Here we go again - pedophiles in schools

Discussion in 'In the News' started by 4north1side2, Nov 28, 2011.

  1. FG

    FG Well-Known Member

    What I meant is that you should probably put female in the title as you are focusing on the lack of punishment and attention to female perps - and that I totally agree with.

    Also: The term pedophilia is commonly used for kids that has not gone thought puberty yet - just a technicality that I think is important.
     
  2. Honestly? I don't think some 16 yr old is gonna be scarred for life for banging his 33 yr old teacher. Hell i had a few teachers i would have liked to bonk too. No as for Sandusky and that fuck from Syracuse...
     
  3. 4north1side2

    4north1side2 Well-Known Member

    The thread is a biased because it's much easier to the beautiful perps than men and everyone is well aware of the Sandusky case already.

    Everything about this post is retarded.
     
  4. Whatever, Nancy Grace.
     
  5. 4north1side2

    4north1side2 Well-Known Member

    Grown ass men can't even handle their emotions with women, what makes you think a 16 year old is ready for such an emotional rollercoaster? These women were preying on these boys because they are far to easy to manipulate with the ply of gifts and sex... Once they find their new flavor of the month, you think these lil boys will be able to handle that? That's like giving a million dollars to someone raised in the ghetto and taking it away.


    [​IMG]

    Gwinnett teacher quits after affair with student

    AJC exclusive: 1 alleged encounter happened in classroom during school hours



    ShareThis
    Print
    E-mail
    .
    By D. Aileen Dodd


    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    The Teacher of the Year at Shiloh High School has resigned after admitting to having a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old student, according to records obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.


    Enlarge photo


    www.homeworknow.com Keenon Hall



    Related
    State to investigate teacher's affair
    Blog: Sounds like a Lifetime movie
    .

    More Atlanta area news »
    Lt. Gov. Cagle to speak to Gwinnett chamber Dec. 14
    Holiday gala scheduled for Crabapple
    Police kill mother stabbing child
    Panel tackles judges' conduct
    Search: Georgia voter's guide
    .
    Keenon Aampay Hall, 29, left a promising career as an English teacher at the Gwinnett County school amid allegations that she seduced a senior who came to her for homework help. An investigative file on the case compiled by the school system’s human resources division contains the student’s accounts of sexual trysts at a hotel, a friend’s home and in the teacher’s classroom during school hours. The report also says that pornography was found on Hall’s Gwinnett County schools laptop.

    The student, a player on Shiloh’s football team who is to graduate Friday, claimed that Hall gave him gifts and pressured him to commit to their six-month relationship by giving her a baby, according to the file. When he declined, the student’s family said, Hall gave him a failing grade, prompting him to report the relationship to school officials.
    “The allegation of the inappropriate behavior came to light because the teacher decreased the student’s grade,” Gwinnett schools spokeswoman Sloan Roach said.

    Gwinnett County Public Schools police are investigating the incident. The governor recently signed a new law making it illegal for teachers to have sex with students, even if the sex is consensual. In addition, the Georgia Professional Standards Commission, which has the authority to revoke Hall’s teaching certificate, is scheduled to review the complaint next week.

    Hall, elected by her colleagues as Shiloh’s Teacher of the Year, could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

    “I am very disturbed by this situation, I think she should have been terminated,” said Ericka Pender, the teen’s mother, from her North Carolina home. “She wanted the relationship to go further and was threatening my son. She said she was going to make him fail.”

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution is not publishing the name of the student because it does not generally identify victims of sexual crimes.

    Sid Camp, executive director of Gwinnett’s Division of Human Resources, told the state that Hall “admitted to having a sexual relationship with the student.” Hall wrote a brief statement to the school district saying that it was a “consenual relationship,” misspelling the word. She said at least one other teacher knew about the romance.

    Connie Hall said her daughter is a stellar teacher admired by peers who went out of her way to help students learn. Keenon Hall went to Shiloh in 2004 as a substitute and worked her way from a teacher’s assistant to a respected certified teacher and cheerleading coach, her mother said. She said her daughter eventually became overwrought with stress caused by mouthy teens, pushy parents and administrators who failed to support hard-working teachers. She began to lose sleep and shed hair over her $35,600-a-year job, her mother said.

