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School hid rapes of four 1st-graders

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  • School hid rapes of four 1st-graders

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17030722/


    ALLENTOWN, Pa. - Teachers and administrators at Central Elementary School knew they had a problem with F.H., a 12-year-old who had been accused of going into a bathroom stall and sexually assaulting a first-grade boy.

    But instead of calling police and removing F.H., district officials covered up the attack and allowed him to remain in class, leading to the sexual assault of three more first-graders, parents say.

    The allegations, contained in a $15 million federal lawsuit against the Allentown school system, have created an uproar in Pennsylvania’s third-largest city, with outraged parents demanding the superintendent’s ouster and state lawmakers working on a legislative fix.


    The case has also illustrated how difficult it can be under the law for parents to hold a school system responsible for the safety of their children.

    ‘Serious issues’ in the district
    “I’m disgusted,” said Yolanda Colbert, 36, whose three children attend Allentown schools. “These 6-year-olds are the most vulnerable, and if adults cannot protect them, we have some serious issues in the Allentown school district.”

    The district denies wrongdoing and has asked a judge to dismiss the lawsuit. But it has not disputed that assaults occurred, and its legal response has only further inflamed public opinion in one of the state’s poorest school districts.

    In federal court last month, the district’s lawyer, John Freund III, argued that under the Constitution school officials cannot be held responsible simply for failing to protect youngsters from assaults by other students.

    He cited federal court rulings that say school systems are generally immune from paying damages unless it can be shown that they actually took “affirmative” steps that put youngsters in danger, and that the action taken “shocks the conscience.”

    Freund said in an interview that he was making a narrow legal argument, not a generalized statement about the district’s responsibility to its youngsters. Various state and federal laws, not to mention “basic morality, common sense and professional duty ... clearly obligate schools to protect students,” he said.

    But his argument rankled parents.

    ‘Affirmative’ act of endangerment?
    “I understand there is a civil case, but it still makes me very uncomfortable that a school district would stand up and say under any circumstance, ‘We don’t have to protect our children,’ ” said Emily Mebust, the parent of a kindergartner.

    A judge has yet to rule on the school system’s request for a dismissal. No trial date has been set.

    The lawsuit, filed by the parents of three of the alleged victims, said school system officials concealed the assaults “in an effort to veil the long-standing violence” in certain Allentown schools.

    The assaults began in December 2003, a few months after F.H., a special-education student with a history of behavioral problems, was transferred to Central Elementary from another school in the district, according to court papers.

    After learning of the first assault from a second-grader who witnessed part of it, administrators kept quiet and allowed F.H. to remain in school, the lawsuit said. The 12-year-old sexually assaulted three more first-graders over the next four months, according to the parents.

    The final assault, for which F.H. was found guilty in juvenile court of rape and sent to a detention center until he turns 18, took place after he was put on “hallway detention” — out of view of any teacher and next to a bathroom used by first-graders, the lawsuit said. That is a key point in the plaintiffs’ case.

    ‘Lion into the lambs’ lair’
    Scott Wilhelm, the plaintiffs’ lawyer, said putting F.H. next to a bathroom was an “affirmative” act.

    One legal scholar agreed.

    “You have reason to believe that this lion is mauling the lambs, so you move the lion into the lambs’ lair?” said Perry Zirkel, an education law professor at Lehigh University in Bethlehem. “It sounds bad. It sounds like a terrible affirmative act to put the kid next to the bathroom.”

    Nevertheless, Zirkel said the plaintiffs still have little chance of winning because the courts have set such a high bar for such claims.

    And Freund said the lawsuit overstated the extent to which teachers and administrators were aware of the attacks. “Everyone, to our knowledge, acted as they should have acted,” he said.

    But the parents of the fourth victim said the district has shown little regard for their son. Nobody from the district has contacted them since his rape, they said in an interview.

    “It’s a constant slap in the face,” said the boy’s mother, who spoke on condition of anonymity to protect her son’s privacy. “They still will not accept any responsibility. They will not accept any accountability.”

    © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
    ~shacked up with an ob/gyn~

  • #2
    So, Vishenka.....private school for the future kiddos, right?

    That's horrible. There was a story like this in Boston about kindergartener's being forced to give oral sex to older kids on the bus. I don't understand how kids get this way. It makes me very sad. It's hard to know how to let go and let your kids establish some independence when you hear reports like this. You want to hold them closer.


