Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Summary - Oct 31, 2007





If it's not lawyers, it's their clients
. link
We're never quite sure why some lawyers let their clients testify.

HOSPITALIZED
Tampa, Florida teacher Christina Butler has been hospitalized because of "emotional stress, " according to her lawyer.
[Her attorney, Tom] Fox did not discuss the allegations but said there could be problems with statements Butler made to police last week based on her "long history of mental disorders."
Uh, Yeah. She is accused of having sex with a ninth grade student. Butler is 33.
TT - Link

SENTENCED (sorta)- Lewd and lascivious molestation
A Florida teacher was sentenced to a year in jail - not prison - for lewd or lascivious molestation of a 15-year-old boy. The prosecution wanted 51 months in prison, but the judge said she departed from a prison sentence for reasons including a doctor's testimony that Goodbrad was at a low risk to reoffend, and because he showed immediate remorse. She also sentenced him to community service. We are going out on a limb by saying she's a crackpot and ought not to be a judge and feel immediate remorse for the statement.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - Child molestation
A judge sentenced teacher Kenneth Lang, 60, to 7 1/2 to 15 years for molesting a boy from 1983 to 1986, starting when the boy was 7. As part of the plea agreement, Lang gave up his right to ask for a sentence review or a sentence reduction after serving two-thirds of his time. The judge praised the the victim for having remarkable inner strength and coming forward.
Lang faces charges in two other states. (New Hampshire)
TT - Link

SENTENCED - Indecent exposure to a minor
In North Carolina, teacher's assistant Travis Thompson, 39, was sentenced to two years' probation, ordered to pay a $200 fine and ordered to submit to a mental health assessment. He also must register as a sex offender. He pleaded guilty to indecent exposure to a minor. AFTER HIS ARREST, he went on WTVD Channel 11 news and admitted acting inappropriately. He said the girl had given him a lap dance, which she vehemently denies.
She is 13-years-old.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - sexual abuse of students
Found guilty by a jury of 15 counts of sexual abuse of two students, Curtis Buell, 25, was sentenced to two years in prison, followed by five years' supervised probation. He will have to register as a sex offender. At the blog entry here, people who knew him were not too surprised.
TT - Link

GUILTY - making threats
"Don't take the stand," is what his lawyer should have advised. Patrick Knoble, 36, was found guilty of making threats against a school board member and the school superintendent. His performance on the stand seemed to be the convincing factor. The state revoked his license in March. (Amazing how fast they can do that when they want to, without waiting for the outcome of any legal proceedings, hearings, grievance processes, appeals and rights to further appeals, etc etc etc.) (Ohio)
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Electronic enticement of a minor
A University of Hawaii professor was arrested, accused of trying to seduce what he thought was a 15-year-old girl on the Internet. It was, as so many of these chats are, with a police officer. He agreed to meet the 15-year-old because,
"I was trying to help the girl," Fossorier told KHNL television while the police escorted him to a cellblock. "I was trying to meet her and say that what she was doing was wrong."
TT - Link

ARRESTED - to the delinquency of a minor
A special education teacher's aide was arrested after she helped a 16-year-old leave a group home. It wasn't because she was mentoring him. (South Carolina)
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sexual abuse by a parent or guardian
The guardian is the band director, but the story is sketchy. The school also rates a 1 at GreatSchools.net and 1 doesn't mean it's tops. Maybe schools that are academically rotten should not have band or drama or things like movie theatres or hockey rinks or television studios. We have no idea if this school has such features but we know of one in New Jersey that does that rates almost as low.
TT - Link

PRELIMINARY HEARING
The defense witness today in a preliminary hearing to determine whether there is enough evidence to go to trial wasn't a spectacular choice.
TT - Link

ON TRIAL
In Louisiana, 60-year-old Charni S. Dodson, a middle school teacher, is on trial on charges of cruelty to a juvenile, false imprisonment and obstruction of justice for treatment of an adopted boy. She lost custody of one of the boy’s sisters in 2002 after keeping her locked in a windowless room.
TT - Link

INEPT
"Inept" might be the wrong word, but when you are charged with the safety and education of children, what can you think when they allow a teacher arrested for selling methamphetamine back into the classroom because the crime he was charged with was not violent in nature?

It's Guam and parents complained to a news outlet. The superintendent reversed the decision. TT - Link

Crisis of the Week
MRSA is a staff infection resistant to the broad-spectrum antibiotics commonly used to treat it. Widely quoted in articles about infections in schools is the figure from CDC that 18,000 people died of it in 2005, compared to 16,000 who died of AIDS. Only it isn't quite what the Centers for Disease Control said. Those are deaths related to healthcare. The community-associated MRSA accounts for only a small percentage of that number. Serious? It can be. But, not the 18,000-dead -in-one-year epidemic found in news stories. Wash your hands, don't share towels, cover wounds to prevent infections. Basic hygiene. Link to CDC page at blog entry.
TT - Link

Say what???
TT - Link

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Updated - October 30, 2007

Much of the work at the blog is following up on stories. We do this daily but do not re-date the stories until there is a final finding and/or sentencing. Usually we don't even add them in this space either. A few were ones we got inquiries on or were following closely.


INDICTED
Erin Baker, 25, female, an Ohio coach, was indicted on 55 charges of having sexual contact with a player during the past two years. The charges include 38 counts of sexual battery and 17 counts of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor. The age of the girl was not given. (Ohio)
TT - Link

MOTION TO DISMISS VERDICT
In one of those curious cases that makes little sense,the attorney for Albert Scerbo has filed a motion to dismiss or retry Albert Scerbo. Scerbo is a music teacher at an Onondaga Indian school who was arrested in Dec 2006. What is so curious is the pre-trial "racism" charge by the New York Times who termed a small girl who referred to Scerbo as a "white cracker" as "bristling racial tensions." Overblown rhetoric - again in the New York Times - called the case, "an emotionally charged case that has touched on differences in race, class and religion.."

Scerbo was found guilty by a jury on two of the charges and not 17 other charges, after pre-trial coverage that included headline after headline in the newspapers reporting that charges were dropped as four victims were eliminated from the case by the judge . It was a bizarre display of media involvement that seemed out of place with the story, especially since we got tons of e-mail from people asking, "What racism???" We searched for evidence of it online in other local media but found no "bristling tensions" in their coverage of the story. Or the community.

And then, surprisingly, a day or so before sentencing, the local paper ran two stories that resulted in the lawyer asking for a delay in sentencing. After contacting jurors, they allege that two jurors convinced other jurors of the guilt. Bizarrely, the legal motion stated that the two jurors were both educators who told jurors that teachers were trained not to touch children. Teacher training wasn't a part of the prosecution presentation and it's an interesting question whether jurors, whether they are teachers, doctors, lawyers or policemen are allowed to bring their expertise to a trial.

None of which explains the peculiar interest in the case by the media. Can someone tell us who Scerbo is related to? Or what the big deal is?
TT - Link

TRIAL POSTPONED
The trial of a teacher described as a "great guy and fun. He had a crazy sense of humor," by the PTA president has been postponed. Greg Westhoff, 60, will go to trial in March. In the meantime, more details are emerging about his background that included previous charges of harassing a female student for which he was fired, and a guilty plea to second-degree harassment of a male student in a physical dispute in the cafeteria, an incident for which he was reprimanded and removed from the classroom. He was sentenced to one year conditional discharge in that case.

