School Accused of Covering Up Sex Assaults

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Updated:2007-02-07 19:41:40
School Accused of Covering Up Sex Assaults
$15 Million Lawsuit Filed Over Rapes of First-Graders
By MICHAEL RUBINKAM
AP
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (Feb. 7) - 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.

"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 school officials cannot be held responsible under the Constitution 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.

"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.

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."

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2007-02-07 16:26:34
Source: Top News- School Accused of Covering Up Sex Assaults - AOL News

I'm not happy w/this one... :pissed: Why they are attempt molested young children at the school or other place professional..
Piece shit of it..
 
The school should have done something about this if they KNEW about F.H. yet administrators kept quiet and allowed F.H. to remain in school, This is BS, I don't care how poor the school district is, their job IS to protect these students, and they failed to do so....I wish there was some laws that will make ALL the school districts to take this matter seriously by reporting such a case to the police department and the parents, that teacher should have never allowed to remain back in school after what he did to these students...I hope the laws get tougher on cases like this otherwise the school districts will continue to keep quiet about this....
 
I didn't read much any of it, although I'd like to point out that's a fucking lot of money. I come to the conclusion that this just might be a scam, it's not the first time it's happened. People do file false claims just to sue other people and earn money. The sad part is it actually works in alot of cases. Perhaps I should read it, maybe later... too tired.
 
ew... that's plain sick I feel sorry for 1st grader cuz he will be scarred with what 12 years old did to him.. ugh makes me sick.. that's nice work to see younger kids becoming child molesters at such young age! sheesh.. they need help b4 it can get worse.. blah
 
*shake my head*

12 years old need a professional help. We need to find out why he did to 1 grader.
 
I'm not surprised about the school trying to cover something up like that.. Just like the Government does on many things. I feel bad for that 1st grader though. Just goes to show how sick (young or old) people can really be..
 
The school should have done something about this if they KNEW about F.H. yet administrators kept quiet and allowed F.H. to remain in school, This is BS, I don't care how poor the school district is, their job IS to protect these students, and they failed to do so....I wish there was some laws that will make ALL the school districts to take this matter seriously by reporting such a case to the police department and the parents, that teacher should have never allowed to remain back in school after what he did to these students...I hope the laws get tougher on cases like this otherwise the school districts will continue to keep quiet about this....

Yes. There was a case close to where I live last year of a teenaged MR student that was sexually asaulted by a couple of students, and when she went tot he principal, the principal just ignored it. Lawsuit filed, principal and superintendent lost their jobs.
 
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