In summaries of fact forms filed with the Juvenile Division for each teenager, each defendant says he accepted as true the allegations they assaulted — or, in Lakin’s account, “poked” — a then-16-year-old boy with a pool cue in September 2017.

The incident occurred at the home of Wood’s father, then-Superintendent Kyle Wood, who resigned Dec. 19, 2017, about a month after the allegations appeared in news reports.

“The final resolution of the juvenile case proves what we have said and known from the beginning: this was not a sex crime. There was no rape,” defense attorney Paul DeMuro, who represents the Wood family, said in a statement.

He said later that the resolution “speaks to the lack of any sexual intent or act, the lack of serious injury to the accuser, and to Joe’s outstanding character and low-risk profile.”

“The state overcharged these kids with a rape charge to attempt to shame and humiliate them, and their families, into admitting something they did not do,” DeMuro said.

Palmer did not require any of the defendants to remain under supervised probation while they either pay an additional $112.50 in court fines and costs or, in lieu of the payment, perform 11 hours of community service.