The school district is being sued by one victim, but the PTA president - someone who you would expect would respect the children who are the alleged victims in the case - said that many students in the class believed that Westhoff's accusers made their allegations because they were failing the class.

She said that to a newspaper. That she said that before the release of information that the teacher was fired for harassment of a female in 1997 doesn't excuse the thoughtlessness. In defending the teacher, she cast doubt about children who have yet to testify, reinforcing the reaction of children in the school who nearly always side with "popular" teachers.

Whether the teacher is ultimately convicted of the charges, there is no excuse for repeating the poor and uninformed judgement of other students. Schools are there to teach children how to think, not to react emotionally. But, even worse, imagine how the victims feel with that stunning condemnation of their motives from an alleged adult. From their school, no less.
TT - Link

TRIAL to BEGIN (finally)
Arrested in 2004, Jesus Rivera, 45, has been on bail for two years. He is accused of sexually abusing five male students. The abuse dates back to 2002. A jury was selected and the trial is scheduled to begin this week. (California) No idea why the case has taken so long.
TT - Link

NEW OR COMPLETED CASES
PAROLE DENIED (AGAIN)
For Brian Floss, 44, a third-grade teacher in Arkansas who was sentenced to ten years for sexual assault of an 8-year-old girl. It was the second time the family has had to testify. Floss has served five years.
TT - Link

SENTENCED
To 90 days in jail for sending lewd text messages to a female high school student and discussing inappropriate topics with her. The high school wrestling coach apologized and called it stupid and irresponsible. The judge corrected him. "It was was more than stupid and irresponsible, it was criminal,” and "extremely concerning." (Minnesota)
TT - Link

SENTENCED
A boys soccer coach in Michigan was sentenced to 270 days in jail for using a computer to accost a child for immoral purposes and using a computer to disseminate sexually explicit material to a minor. Turns out the two 14-year-old girls were police. The coach will have to register as a sex offender.
TT - Link

SENTENCED
In Alabama, a teacher pleaded guilty to bringing a loaded gun to school. He was sentenced to a 10 day suspended sentence. He will keep his job. The school had suspended him for three days.
TT -Link

GUILTY PLEA - child predator
The judge described him as a "manipulative, cunning, deceptive con-man extraordinaire who is a classic child predator" in court after Thomas 'Truck' Harris, 52, admitted molesting a 13-year-old boy in 1991 when he was the boy's baseball coach.

Harris was found guilty by a jury in June on sexual assault, endangering the welfare of a child and criminal sexual contact in connection with the abuse of another victim . Evaluators at the Adult Diagnostic and Treatment Center at Avenel found him to be a repetitive and compulsive offender.

Interpol is investigating him in connection with cases in the Philippines.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - child molestation
School bus driver Scott M. Bender, 44, was arrested for investigation of first-degree child molestation. Reportedly, when interviewed by Pierce County sheriff's detectives, the documents say Bender initially denied all of the allegations but later admitted to exposing himself to the girl. She was four-years-old.
TT - Link

CHARGES DROPPED and RECORD EXPUNGED
For a teacher arrested in Florida in 2006. It was a case we never discovered and did not cover and can't find in archives.
TT - Link

CORRUPTION, FRAUD, RESIGNATION and MONEY
The Feds are looking into corruption in Memphis Schools and have convened a grand jury to look into $50 million contracts for three schools. Several board members testified. Details won't be available until the grand jury completes their task. In other news, the Memphis Schools have conducted an internal audit into their cafeterias. No criminal charges have been filed as of this date but the preliminary audit is a clue to big problems. It cost them $9,000 just to haul away the 343 tons of food to the dump. And 343 isn't a typo. (Tennessee)
TT - Link

In New Jersey, the school director of facilities was indicted and he wasn't even the subject of the investigation. Search New Jersey labels for other corruption cases in the "Garden State" that we've started to dub "The Corruption State." Online Resources - links to the U.S. Attorney Office in New Jersey and other states. Fascinating reading.
TT - Link

We're not sure what is happening in theDelaware Valley Regional High School District in New Jersey, but the school district has forwarded information to the prosecutor's office and the Superintendent has resigned.
TT - Link

REVENGE?
A school board in North Carolina released the confidential personnel records of a teacher who was fighting a forced transfer to another school. The fact that they only released a few records that would bolster their decision was countered by the teacher who has released many of his records that show he was an exemplary teacher for 18 years.

It appears that they just didn't like him appealing his transfer and embarrassing them.

Confidential personnel records are sacrosanct for teachers accused of criminal conduct, which is making us wonder if the schools aren't using the "confidential personnel record" as a screen to shelter someone other than accused teachers.
TT - Link

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Summary - Oct 26, 2007

TOP STORY
A contract school bus driver in St. Paul, Minnesota, was still missing after an arrest was issued for his arrest for molesting a special education student. Two younger girls also reported that he also touched them inappropriately, but he wasn't investigated in those cases. Apparently, another complaint was investigated but resulted in no disciplinary actions.
This is one of our TRUST US stories that makes you want to march, broom in hand, to a school district office and just vent.

If a parent was this negligent in raising a child and failing to provide safety, the state child welfare agencies would step in.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - Manufacturing marijuana
Two Michigan teachers, Bret Johnson and Keri Johnson, were sentenced to probation after after pleading guilty in August to manufacturing marijuana. For their personal use, they insist.

They both resigned from their high school teaching jobs, have felony convictions on their records and might lose their house as a drug asset seizure. However, they haven't lost their teaching licenses yet. State authorities couldn't predict it. Each case is decided on a case by case basis.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - multiple counts of second-degree sexual assault and risk of injury to a minor
Richard Cea, 27, a high school math teacher in Connecticut, was sentenced to three and a half years in prison for having sex with one student and raising the grade of another who sent him pictures of himself in her underwear. Both girls were 15-years-old.

In a story on his arrest, they said that the mother found a note in her daughter's bedroom about Cea.
"I can't believe I slept with Cea, EW! Lol But I was drunk and horny what can I do? Lol Still you can't say anything cause you slept with him five times now EW! No it was weird to say the least!"
The three-way sex wasn't mentioned in the sentencing story.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - (sorta) for sex with student
The newspaper described it as "an affair" but Joseph Tucker, 28, was arrested on suspicion of criminal sexual conduct with a female student and suspicion of tampering with a witness. He pleaded to -degree criminal sexual conduct for which it was thought he would get a 90-day sentence. The judge sentenced him 18 months in prison, but the judge stayed the sentence, ordering him to serve 3 months in the "Workhouse." He has to register as a sex offender. He was married with two children, ages 1 and 3.

The real crime? If he hadn't disobeyed the court instruction not to contact the victim, he would have gotten probation. (Minnesota)
TT - Link

SENTENCED - (almost) for sex with student
Kevin Burns, 24, another high school math teacher, pleaded guilty to charges of criminal sexual contact and official misconduct for which he was sentenced to three years in prison - stayed while Burns appeals. The appeal? His lawyer said the court ignored the wishes of the victim and his father that he not be sent to prison. The judge ignored their recommendation, but stayed the sentenced until the appeal is heard. (New Jersey) Burns will be a sex offender no matter what.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - 17 sex-related felony charges
Married to another teacher at the same high school with whom he has a 4-year-old son, Philip Sutliff, 34, was sentenced to 12 years, 8 months after pleading to 17 felony charges for having sex with a student. "He discredited his family, his profession and all those who believed in him," said the father of the victim.
TT - Link

SENTENCING DELAYED
A plea agreement to two counts of attempted aggravated indecent liberties with a child meant dismissing two counts of indecent solicitation of a child, two counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child, aggravated criminal sodomy and one count aggravated intimidation of a witness. Humberto Gonzalez, 23, an assistant wrestling coach, would have been sentenced but that has been delayed while he is evaluated. Both his attorney and the prosecution recommended five years probation because Gonzalez had no prior criminal history.