    “She loved teaching and thought she could change the world,” said Hall, who says she tried to push her daughter to seek a higher-paying profession. “My daughter didn’t have any inappropriate relationship with no under-aged student. She resigned for medical reasons, that’s what her paperwork shows.”

    The student recently told Shiloh administrators in a written statement: “One day in October I came after school for some extra studying with my teacher Kennon Hall ... She began touching me on my leg and then asked me when I was going to let her molest me. ... We began to laugh, then she asked me again, this time handing me a phone number and asked me to call. ...”

    According to the file, the student said that the teacher once paid for a cab to pick him up and take him to a hotel.

    “We entered the room ... then she gave me some vodka and ask me do I enjoy drinking?” he wrote. “I told her lies about being a good drinker, but honeslty after one drink I was done. She began feeling my man parts and we had sex.”

    The teen also told administrators that Hall gave him cash, a cell phone and had sex with him in a classroom, an encounter the teacher denies. The student said the teacher eventually turned on him because he didn’t want to get too serious. “What made Kennon Hall mad ... is the fact that I would not give her a baby.”

    Hall’s peers had voted her Shiloh High Teacher of the Year in the fall. Her name was touted in school bulletins; she gave inspirational speeches; and was recognized at a Gwinnett County awards dinner with other top district teachers. Her parents, who attended the banquet, said they were proud but wondered why she never got her Teacher of the Year ring.

    “She earned it,” her father, Dennis Hall, said. “I believe this is the action of Principal [Gwen] Tatum. It definitely opens the county up for a defamation lawsuit. ... How can seven years of teaching and a reputation be destroyed because of the word of one knucklehead? I think that’s wrong.”

    Hall has a bachelor’s degree from Georgia State University and has completed her master’s work, her parents said. On an application for her Gwinnett job she wrote that she was “uniquely qualified” because she has “a passion for education and working with children.”

    The student, now 18, relocated to Georgia from North Carolina to live with his uncle, Jason Pender, a football coach at Shiloh High. Ericka Pender allowed her son to leave home so he could focus on academics his senior year and graduate instead of getting distracted by old friends in Winston-Salem.

    Coach Pender said his nephew had been dating a teenager at school and didn’t seem any more stressed than most seniors trying to get into college. “I wondered how he got the cell phone when he was not working,” Pender said. He grew concerned when the teen’s progress report in English “went from an A to a D or F.”

    The student has accepted a full scholarship playing football at a North Carolina university. His excitement over graduation, however, is tempered with the buzz of students who giggle about the affair with Hall, his mother said.

    “Everyone talking about it bothers him,” Pender said. “I’m ready for him to graduate, come back home and go to college so this can be behind him.”

    How we got the story

    Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter D. Aileen Dodd received a tip from a source about reports of a teacher-student relationship at Shiloh High. Dodd sent a letter to Gwinnett County Public Schools requesting a copy of the teacher’s personnel file, the incident investigation and referral letter to the Georgia Professional Standards Commission. She later interviewed the parents of the teacher under investigation, family members of the student, other students and the Gwinnett County District Attorney for the story.
     
  6. Stizzy

    Stizzy Well-Known Member

    I would have loved my teachers sexing me, but the outcome would have been mentally fucked up on my behalf. Having a experienced adult doing things to me unimaginable. Then dumping me for that new flavor of the month?? :smt076. I feel you North, highschool students are not mentally ready. Most aren't anyway.
     
  7. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

    smh :confused:

    exactly. these mofos wished it would happen to them because they couldnt mack up on some pussy the right way.

    as far as sandusky and the other dick, the only person on the face of the earth would be down with that shit is Tirkah.
     
  8. Tirkah

    Tirkah Active Member

    Deadbeat mofo.

     
  9. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

    LOL. stop hating fool. I knew your stank ass would be stalking. LOL. lil bitch. LOL
     
  10. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    Let's be real the reason these women aren't ostracized is one they're hot(i'd bang 99% of them)
    Two I believe most of their so called victims were minorities and we already know the drill there.
    Three the vast majority wont do a day in jail. In this sexist patriarchial society men can't be victims and women can't be perverts.

