A Missouri teenager who took her own life after being bullied at school has inspired legislation in her name, bills that aim to prevent similar tragedies and to spare families of one aspect of the pain that followed her death.
The legislation has been supported by testimony from her family and carried by a representative who is a family friend.
Representative Mazzie Christensen’s (R-Bethany) friend was Sawyer’s guardian and raised her when her parents lost custody of her due to abuse and neglect, some of it related to drug use. Through her, Christensen learned what Sawyer went through the afternoon before she took her own life.
Legislation sponsored by Christensen and Representative John Black (R-Marshfield) would require schools to update their antibullying policies, and require that charter schools to adopt such policies.
Black has carried the legislation for several years, also motivated in large part by one incident, and the lack of response by the school in which it happened.
Legislation from Christensen and Black, combined into House Bill 2120, would require districts’ policies to lay out how districts will respond when investigations find that bullying has occurred.
House Bill 2120 would reinforce current statutory definitions of “bullying,” “school violence,” and related crimes, and their classification under Missouri’s child abuse laws. These statutes require reporting certain cases to child abuse investigators – reports which trigger investigation by child welfare officials and, in some cases, law enforcement.
Response to bullying, as laid out in the bill, must include notification of the parents or guardians of the students who engaged in bullying, and a requirement that those students participate in prevention programs.
It would restrict the application of “zero-tolerance” policies – policies that any act of violence must result in discipline, regardless of circumstances – for any student who is a victim of bullying. Statements regarding victims of bullying acting in self-defense would have to be considered by administrators when determining disciplinary action. Charter schools would be banned from expelling or transferring students solely due to reports of bullying.
District employees and volunteers who interact with students would have to be trained annually on bullying intervention, and about liability for actions or failures to act. The bill would extend legal protection to school employees and volunteers who step in to stop incidents, as long as they follow proper procedures and act in good faith.
Acts of bullying and related discipline would have to be reported to the school board monthly, to be reviewed in a closed meeting and addressed by the board within 30 days.
Christensen’s other bill inspired by Sawyer aims to ensure that those making decisions for dealing with the remains of a loved one who is a minor were the people who loved and cared for them in life.
Christensen said after Sawyer’s death, current law ensured that decisions regarding her internment and funeral fell to her next of kin. This meant her father, who had lost custody of her because he had been abusing her.
House Bill 1696 would specify that when a minor with a court-appointed guardian dies, that guardian will have final say in the care of the remains unless they are under investigation for the minor’s death. In cases of co-guardianship or joint custody, the guardian or parent with whom the minor resides will have the stronger claim to that authority. It also stresses that the religious, cultural, and individual beliefs of the deceased must be considered in making final arrangements.
The House voted 118-8 to send the bullying policy legislation to the Senate, where it has been voted out of a committee. With one week left in the session, Rep. Black is hopeful it will be acted on before Friday, and if necessary, he believes others will continue to fight for this proposal next year.
Christensen’s right of sepulcher legislation passed out of the House 140-0. A Senate committee voted to advance the bill with changes, and it awaits action by the full Senate.