He'll have to register as a sex offender, but it's a first offense, so the victim doesn't count. It's a freebie. (New Jersey)
TT - Link

One of the first reforms that legislators ought to consider is that first offender status should not be considered in sentencing those convicted of offenses against children.

THE FOLLOWING TEACHERS WERE ARRESTED

Joseph Bradfield, 45. arrested on a weapons charge for bringing a gun onto school property. No details, but he isn't the first teacher to have done so. How the weapon was found and where wasn't mentioned in the story. (IOWA)
TT - Link

Monica Marshall, 49. In Alabama, a beer-chugging teacher was arrested when she was spotted in her car hoisting a beer bottle to her mouth at a stop light. The car smelled of marijuana and the residue was on her blouse. A search of her car found a smoldering marijuana cigarette and a plastic baggie containing what the officer suspected to be marijuana. She resigned.
TT - Link

Umesh Ramjattan, 22, a teacher in a New York school, was arrested for sending sexually explicit emails, including one with a picture of him and his girlfriend having sex to three female students. They were 12-years-olds.
TT - Link

Holly Anna Hatcher, 25, a high school social studies teacher in Tennesse, was arrested for having sex with a 17-year-old male student. She is charged with six counts of statutory rape by an authority figure. It's a pretty safe bet to make with friends that she will get probation.
TT - Link

GIVING THE BENEFIT OF DOUBT Part I
A student who twice reported Christina Butler, 33, to school authorities was suspended by the school for spreading rumors. That was before the Tampa, Florida, teacher was arrested for having sex with a ninth grade student in her special education class. And it wasn't the school or school district who contacted police. The police stopped a group of male teenagers in her vehicle and one of them blurted the truth out. The mother of the girl who was suspended doesn't think the school even bothered to investigate. So does a lawyer for the 16-year-old boy and the student who tried to get school authorities to act.
TT - Link

Lawsuits are sometimes the only way to get schools to say they're sorry. Not that they do feel sorry because it's taxpayer money that goes to payouts and doesn't really hurt them individually or financially. And then those confidentiality clauses guarantee that they don't acknowledge wrongdoing and no one is the wiser to the reason why the school or school district was liable. All bought and paid for by your tax dollars.

GIVING THE BENEFIT DOUBT TO COLLEAGUES Part II
In Urbana, Illinois, the parent of one child who originally reported Jonathon Andrew White, a second grade teacher, to authorites, spoke at an evidentiary hearing that will determine what evidence is allowed into the upcoming trial. She contacted the school principal on Nov 2. Her child wasn't interviewed until five days later. White was not removed from the classroom where he had contact with the victim every day, or with what later would be determined to be nine victims, until January of the next year.

It was pure accident that the parent met a police officer's wife and told her of the "banana game" White played with the blindfolded children. White was previously investigated in 2004 and forced to resign at another school.
TT - Link

APPEALING her FIRING
In Washington, a special education teacher is appealing the district's decision to fire her. A retired judge will decide the issue. But the school thinks she has boundary problems, showed extremely poor professional judgment, and exhibited serious insubordination. When it gets to the point where a 62-year-old teacher is so emotionally involved with a student that she wants to adopt him, there may be a line in the sand.
TT - Link

UNDERCOUNT OF TEACHER MISCONDUCT CASES
Is a problem in every state for various reasons. At this blog we estimate that we gather less than 1% or 2% of the teacher abuse cases because most are either dismissed by the school after shoddy investigations or don't hit the newspapers and we don't catch every story out there when it is published. So when an Indiana reporter repeated the statistic that there were 17 cases of sexual misconduct with students in five years, we looked at the cases we have profiled.
TT - Link

QUOTE of the DAY
The school district spokesman in Tampa, Florida, on their new 45-minute in-service training that didn't, apparently, phase Christina Butler one bit.
TT - Link

TEACHER STRIKE AND ADVOCACY JOURNALISM
A reporter following the two week Seneca Valley, Pennsylvania, teachers strike epitomizes the kind of lazy reporting that makes functioning in a democracy difficult. Thankfully, there's the Internet for taxpayers and voters who really want to know the facts. It isn't malice on the part of the media but it is lazy journalism, especially in the news rooms where those who oversee reporters and edit their material and should send them back to the field with instructions to tell the damned story, don't do that. Possibly because they are sympathetic to the strikers and unions or because they themselves are lazy. We're betting it's sympathy because newspapers have union concerns in their printing plants, political candidates they support that are funded by union "donations" and what they consider in many cases a bond with other "professionals." Either way, the price of a newspaper is still 25 cents to 50 cents. That's about what it's worth - for a month subscription.
TT - Link

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Summary - October 24, 2007

OUTRAGE OF THE DAY
For something that will send your blood pressure soaring, read the Outrage of the Day. It's a tie with the sentencing case below for disgust.

SENTENCED to 76 years, 10 years suspended
In Indiana, Jennifer Jacobi, 35, a substitute teacher who had a long-term "relationship" with a known pedophile and major producer of child pornography in Maine she met on the Internet, was sentenced to 66 years for her sexual violation of two children, one was 8-years-old, both were relatives. She also allowed Richard Prado to molest the children. He later committed suicide in a Maine jail. Jacobi is still facing federal child pornography charges. She is married and the mother of two children, ages 2 and 11.

In an interview with a t.v. reporter, the reporter asked if she saw herself as a sex offender and Jacobi replied, “Honestly, no.”
TT - Link

GUILTY VERDICT - Enticing a minor for immoral purposes
Sharon Rutherford, 30, was found guilty by a jury of of two counts of enticing a minor for immoral purposes. She is alleged to have had sex with four students, two of whom were of the age of consent. The other two were under age 16. The school was notified that she was a problem in 2004 but their investigation "found no evidence." No idea if they called in the police. Rutherford faces further charges of soliciting a student to murder her husband. Those charges are pending, presumably because it will be easier to establish once her sexual involvement was proven. We're betting that it will be a movie of the week in less than a year. The lawsuits will probably be sooner. (Alabama)
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA - Public Lewdness
In Lewiston, NY, a P.E. teacher pleaded guilty to public lewdness three months after being arrested in a Wal-Mart parking lot. Several customers complained. Anthony Fazzary, 42, will be sentenced in February. In the meantime, school officials are "discussing a resolution of the Fazzary case with the Addison Teachers Association."
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA - possession of heroin in a school
A third grade teacher may avoid a criminal record after all. She was found in possession of heroin, marijuana and associated paraphernalia in the school, some on her person in the classroom. After pleading, the judge held out the possibility of Drug Court where her conviction will be erased after completion of the program. Krista Crosby, 34, will, of course, be eligible to teach elsewhere with a perfectly clean record. Thank you, Nebraska.
TT - Link

ON TRIAL
Sometimes we only learn of misconduct when the educator is on trial. Such is the case with Jose "Joe" David Soliz, 29, a first grade teacher in Texas accused of molesting four students.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sodomy and sexual abuse
A popular assistant principal in Alabama was arrested on allegations of sexual abuse and sodomy of a 16-year-old male. Cleavon Eason, 36, has been the assistant principal for ten years and his arrest prompted one student to ask, "How can this really be happening?" It isn't the naiive question it sounds like. It's more a cry of pain at the betrayal.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - sex with student
Christina Butler, 33, a Tampa, Florida teacher was arrested charged with having sex with a ninth grade student. Police were alerted when they stopped a group of teenagers in her car and one of the teenagers revealed the sexual relationship.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - five counts of rape - of student
In Utah, another female teacher, Cris Morris, 29, was arrested on five counts of rape, a first degree felony, for allegedly having sexual intercourse with a juvenile male student. Criminal charges haven't been filed yet, but if they are and she is convicted, we have a clue to the future. Consulting our Utah Ouija board (and looking at past sentencing in Utah) we predict ... ... ... Probation.
TT - Link

CATCH UP
Two teachers in Woodland, California were arrested, both on sex charges. We hadn't heard about either one of them before the article that was run in connection with the Associated Press series.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - sexual conduct by a school employee
Kevin Kegel, 28, a Nevada teacher was charged with sexual conduct by a school employee with a pupil (age 14 or 15) from the same school" and two similar counts including a pupil of age 16 or 17. He was fired in June and arrested in July. A preliminary is scheduled for November.
TT - Link

CHARGED - Obstruction of justice
Two Oklahoma City school officials were charged in connection with two assaults on students that were allegedly motivated by the students' race. One was the Transportation Director and a school superintendent charged with obstruction of justice for trying to get the investigation stopped.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sexual assault of student
In West Virginia, a 22-year-old computer technician working for a board of education was arrested for having sex with a 15-year-old student he met at one of the schools. Casey Casto, 22, has been charged with third-degree sexual assault and third-degree sexual abuse by a parent, guardian, custodian or person in a position of trust to a child.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Domestic violence and burglary
School Board member Manuel “Manny” Hernandez, 29, was arrested domestic violence charges and faces felony counts of assault and burglary stemming from a violent fight with an ex-girlfriend. It's alleged he climbed through her kitchen window at 10:00 a.m. and hit her several times with his fists. The couple have a child together. He's a lawyer and former municipal judge. At 29. (Texas)

"School board members can only be removed for incompetence, official misconduct, intoxication or conviction on felony charges, according to the state education code. "
TT - Link

ARRAIGNED
An assistant band director in Mission, Texas, was arraigned on a charge possessing a controlled substance after officers found 1.8 grams of cocaine in his home. The lawyer for Christopher Motes, 42, is confident he can get the evidence found in the search warrant suppressed. In the meantime, police found a good deal of pornography in the home and have sized his computer to look for any illegal material. Motes is on probation from a forgery charge more than four years ago.
TT - Link

BACKGROUND CHECKS - NOT
Background checks were instituted in every state to keep convicted teachers out of the classroom. Every state and every school district requires such checks and it's the first line of of self-defense in the arsenal of every school administrator when teacher misconduct occurs. "We conducted a background check, " they recite, as if that was the end of their responsibility. Few reporters ask beyond that, like when was the check conducted? Was the teacher allowed into the classroom before the background check was completed? Because that's the case in Alabama, and we assume elsewhere, for those hired on an "temporary emergency basis." And claiming that "principals are going to be honest" in the reference check is really stretching credulity.
TT - Link

LAWSUIT
A lawsuit backed by the ACLU in another attempt to corrupt the accountability and responsibility process in school hiring has failed. A teacher in Louisiana was fired one week after she was hired when parents and the school found out about her "adult-oriented" artwork on her website. The school district thought that she exhibited poor professional judgement in telling students about the site, "even if she mentioned the site only to warn students not to visit it." She and the ACLU claimed the firing was a violation of her first amendment right of free speech. The lawsuit failed on a technicality and the ACLU hasn't decided yet whether to file another lawsuit. And find a friendlier judge.
TT - Link

SCHOOL REFORM WITHOUT THE, AH, REFORM
An article in the New York Daily News on Mayor Bloomberg's dealings with the teachers unions gave us a chance to recall his previous, ah, school reform appearance.
TT - Link

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Summary - Oct 23, 2007

SENTENCED - first degree sexual assault
In New Rochelle, New York, James J. Nieto, 80, was sentenced to 30 years. He was found guilty of of first-degree sexual assault of a victim under 13 and two counts of risk of injury to a minor by a jury in September. The two girls were relatives.
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA - 17 counts of taking indecent liberties with a child
Michael Gates, 33, a Virginia teacher, pleaded guilty to 17 felony counts of sexual offense (taking indecent liberties with a child) against a female student. And he's facing charges in another county.
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA - possession with intent to distribute
Also in Virginia, Frank "Chip" Rea, 30, a P.E. teacher and coach pleaded guilty to cocaine possession and marijuana possession with the intent to distribute. He'll be sentenced in January.
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA
Former Democratic Assemblyman Alfred E. Steele, pleaded guilty to taking bribes while Democratic state assemblyman and current Orange Mayor Mims Hackett Jr. pleaded not guilty in the Pleasantville School District scandal that netted eleven New Jersey officials.
TT - Link

NOT GUILTY VERDICT
Deana Luedtke, 31, was found not guilty by a jury. She was accused of criminal sexual conduct involving a 13-year-old boy more than four years ago . The jury didn't buy it.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sexual assault on a child by person in a position of trust
A volunteer and a contract employee who taught music and color-guard for five Jefferson County schools was arrested on suspicion of sexual assault and sexual assault on a child by a person in a position of trust. The female student is 16-years-old. William Paxton is 42. (Colorado)
TT - Link

LAWSUIT
The eighth victim has filed a lawsuit against the Beaufort County School District that has already paid out $4.6 million that isn't covered by their insurance carrier. Sometimes a lawsuit is the only way to get people to say they are sorry. So far, no one in the school district seems to understand that concept. (South Carolina)
TT - Link

Why doesn't this surprise us?
In Brunswick, Maine a 21-year-old Brunswick High School graduate with 18 criminal convictions in the past two years wants to run for the school board.
TT - Link

Editorial in Hawaii
The Honolulu Star Bulletin responded to the AP series on teacher misconduct that revealed that Hawaii hasn't revoked the credentials of a single teacher for sexual misconduct since 2001. As we noted, they haven't revoked the credentials for any of the drug dealing teachers either. Nor a single teacher for gross incompetence. However, seven teachers lost their licenses because they had stopped paying licensing fees after resigning from their jobs. A little self interest there? The Standards Board is comprised of teachers, administrators and educrats.
TT - Link

Tougher Penalities
In South Carolina, they're talking about tougher sentencing for teachers and those in authority who molest children. One proposal is to add five years to the sentence that can't be suspended to probation. Must be they finally got around to looking at the number of teachers who got parole or suspended sentences in S.C. courts. It is, however, unlikely that they could add a five-year penalty just because someone was a teacher. Or maybe the purpose is to write a law that won't withstand legal challenges. It's hard to tell.
TT - Link

Fruit Loops in Maine
A committee school member wants to modify the plan of the Maine middle school that wants to provide birth control pills and patches and abortions to all their students ages 11 to 15. He wants to limit the birth control pills, patches and abortions to those 14 and up. The age of consent in Maine is 14. He also wants parents to have the right to opt out of the program. Of course, an election is next month which ought to be a good indication of how parents feel about the issue.
TT - Link

