Washington

Two juveniles arrested on suspicion of rape in Mark Morris High School case

Longview police arrested two juveniles Thursday morning on suspicion of second-degree rape following an investigation of alleged sexual assault at Mark Morris High School.

Quality journalism doesn't happen without your help

Support local news coverage and the people who report it by subscribing to The Daily News.

The two were arrested at 8:07 a.m., according to a notice from the city of Longview.

The juveniles were not named.

In addition to second-degree rape, both are facing charges of unlawful imprisonment with sexual motivation, indecent liberties with forcible compulsion and indecent exposure.

Neither the police nor the school have provided details, including the date or location of the alleged sexual abuse and who first reported it to the school.

The notice about the arrests said identifying information about the arrestees would not be released due to their ages.

The Daily News also does not name juveniles suspected of crimes unless they are charged in adult court.

"The safety of our students remains our first and highest priority," said Longview Police Chief Robert Huhta in the notice.

Timeline: Mark Morris High School students accused of sexual assault

Here's what happened so far.

Reporting requirements

The Longview Police Department is also investigating mandatory reporting requirements, the notice continues.

Under state law, all school employees are mandatory reporters of child abuse, meaning they are required to inform law enforcement or another relevant agency if they have "reasonable cause to believe a child suffered abuse or neglect."

Child abuse can include physical or sexual abuse.

Huhta told The Daily News the law can apply to abuse by other children, not just by adults.

Reasonable cause is a legal term, meaning a reasonable person would interpret the facts of a case as evidence of a crime.

Huhta said, as of Friday, the school district had not filed any reports involving the case to the police.

The timeline

It is not clear, in this case, what school leaders knew about report before, or even after, it was filed to the Longview police on Feb. 9 by a victim.

That morning, Longview students and parents held its first of a two-day protest outside the high school demanding more information about accusations of a sexual assault involving students.

The police department announced that afternoon that officers were investigating a possible crime between Mark Morris students. Later, police told The Daily News that report involved a possible sexual assault.

Holding signs

Protesters hold signs across the street from Mark Morris High School Tuesday, Feb. 10. They criticized what they described as a lack of response from the school after several students were accused of sexual assault. Two arrests were made in the case on Thursday.

The school and its school resource officer, the latter of which is employed by Longview police, were aware of a disciplinary issue at the school as of Feb. 5, according to emails sent to The Daily News from school and police leaders.

The details of that issue are not clear, but police said it involved accusations about a Mark Morris basketball team.

The Cowlitz County Prosecutor's Office has also said the case involves a Mark Morris basketball team.

Editor's note: The Daily News reporter Minka Atkinson contributed to this article. This article has been updated to provide more context.

More Mark Morris investigation coverage:

School officials are mandatory reporters, but police say no leaders filed reports on Mark Morris case

Letters to Mark Morris families show school leaders were addressing a discipline issue prior to the criminal complaint.

Timeline: Mark Morris High School students accused of sexual assault

Here's what happened so far.

Mark Morris High School protests enter second day

Students continued to criticize what they described as an insufficient response to accusations of sexual assault. Longview police say the case's first report was filed Monday afternoon.

Mark Morris High students protest after sexual assault allegations

The same morning as the protest, school security was increased due to an online threat of a student bringing a weapon to class, authorities report.

Copyright 2026 Tribune Content Agency. All Rights Reserved.

This story was originally published February 20, 2026 at 4:21 AM.

Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER