Before abuse allegations, ex-Palo Verde coach was a fixture at school
from: ReviewJournal.com
For decades, Michael “Luke” Atwell worked with children.
After retiring from the Air Force in 1997, he obtained a license to teach social studies in Nevada, and he spent the next 15 years working at Becker Middle School and Palo Verde High School.
He coached boys cross country and girls softball and apparently continued coaching as a volunteer at Palo Verde until recently. When police arrested him Nov. 19 on allegations he had sexually abused a child, he was taken into custody at the school.
Atwell, 72, pleaded not guilty to initial charges. Jess Marchese, his attorney, said Atwell denies the allegations and has called some of them questionable. He remains in custody on $250,000 bail and has declined an interview request.
Other allegations
Since the arrest, prosecutors have accused Atwell of sexually assaulting another child. That child’s mother told police Atwell also sexually abused her when she was a teenager, according to a police report.
A second woman has alleged that she had a sexual relationship with Atwell at his home and school when he was her teacher and she was between 16 and 19 years old, according to a police report. The woman also said he molested her 4-year-old son during a recent visit, according to police.
Atwell only faces charges in connection with two alleged victims who are still children. Police said in a report that they could not charge Atwell for the allegations that he had a sexual relationship with a student because a law banning such relationships was not yet active. Prosecutors said they dropped charges involving the other woman due to what they described as a statute of limitations issue, not the merits of the allegations.
For some, the allegations have come as a shock.
“He seemed to always want the best for the girls and the teammates,” said Abbie Millman, who was on the softball team at Palo Verde as a freshman and is now a UNLV student. “He really tried to take care of us.”
Others had a less favorable view of Atwell.
A sibling of one of the alleged victims told police Atwell recently resigned from a maintenance position at Cornerstone Church because of allegations he asked an underage girl about her sex life and taped women’s underwear to an office door, according to Atwell’s arrest report.
Atwell ‘taught values’
Atwell enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1971, according to a 2010 Review-Journal article about him. He flew as a crew chief during the Vietnam War, then transferred to the Air Force and served until 1997, when he retired as a lieutenant colonel.
Atwell was also chief of protocol at Nellis Air Force Base and a combat commander in Operation Desert Storm, the article said. He received a Bronze Star for actions in that conflict.
“My military background has taught me many things, primarily to have integrity above all else and to appreciate and contribute to the community,” Atwell said in 2010. “These are the things I try and teach my Summerlin students every day.”
He was punctual, Millman said, and tried to make activities a team effort. When students took down the flag at softball practice, she recalled that he made sure no one let it touch the ground.
“It was obvious that he had been in the military,” Millman said.
Jose Solorio, who coached cross country with Atwell, said, “He thought that kids should focus on their academics, that kids should respect their parents. He was a person that taught values as part of his coaching.”
The Clark County School District did not respond to requests for comment for this story.
Cornerstone declined an interview request. Dave Stretz, an associate pastor, provided a statement saying Atwell was a long-time volunteer who had undergone a criminal background check.
“While we are not aware of any harm that came to any child by Mr. Atwell as part of Cornerstone school or church activities, we know that any child harmed in these ways, no matter where or how the harm occurred, is tragic and horrific,” the statement said in part. “We have been and will continue to pray for those who have been impacted by these events.”
Some of the alleged victims had ties to Cornerstone, according to police.
Previous lawsuit
The current case is not the first time Atwell has faced allegations that he acted improperly with a child.
In 2012, court records indicate CCSD paid a $2,000 settlement after an incident in which a student named Nicolas Cobb accused Atwell of grabbing his stomach and leaving a bruise during a volunteering event the year before.
“I don’t believe Mr. Atwell intends to hurt the students but may have gotten a bit carried away,” Cobb wrote at the time in a statement provided by his mother, Holly Lemperle.
Cobb was on the Palo Verd
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