Legislative Hearings in Ohio
Have been scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday in response to the Columbus Dispatch series "ABCs of Betrayal," a damning portrait of the callous indifference of state education authorities to the rule of law. One immediate result of the series is that the state will put their database of teacher discipline decisions online. That will take care of those cases where a negotiated settlement doesn't include non disclosure clauses. This way, we can see if Ohio teachers who were sentenced have their licenses revoked or not.
TT - Link

Monday, October 22, 2007

Summary - October 22, 2007

TOP STORY
Pamela Smart is serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole in the killing of her husband in 1990. She convinced a student to do the dirty deed and he did with the help of two friends. He was sentenced to 40 years in prison. He is petitioning for a reduction in sentence. At the time of the murder, he was 15. Billy Flynn is now 33. Gregory Smart was 24 when Flynn shot and killed him. Pamela's woes in prison make you believe there really is justice. (New Hampshire)
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA - first-degree criminal sexual conduct
In Minnesota, Troy Michael Bernard, 35, a middle school teacher, pleaded guilty to a charge of first-degree criminal sexual conduct for having sexual relations with a student for nearly a year, beginning when the girl was 14. He will be sentenced in January.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sexual misconduct with a minor
A Kennewick, Washington teacher who resigned in 1998 and worked as a substitute in Kennewick schools was arrested, accused of two counts of sexual misconduct with a minor for sex with a 16 - 17 year-old male student. William Pickerel, 72, worked in the schools for over 40 years.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - felony sexual-assault charges
He lives and works in Ohio and teaches in Columbus, but Jason Crary, 36, was arrested for sexual offenses alleged to have been committed in Milwaukee when he worked there in the 1990s. The boy's soccer coach as the school resigned three days ago when his past was revealed.
TT - Link

RESIGNED
A Smiths Station High School teacher has resigned after being asked to to do so after allegations of inappropriate contact with a student. He has not been charged, but police and the school are investigating.
TT - Link

VIOLATING TERMS OF HIS PROBATION
He was given probation in order to repay $100,000 he embezzled. He's only paid back $6,000. That puts Wayne Kruse in violation of the terms of his parole. Of course, the money was stolen from the Lawrence Education Association. The union doesn't seem to have minded that the former union president has made no restitution since 2005. (Kansas)
TT - Link

Background checks are flawed - New Hampshire AP story
Among the findings, "Criminal and education records effectively sanitized through plea-bargains and other negotiations." Yeah. We observed that, too, in just about every state.
TT - Link

North Jersey teacher sex arrests up
Thoughtful companion piece to the Associated Press series at the the Record.
TT - Link

Teacher Misconduct Denied
By Herald Bulletin in Indiana. Teacher union officials are quoted extensively. And exclusively. Conclusion: misconduct is rare. We would spell out B.S. but we're family friendly, but it is B.S. We point out a lot of these "rare" misconduct cases.
TT - Link

Friday, October 19, 2007

Summary - October 19, 2007

SENTENCED (sorta)
If you consider 3 years probation and sex offender treatment and a $1,000 fine for three counts of forcible sexual abuse, all second-degree felonies for sex with a 17-year-old boy punishment, then Christy Brown, 33, was sentenced. (Utah)
As we said, "Three years probation, a $1,000 fine and sex offender treatment. Why not just give her a Teacher of the Year Who Violates a Student Achievement award?"
TT - Link

SENTENCED (sorta)
Joshua Jacobsen, 31, got 9 months in jail - not prison - and lifetime probation. He will also have to register as a sex offender. He was arrested last year, accused of abusing one of his students beginning when she was just 13. He wants to "move forward." (Arizona)
TT - Link

GUILTY VERDICT - felony first-degree sexual abuse and misdemeanor child endangerment
We were outraged when he was arrested. The mother was told that David Heil, 43, would never teach again by the school district. However, school administrators and the teachers union negotiated a deal that eventually sent him to another school. When the mother found out in 2006, she went to police. A jury found David Heil guilty. Assistant District Attorney Douglas Randall, who told jurors during his summation that school officials double-crossed the boy's mother and lied to her. But you absolutely won't believe what the school district says.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - firearms on school property
The story is so incomplete that you are left with more questions than answers. Danny Hoover, Jr., 36, principal of Wirt County Middle School, was arrested for bringing firearms to the school. It didn't make sense to us either. We're looking for more stories.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sex with 14-year-old student
In Van Nuys, California, Merideth Vincent, 40, a teacher of a private home schooling group, was arrested, accused of having sex with a 14-year-old male student. You got to be desperate to hit on kids.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - giving students pain prescription drugs
Barbara Trotta, 38, a special education teacher in Oregon, was arrested, accused of giving three students students prescription pain pills and allegedly excused at least one student from class and allowed that student to use her personal vehicle to pick up additional drugs.
TT - Link

CHARGED - domestic violence
Every time we post a story about a teacher who is arrested and accused of drunk driving or domestic violence we get e-mail protesting that it doesn't affect his job. Our reply is that he can be the greatest teacher in the world, but students know about the arrest. And what they will learn from how school authorities respond will constitute an important life lesson. (Pennsylvania)
TT - Link

JUDGE REJECTS PLEA AGREEMENT
There are good judges in this country. In Indiana, a judge rejected a plea agreement that would have allowed John Watts, 28, to plead guilty to one count of sexual misconduct with a minor, a felony, and receive a sentence of six years in prison with all suspended, be placed on probation for six years and serve one year of home confinement. He had been charged with 23 counts of sexual misconduct with a minor and they have his confession on tape as well as an admission to having sex with another student. Did we mention the girl was 14-years-old?
TT - Link

SPECIAL PAY PLAN for TEACHERS - doing their job
In Iowa, the state Supreme Court ruled that that school districts will have to bargain with teachers who work "a full load of classes." That means anyone who actually teaches over -- a whole five hours a day -- must be given extra compensation. Absolutely absurd.
TT - Link

WATCHING THE WATCHERS who definitely need watching
In Virginia, the Associated Press is pleased to report, the state Department of Education is, based on an Associated Press investigation, going to look to tighten teacher licensing system. Looking at the system, apparently, doesn't include looking at the one place responsible for license revocation - the state Department of Education.
TT - Link

SCHOOL BOARD WATCH
A grand jury indictment has led to the arrest of former school-board president, Keith Crego, 37, and the former superintendent, Leslye Abrutyn, 58, on a combined 22 felony charges and 21 misdemeanors. It's a great story of sex, corruption, disgraceful inaction, and the reporter seemed kinda fascinated by what these people wore to court.
TT - Link

Summary - September 18, 2007

NOT GUILTY VERDICT
David Janssen, 55, an Appleton, Wisconsin teacher was found not guilty of all counts by a jury. The charges were from an alleged 1996-2000 encounter with two former students.
TT - Link

SENTENCED -possession of and prepared to sell crystal methamphetamine
His arrest made headlines at the time. It's not every day that a school principal is arrested for selling drugs out of his office. John Acerra, 50, was sentenced to 2-4 years in prison, followed by five years probation. (Pennsylvania)
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA -lewd acts on a child
Charged with 12 counts in an indictment, a San Bernardino School District Administrator was allowed to plead to two felony counts of lewd acts on a child. The No Contest plea provides for - get ready - 180 days in jail (not prison) and she can serve her time on the weekends or at home with a monitoring device. It's a generous settlement with Michelle Rossi, 36, who had a year-long affair with a 14-year-old girl when Rossi was a middle school teacher. She'll permanently lose her teaching and administrative credentials and must register as a sex offender, but it's a good reminder that without sex offender registration, a lot of sexual predators are barely punished for their crimes.
TT - Link

