coach then told the student to go home, and the student kicked him in the groin before Wilcox restrained the student again for a few seconds, the order explains.
The girl got her phone and said she was calling the police, but Wilcox grabbed the phone and walked away, the document says, leading to the charge for interrupting the use of a phone.
A photo provided by Wilcox shows marks on her face from being slapped.
Mrazik concluded that Wilcox’s testimony that she felt it was necessary to prevent the girl from hitting someone else was credible, and although she was not justified in using force to defend herself, she had met the required standard to show she was justified in defending others.
Prosecutors, however, argued that they had also proven she was not justified in defending others ā specifically saying that the threat to others that Wilcox argued existed met the imminence requirements but was unreasonable.
The Supreme Court agreed, determining that prosecutors did meet their burden and the child abuse charge should not have been dismissed.
In addressing the second charge related to the phone, the high court said misdemeanor charges are not subject to dismissal through the pretrial justification statute, and so it should not have been dismissed.
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