HARRISON, Mont. -- After Spencer Ore was banned from a Montana high school in 2013 for bringing two pistols to campus and was accused of making threats, his parents sought help, hopingt one day he would reintegrate into society.
Margaret and Stephen Ore visited him every weekend while he was in juvenile detention. They invested in nearly two years of treatment for underlying behavioral problems.
When his doctors and probation officers said Spencer, now 16, was well enough to return to public school, the Ores moved 50 miles away to enroll him at a school in quiet, rural Twin Bridges, Montana.
But last month, parents at Twin Bridges discovered Spencer's past and successfully sued to block him from attending the school, a rejection that left the Ores wondering whether a boy like theirs can get a second chance to get an education in an age of school shootings.
"We were just hoping that he could be accepted into that community and have a chance to be a regular kid," his mother said.
For the 31 parents and grandparents who sued, it's a risk they are not prepared to take.
"The bottom line is we feel like we're getting a dangerous child shoved down the throats of all the people here in the school," said Bart Baumeister, one of those who filed the case. "It's upsetting."
Spencer's parents said he was on antidepressants and medication for attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder when he took a loaded .357 Magnum and unloaded .22 handgun to Harrison High School on Jan. 25, 2013.
A peer told the principal about the weapons in Spencer's backpack as the school bell was ringing just after 3 p.m.
Psychiatrists since have told his parents the combination of those drugs, along with his then-undiagnosed bipolar disorder, could make him unstable.
Spencer told two stories about why he packed the guns that day. In one, he planned to run away after school to live off the land in the Rocky Mountains. In the other, he wanted to prove automatic weapons aren't necessary to carry out a school shooting.
"There was no one set plan," Spencer said. "It was just a bunch of racing thoughts running through my head."
Spencer spent a year between detention centers and therapy programs, but he was back home with his parents when things got worse for the Ores in January 2014.
In what his attorneys later called an attempt to impress a girl, Spencer talked in Facebook messages about committing new crimes. When he wrote, "this time ill blow up the whole (expletive) school," the girl protested.
"No i dont want to hurt anyone," Spencer wrote back. "I wont."
Spencer was sent back to treatment. He had violated his parole by using an unauthorized electronic device.
Spencer showed major improvement at Normative Services in Sheridan, Wyoming, the most drastic coming when he was entrusted the responsibility of heading a house of 14 boys.
He was released back to his parents in early fall and remains on probation until his 18th birthday.
Along with mood-stabilizing medication to treat bipolar disorder, psychiatrists prescribed Spencer something else: social interaction, specifically at school.
Spencer has attended Boy Scouts in the new town, but the Ores dropped any notion he might attend Twin Bridges when school officials told them last month some parents were encouraging their kids to provoke him to get him expelled.
Because of those threats, the Ores did not object when the school parents filed their lawsuit.
He was turned away from private schools, and he flunked an online course.
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