Amidst the heartache and questioning that have enveloped El Paso following a student’s tragic death, the El Paso Independent School District (EPISD) faces renewed scrutiny. Fourteen-year-old Joseph Nathaniel Caraballo, a student of Austin High School with specialist learning and safety requirements, was fatally struck by an SUV on September 23 after leaving his school campus, as obtained by KFOX-TV. “The district is conducting a comprehensive investigation and is addressing this matter with the utmost seriousness and diligence,” EPISD expressed in a separate report covered by KTSM.
Board President Leah Hanany, while speaking to KFOX-TV, empathized with the grieving family: “I just cannot imagine what Joseph’s parents are going through. It is heartbreaking to send your child to school and then not have them come home.” The sorrow is magnified by reports that Joseph’s Individualized Education Program (IEP) clearly indicated his propensity to elope, a fact that intensifies the questions surrounding the school’s adherence to his safety plan. Despite the known risks, Joseph managed to quickly leave the school’s premises without immediate detection or intervention from the authorities.
What followed Joseph’s exit from school that fateful afternoon was a perilous trek, one that ended on the nearby highway. The dashcam footage detailed by KFOX-TV shows harrowing attempts by drivers to assist before it became tragically too late. Investigating the exact route taken by Joseph has been difficult, but the grim conclusion was his encounter with the SUV on U.S. 54, a section of roadway that would prove far too hazardous for a vulnerable child such as him. Evette Ortiz, Joseph’s mother, shared with KTSM her son’s severe autism, noting this was not the first incident of her son fleeing a safe area, with three escapes since the school year began…