HEADED FOR TRIAL - child endangerment, assault, harassment
A judge ruled there was sufficient evidence to hold Heather M. Spriggle, 38, for trial for felony count of endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor count of simple assault and a summary charge of harassment. The classroom abuse of the 13-year-old developmentally disabled child was witnessed by aides. (Pennsylvania)
TT - Link

HEADED FOR TRIAL - Solicitation of murder
In Alabama, Sharon Rutherford, 30, will go on trial Oct 20. She is accused of having sex (we refuse to call it "an affair") with a student and convinced him to kill her husband. She was indicted for making advances to two other students in her classroom. The husband was unharmed, although we will have to wait for the trial to find out the circumstances.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Solicitation of sex from a minor
Charles Hadley, 39, a North Carolina teacher, was arrested for soliciting sex from a minor in an online chatroom. Police suspected him of improper online chats and investigators posed as a 15-year-old.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Contributing to the delinquency of a minor
In South Carolina, Janet Fackovec, 25, is charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor for allegedly having sex with a teenage student. Detectives arrested her at the school. She's been suspended with pay.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - sexual battery by an authority figure
An assistant football coach and also teaches in-school suspension, was arrested after a grand jury indicted him on sexual battery charges. Huana Jennings, 36, has been suspended with pay. A teacher at the high school passed along the information to school authorities. (Tennessee)
TT - Link

COACH DISMISSED
A coach was dismissed in Maryland after a reporter made inquiries about revocation of teaching licenses and it turned out that the coach had lost his New Jersey license to teach after an "incident." He claims he never went to court on the charges and that he doesn't need a teaching license to coach. He's hiring an attorney. It sent us on another rant about how some teachers are able to bargain with their licenses and avoid harsher sentencing or avoid court altogether.

We don't know that that's the case here, but anyoen who loses their license to teach in one state shouldn't be in any school in any state.
TT - Link

A TRAIL OF MISCONDUCT
A teacher was hired in Florida after having had an inappropriate relationship with a female student in Oklahoma and a sexual relationship with one in Georgia for which he was tried. The result of the 2001 trial was a mistrial. Bizarrely, the superintendent of the school district where he taught in Georgia not only failed to disclose to other schools this teacher's problems, but later resigned because she failed to report her daughter's - a school counselor - misconduct.

We're still wondering how a background check failed to turn up the 2001 court case and whether any school district should have taken a chance on the teacher. (Naturally, the reporter points to a national registry as a solution. It doesn't work in Canada, and how someone could think that districts that don't even report to the state would think that they would report to some national registry? Not when reporting might subject them to lawsuits.)
TT - Link

BALTIMORE SUN EDUCATION BLOG
More and more newspapers are creating education blogs. We found the length of the teacher's school year and day gleaned from contracts at one of the Baltimore Sun blog entries. Talk about UNDERWORKED. We haven't been able to find a Part I and have no idea what that contained, but this was fascinating as well as the link to negotiated contracts from a Maryland Superintendent's Association.
TT - Link

BEST READING OF THE DAY
Even if you don't live in Illinois, you'll want to read the new series, "Hidden Violations." It's the second series by Scott Reeder and the Small Family Newspaper Group. His award-winning 2005 series, "The Hidden Costs of Tenure" will bolster every argument you've ever had about bad tenure is. In "Hidden Violations" you find out just how casual Illinois is toward teacher misconduct. We kind of guessed it from the cases we see, but they contacted all 50 state education departments and built a database of revocations and suspensions. And it will confirm your suspicions about revocations.
TT - Link

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Summary - September 17, 2007

SENTENCED (Sorta)
After pleading guilty to two counts of fourth-degree sexual assault and tampering with a witness last month, Matthew Glasser, 31, a Catholic school music teacher, was sentenced to seven years SUSPENDED and five years of probation.
TT - Link

SENTENCED to 20 years
In North Carolina, Jimmie Grubbs, 66, a teacher and mentor to children lauded by local newspapers, was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He pleaded guilty in September to federal charges for taking students to Columbia, S.C. and Myrtle Beach, S.C. and molesting them. The newspaper named the six boys who stepped forward as The Herald’s 2006 Man of the Year.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - third time
Queens teacher Julio Benavides, 28, was arrested - again. He was arrested in June, accused of engaging in sexual intercourse with a then 14-year-old female student. A condition of his release was to have no contact with the victim. He was arrested in September for violating that order. This latest arrest is for trying to contact the victim again.
TT - Link

STILL WAITING - Child Pornography
David Cameron was arrested in 2004 for child pornography. He was one of six men accused of taking part in a child porn ring operating out of a Mt. Vernon home in Illinois. He will have a pretrial hearing in February on two different dates, one for each county that has filed charges.

Note: One of the things we have observed here that child pornography cases are lengthy. The reason seems to be that the investigating agencies make a great effort to identify the children in case any of them are local. This is a long process but is crucial to understanding the charges that should be filed. Then, there seems to be a connecting web between child pornographers that investigators want to know about while they might have a potential testifying witness.
TT - Link

RELEASE FROM PRISON
For the second time this week, a community has scheduled a public safety meeting to notify residents that a sex offender will be moving into the community. Both are teachers. Robert Pannier, now age 40, was sentenced in 1998 for having sexual intercourse with a 15-year-old student. Released in 2007, he violated conditions of his parole. He has been classified as a Level III offenders show traits of high public risk to re-offend, according to the Department of Corrections
TT - Link

CONVICTED but still licensed to teach
In Illinois, they are, like Ohio, coming to an awareness that even when teachers are convicted and are in prison, they remain licensed to teach. They pointed to a New Mexico law that passed last year that means that they now no longer require a guilty verdict before revoking a teacher's credentials. An arrest now is enough to warrant pulling an accused teacher's state license.
TT - Link

BEST READING * * * * *
The Columbus Dispatch concludes their four-part series on problems with disciplining teachers in Ohio. It's a first-rate series that was the result of a 10-month investigation, collecting records (like pulling teeth) from the state's Office of Professional Conduct. They're a newspaper with clout so you can imagine what a parent could find out. Absolutely nothing. Because even with the power of the press, they found 246 cases that the Office of Professional Conduct wouldn't release even when ordered to do so by the state's Attorney General.