    And....how can the school officials be so cold about the whole thing?
    Angie
    Gyn-Onc fellowship survivor - 10 years out of the training years; reluctant suburbanite
    Mom to DS (18) and DD (15) (and many many pets)

    "Where are we going - and what am I doing in this handbasket?"

    Comment


    • #3
      Every one of those school officials that knew should be fired and never allowed to work with children again - disgusting!
      Wife to NSG out of training, mom to 2, 10 & 8, and a beagle with wings.

      Comment


      • #4
        In federal court last month, the district’s lawyer, John Freund III, argued that under the Constitution school officials cannot be held responsible simply for failing to protect youngsters from assaults by other students.
        Just like the courts ruled police officers CAN NOT be held responsible for responding to emergency situations (ie if they take half an hour to meander down to an armed burglery of an occupied home they can't be held liable).

        I would be surprised if the courts rule that a school is responsible for the safety of the children within its walls (based on another government institution- the police - not being held responsible for citizen safety during an active crime that has been called in). It's a domino effect. And, a case has already been built in the justice system for NOT holding the schools responsible for protecting their students.
        Who uses a machete to cut through red tape
        With fingernails that shine like justice
        And a voice that is dark like tinted glass

        Comment


        • #5
          You'd be surprised how sick some of the kids are, out there. My sister is a 6th grade teacher in WA state and I can't tell you how many times she has students with parole officers and CPS case workers invovled.

          One such kid was, no joke, a budding sociopath. When my sister cornered the sex-offender tracking officer that came to one of his parent/teacher conferences about the students proclivities, she was told that they couldn't reveal any information because he was a juvenile, even though there were obviously some sex-offenses. (The laws have since changed, thank goodness!) The officer then went onto to tell my sister that the only thing they could say was to NEVER allow this kid unsupervised access to any other children, regardless of their age or gender, EVER.

          This is just reason #4,892 why I would never become a school teacher... :!

          Comment


          • #6
            And, every one of the school officials that knew about this monstrous crime and failed to report it should be held criminally liable. They aided and abetted a criminal. They are participants in a criminal act via their actions.

            That 12 year old boy is also a VERY good case for allowing adolescents to be tried as adults in extraordinary cases (such as serial rape - particularly of small children). That boy is going to get out at 18 and continue raping - the recidivism rate is high enough among "normal" rapists alone - a serial rapist is a particularly scary bomb. By their very nature serial rapists WILL rape again (thus they are "serial" rapists). http://stinet.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=ge ... =ADA281861
            Who uses a machete to cut through red tape
            With fingernails that shine like justice
            And a voice that is dark like tinted glass

            Comment


            • #7
              excuse me ... i need to go vomit.

              Comment


              • #8
                :disappointed: My faith in the human race is dwindling really, really low... kinda like a candle that has burnt to the wick.

                Comment


                • #9
                  What I don't understand is why not a single teacher or administrator "dropped a dime" and called the cops on this kid? Sorry...but I'd rather lose my job or possibly my teaching credentials if it would prevent this freak from damaging another child.

                  Sometimes you just have to take the high road, regardless of the personal costs to yourself. I wouldn't be able to live with myself if my actions could prevent a sex crime and I sat quietly by and choose to do nothing.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    If I was a teacher or administrator in the school, I'd have to be physically restrained from "taking the kid aside" in the hall. I'm sure I wouldn't physically hurt him (unless I caught him in the act), but I would definitely have words with the boy AND call the police.

                    This is why I worry about my ability to teach -- I'd think that was the right thing to do, but I'd bet that school officials were more concerned with keeping it quiet and defending any possible legal action. I can't think that way about things like this. You'd have to peel me off this kid to hand him over to the police for investigation.

                    I hope they believed the kids that reported the crimes. Sadly, I think school officials don't believe little kids when they don't want what they say to be true.
                    Angie
                    Gyn-Onc fellowship survivor - 10 years out of the training years; reluctant suburbanite
                    Mom to DS (18) and DD (15) (and many many pets)

                    "Where are we going - and what am I doing in this handbasket?"

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Sheherezade
                      You'd have to peel me off this kid to hand him over to the police for investigation.

                      I hope they believed the kids that reported the crimes. Sadly, I think school officials don't believe little kids when they don't want what they say to be true.
                      ITA on all points. I'd probably have beaten the kid and any adult who tried to defend him.

                      I don't have enough patience to handle things like that.

                      Comment

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