How's that for hubris? Ohio, however, isn't an exception to the belief of the Educational Establishment that they are above the law.
TT - Link

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Summary - October 16, 2007

WE'RE STILL SNICKERING
A middle school in Maine wants to make contraceptives available to students in the 6th and 8th grades. We're talking about 11-13 year olds. No doubt, it's in response to those 5 students a year who report sexual intercourse, or maybe it's the fact that the percentage of middle school students in Maine who reported having sexual intercourse dropped from 23 percent in 1997 to 13 percent in 2005, according to the Maine Youth Risk Behavior Survey. With some luck, this stupid school can reverse those figures.
TT - Link

TRUSTWORTHINESS PART III
We aren't talking about the school board member either.
TT - Link

SPEAKING OF BUBBLE GUM
Seventeen magazine, the slick publication for the bubble gum and plastic teenagers caught in a 1960s time warp, has an article in their November publication on "Predator Teachers." Don't rush out and buy a copy. We certainly aren't going to. But we link to our rant about the teacher.
TT - Link

The ABC's of BETRAYAL Part III ***** (Excellent)
The Columbus Dispatch has done an outstanding job in their series on teacher misconduct in Ohio and how the Ohio Department of Education fails at every level to demonstrate capability or concern for students or parents. Their arrogance is such that they won't release records even when ordered to do so by the state Attorney General. This is not a problem unique to Ohio. The same could be said about most states, but it takes a real newspaper to uncover the truth.
TT - Link

"Illinois does a poor job of dealing with teacher misconduct" *****
is the title of an article in the Small Newspaper Group in Illinois, written by Scott Reeder. He is the reporter who exposed "The Cost of Tenure" in Illinois. You wonder why teachers don't lose their certification? Two-thirds of the members of the certification board, under state law, are appointed by the two teacher unions. That's not all you will find out.
TT - Link

Tenured teacher resigns in Illinois
It's headline material because it doesn't happen that often unless, of course, the teacher is bargaining for a plea agreement. The teacher in this case, however, had no choice. He did the unthinkable -- he -- and we hesitate to write this -- was "racially insensitive." We know, we know, that it's 2007 and we're long past Jim Crow laws and pone dog sheriffs in the Deep South, but in Illinois, the desperate desire to revive racial hatred lives on in the politically correct world of school boards looking for moral authority. Why not just teach and earn parent's gratitude? Wait, that would be too much work. Our bad.
TT - Link

Mo' teachers strikes
Pictures of grown adults carrying signs saying "Fair Wages" or some such stupidity wouldn't inspire a good deal of respect in a five-year-old, but Pennsylvania teachers just love to demonstrate outside of schools anyway. At least none recruited their children to the picket lines.
TT - Link

SENTENCED to 50 years in prison
In Virginia, John Sexton Jr., will be away a while. He was sentenced to 50 years, with all but 15 years suspended for sex acts with a 14-year-old girl. He will be on supervised probation for the rest of his life.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - sex with student
Elaine Turner, 37, a Florida teacher was sentenced to 30 days in jail - not prison - for the sexual activity charge, as well as 30 days probation. For the aggravated battery charge, she was sentenced to 10 years probation and will be required to either spend 150 days at the Wakulla County Sheriff's Office work camp or 150 days at the Wakulla County Jail. The student was 17-years-old.
TT - Link

SENTENCED - Sexual contact of a minor
Don't ask us why Duriel Martin, 29, would climb through a window at 3 a.m. in a "highly intoxicated state and forcibly touch a 17-year-old daughter of a friend. "Former friend" is how the newspaper described the relationship. He was sentenced to one year, but the judge suspended six months of the sentence, allowing Martin to participate in a work release program. (New Mexico)
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Unlawful transaction with a minor
A band director in Kentucky was arrested and charged with misdemeanor unlawful transaction with a minor. Michael F. Colvett, 37, is getting a lot of support from students and alumni, which is always worrisome. Our experience has been that such cases usually end up with everyone feeling betrayed.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Animal cruelty
Those folks in Maine would be gasping in horror to hear that a teacher was alleged to be involved in a dog fighting operating. Daron Scott, 50, and his twin brother were arrested and charged with two counts of extreme cruelty to animals, a fourth-degree felony; two counts of animal cruelty, a misdemeanor; and one count each of conspiracy to commit extreme animal cruelty, a fourth-degree felony. (New Mexico) You realize that you can go to jail for a longer time for animal cruelty than you will if you sexually abuse a student?
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Lesbian sex with student
Erin Baker, 25, an assistant girls basketball coach, was arrested in Ohio for having sexual contact with the a female student. She worked for the school for four years.
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA - Child pornography
In Florida, John McNair, 59, was arrested after he called two women in Nashville and threatened to molest his granddaughter if they hung up. The FBI tracked him down and in a search found 160,000 pornographic images on his computer. McNair isn't a teacher, but he was reportedly engaged to a technology coordinator at an elementary school. She was suspended, but isn't accused of anything. He pleaded guilty to the child pornography and making threatening interstate telephone calls. Bizarrely, police also found dozens of Barbie dolls in various stages of undress in their search, even though McNair had no children in the home.
TT - Link

RELEASE FROM PRISON
David Kaster is due to be paroled Oct. 23. He was sentenced in November 2001 to nine years in prison after a jury convicted him of sexually assaulting three of his team members between March 1998 and April 2000. A a sex offender notification meeting is planned to discuss his release.
TT - Link

Monday, October 15, 2007

Summary - October 15, 2007

SENTENCED - sexual abuse
In Utah, Alan Roy Willey, was finally sentenced to prison for one to 15 years. The prosecutor called him a pedophile. The judge crticized school administrators who had opportunities to stop the sexual abuse of several students who reported it in past decades.
"Throughout his career Mr. Willey was shuttled from one place to another place with glowing letters of recommendation," Judkins said. "There are others here who bear some responsibility. The school districts shuttled him off. The buck stops here."
That's from the judge.
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA
Like Willey, Brett Zagorac's first trial ended in a mistrial when jurors deadlocked. He also successfully battled similar misdemeanor charges in Lake County. He pleaded guilty to a count of misdemeanor battery, saying he rubbed a boy's back in an inappropriate manner. In exchange for Zagorac's guilty plea, prosecutors agreed not to prosecute 12 other misdemeanor battery counts and 13 misdemeanor counts of criminal sexual abuse. We'd feel better if news stories assured us that he would never teach again. Failing that, we're glad we don't live in Indiana.
TT - Link

GUILTY PLEA
Rebecca Kelley, 24, pleaded guilty to four charges, including failing to report an offense involving a minor and three separate charges of contributing to the delinquency of a child. The sexual activity with the teenager stops short of having had sex with the boy. She'll be sentenced in November. (Arizona)
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sexual assault on a child
A theology teacher at a private Christian school in Vail, Colorado, was arrested in California. charged with sexual assault on a child by one in position of trust, a class four felony. Police allege an inappropriate relationship with a 17-year-old girl. The girl wanted to break off the relationship and sent an e-mail to John Allen, 27. Only she got the e-mail address wrong and the recipient in Florida notified police.
TT - Link

LAW$UIT COUNTY, USA
The Beaufort County Board of Education now claims that they never voted on the lawsuit settlement between the school district and former principal because the insurance company settled the claim and it didn't require their approval. They aren't releasing details and neither is the former principal. They'd like to. They really would. It's that pesky confidentiality agreement thing, you know. It's the same reason we don't know why they were liable for the $4.6 million to victims of Philip Underwood-Sheppard.
TT - Link

ABCs of BETRAYAL - Part II
The Columbus Dispatch continues their excellent series on teacher discipline in Ohio. They've done a great job of collating a good deal of information. They have a searchable database for the 1700 teachers who have been disciplined since 2000, and daily profiles of teachers who were disciplined. They found he biggest districts typically fail to report teacher discipline to the Ohio Department of Education. Amazingly, there's no penalty for districts that don't report. Be sure to read the comments at the site. Readers have an awareness of the problem that seems to have eluded educrats for decades.
TT - Link

Trustworthiness Pt III
When you have no moral authority, posturing over a school board member whose conduct is unbecoming of a human being, let alone an elected office, is just kinda shallow and self-serving. Granted, the board member ought to resign, but frankly, the Long Beach Press-Telegram hasn't much more integrity or character than does Michael Shane Ellis. They just kinda seem to deserve each other.
TT - Link

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Summary - October 14, 2007

ARRESTED - We've had at least three cases where drug sniffing dogs were brought to school and the only drugs they found belonged to a teacher. In Florida, Michael Allen Welch, was arrested when the dog homed in on his car in the school parking lot and police found marijuana.
TT - Link

EXCELLENT Series
The Columbus Dispatch has a new four-part series, the result of a 10-month investigation into teacher discipline in Ohio. Or, should we say, lack of discipline. They began the investigation after learning of school districts that kept two sets of disciplinary records -- one for the public and a secret set for administrators. They also found 246 discipline cases were secret, even to parents and schools. Even the Ohio Attorney General called the refusal of the state Department of Education to release records when ordered to do so, "Bullshit."
TT - Link

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Summary - October 13, 2007

Bad thing, bad thing
NBC San Diego went out on a limb to condemn teacher-student sexual relationships. Such relationships, they say, always cross a sacred line. Not to be picky, but the line is "decency." The word never shows up once in the article. We also take issue with declaring the problem is one of unequal relationship and authority. It's one of moral degeneracy and sexual predation and coercion.

The lengths that so-called intellectuals will go to condemn something without reference to morality or decency (or law) is amazing.
TT - Link

Credential Suspended
California authorities have taken the unusual move of suspending the credential of Franca Munoz-Juvera. She's one of the twins accused of having sex with a female student. What's odd is that California never suspends a credential before the legal process is completed. A teacher can be accused of multiple acts of murder and sex in the school cafeteria but will retain his or her license in California even if it takes 10 years for a trial to conclude. A clue might be that the school district announced that an outside investigator will look into the Adelanto district's procedures that allowed the Munoz-Juvera sisters to be hired. There's something in the teacher's history that, clearly, due diligence should have precluded hiring her. Our hope is that the father of the girl hires a good attorney to discover the same thing.
TT - Link

Nothing Else to Do
Van Clifton McKenzie-Adams was sentenced to seven years prison in 2004 for having sex with two students. Since that time, however, he appealed and lost a round in the Connecticut Supreme Court last February. Then he appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The high court has declined to hear the case. Now it's back to jail. The good thing, though, is his case has established that laws that criminalize teacher-student sex do not infringe on one's constitutional right to privacy.
TT - Link

Friday, October 12, 2007

Summary - October 12, 2007

SENTENCED - (sorta) Statutory rape and two counts of assault by offensive touching
In Tennessee, Gabriel Sanchez, 31, pleaded guilty to statutory rape and two counts of assault by offensive touching of a 17-year-old female student. He was sentenced to three years, except -- he is eligible as for alternative sentencing. A hearing will be held Nov 8 to determine if he will receive the alternative sentencing, which could range from probation to the community corrections program. (Good thing he doesn't shoot migratory birds.)
TT - Link

NO CONTEST PLEA - Murder
Retired Fresno Pacific University professor Clinton Pusey, 74, pleaded no contest to first degree murder of his wife. He beat her to death with a baseball bat and a hammer in their home in 2006. It's unlikely he will do any time. Both the defense and the prosecution agree Pusey was not aware of his actions when his wife was killed. A judge, however, will make the decision after a last round of mental evaluations.
TT - Link

UPDATE on Stephen Bolesky
Bolesky, a Vermont teacher, was scheduled for trial on murder charges for the death of his wife. Before he could be tried, a judge released him into a long-term medical facility where he was expected to receive end-of-life care. He died in June. His wife's sister, however, has a wrongful death suit against the estate and a judge has frozen the estate.
TT - Link

CONVICTED - Drunk Driving third offense
Because of a technicality, a Massachusetts teacher avoided jail time for his third drunk driving offense. We won't go into the reasons except that it take a particularly forgiving judge to side with the attorney's arguments. It's Massachusetts and we won't go into the health teacher who had five drunk driving arrests and couldn't be fired.
TT - Link

INDICTED - failure to register as a sex offender
He now lives in Canada, but Robert B. Johnson, 41, was convicted in 2004 and sentenced to four years for endangering the welfare of a child by videotaping a 14-year-old female victim naked in the bathroom of his house with a camera hidden in the heating grate of his basement After his release, he failed to register and failed to get approval for his living arrangements. He was indicted which means that should he return to the U.S., there is an active warrant out for his arrest. Johnson was a teacher at a private school in New Jersey for infants to the second grade.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Cocaine
In Pennsylvania, fourth-grade teacher Joseph R. Abraham, 53, was arrested after he bought cocaine. The story was brief and short of facts, but it is alleged that he has been buying for five months.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sex with 17-year-old male student
It's a great way to start your life in your first job. Jessica Kahal, 22, was arrested on suspicion of having sex with a student. The previous assistant band director at Helix High School in La Mesa, California, was sentenced to five years' probation in April for sex with a student. Maybe the school thought they were safe with a female band director.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sex with female student
A New Jersey P.E. teacher, Victoria Blevins, 23, was arrested sexual assault of a female student and official misconduct. The mother of the victim found an instant message on a computer suggesting that the student and teacher were having an inappropriate sexual relationship.
TT - Link

ARRESTED - Sexual assault of a student - a Class A felony.
It is alleged that Charles Harger, 45, had a sexual relationship in 2006 with a 16-year-old female student at Vilonia High School, where he was employed as a teacher. The assault case is still under investigation. (Arkansas)
TT - Link

CHARGED - felony homicide by vehicle, misdemeanor involuntary manslaughter
Pennsylvania school board member Ricky Lee Smiley, 42, was charged with felony homicide by vehicle, misdemeanor involuntary manslaughter and five summary offenses for a bus crash in 2006 that killed an elementary school teacher's aide. A bus driver for 18 years, Smiley was elected to the school board in Nov 2005. It's a human tragedy.
TT - Link

INDICTED - Gross sexual assault and unlawful sexual contact
Christopher Dumaine, 39, an English teacher in Maine, was indicted on on charges of having sex with a 16-year-old female student. He pleaded not guilty. He resigned from the school in September.
TT - Link

MOMENT OF SILENCE - is a lovely thing
You would think the world was coming to an end the way activists are reacting to the Illinois Legislature approval of a moment of silence at the beginning of each school day. Gov. Blagojevich vetoed the measure, but the Senate overrode the veto last week and the House voted 74-37 to override the veto. The bill was introduced by Rep. Will Davis (D-Homewood).
TT - Link

LAWSUIT
A Seabrook, New Hampshire middle school teacher who refused to stand for the Pledge of Allegiance is, with the help of the NEA, suing a the school district and the school principal for alleged retaliation for her actions. They didn't fire her outright, which was probably their second mistake. The first may have been to hire her.
TT - Link

THE STAPLER INCIDENT
A teacher's aide in Indiana was allowed to resign after he stapled a Post-It note to the forehead of a 9-year-old girl. No news story names the man because he is not under criminal investigation. The girl complained that her head hurt to the school nurse.
TT - Link

BIZARRE
In North Dakota, the Standards and Practices Board is considering action against a teacher who was sentenced to 18 months of probation after pleading guilty in June to the hunting violations. We've known teachers who had sex with 14-year-olds who receive less harsh sentencing.
TT - Link