    One a side note this supports my theory about teachers and social workers for the most part.
     
  11. 4north1side2

    4north1side2 Well-Known Member

    STUDY: More Than Half Of Black Girls Are Sexually Assaulted



    Written by Terrell Jermaine Starr on December 2, 2011 12:08 pm Click for MoreNext Post




    A NEWSONE EXCLUSIVE REPORT

    Sixty percent of black girls have experienced sexual abuse at the hands of black men before reaching the age of 18, according to an ongoing study conducted by Black Women’s Blueprint.

    More than 300 black women nationwide participated in the study and 700 more are being sought to take in the survey by March 2012.

    RELATED: An ‘Unlikely Victim’ Of Domestic Violence Speaks Out

    Farah Tanis, Co-Founder of the New York-based organization and co-author of the study, says the issue of domestic and sexual abuse in the black community is rarely discussed and that a sixty percent rate should be a wake-up call to black women.

    “A similar study which was conducted by The Black Women’s Health Imperative seven years ago found that that number was about 40 percent,” Tanis says. “So that means there is an increase and we need to stop neglecting that issue.”


    Dec. 1, 2011, left to right, Tanya Williams, member of Black Women's Blueprint; Olivia Dowd, Outreach Coordinator, Black Women's Blueprint; Kareen Odate, Acting Director of the Center for Women's Development at Medgar Evers College; Farah Tanis, Co-Founder and Executive Director of Black Women's Blueprint (NewsOne Photo/Terrell Jermaine Starr)

    D.C. Has No Love For Women Of Color

    The study comes just as U.S. Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) introduced legislation reauthorizing the landmark Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) this week.

    While domestic violence advocates praise both senators’ efforts to strengthen the bill, Tanis and other advocates who deal specifically with minority women are advocating for language in the new act that specifically allocates funds to communities of color. More specifically, Tanis and her organization are seeking funding for small community groups which have closer cultural ties to women of color that larger organizations don’t have.

    Rita Smith, the Executive Director of the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, a Denver-based national organization that develops policy on domestic violence issues, says smaller domestic violence groups are often better equipped to work with women of color than larger, more traditional organizations.

    “Reports from these local communities to their national representatives has made it clear for some time that victims who are Latino, African American, Asian and Native American have not been served adequately by mainstream programs,” Smith says. “For some communities it is important to establish services that address the cultural, spiritual or immigration status needs of victims, and while some mainstream programs attempt to respond to those needs, they are not universally addressing them in sufficient numbers.”

    VAWA, as it is currently written, does include language that allots “grants for outreach and services to under-served populations.” But no racial language is written into the act. Federal law prohibits legislation that earmarks government funding based on race.

    Back in 2005 when VAWA was being reauthorized, Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) fought unsuccessfully for race-specific language to be kept in a final draft of the act. He and several of his congressional colleagues expressed what they felt was Washington’s utter disregard for women of color.

    “This language was necessary because the bureaucrats at the Department of Justice were ignoring communities of color when considering grants from domestic violence, rape prevention and other organizations,” Conyers argued in Congress.

    Rep. Hilda Solis (D-Calif.), also lobbied for stronger language to be including in VAWA.

    “By addressing domestic violence in these communities in a way that understands their culture and honors their values, we greatly increase the chances of making a difference for women of color who are being abused,” she said.

    Washington’s historic rebuff to race-language provisions does not surprise Olivia Dowd at all.

    An outreach coordinator for Black Women’s Blueprint, Dowd feels policy makers have something of an elitist outlook concerning which organizations should get funding and who should be in charge of managing the resources.

    She says she has been in domestic violence sessions with mostly black women where she, despite her years of on-the-ground experience with women of color, often has to play second fiddle to a 20 or 30-something white woman with a graduate degree but lacks the sophisticated sass and ethnic intuition black women need to be uplifted emotionally from abusive relationships.

    “OK, this is the deal. Take this ‘V’ and put it on your head and then another ‘V’ because you are warrior women so get over it,”Dowd said, mocking a traditional letter-game exercise that encourages women in recovery to express themselves.

    “As black women, that’s how we talk to one another. That’s how we grew up. As oppose to being the white missionary saying ‘Oh, the poor natives, how bad! Let me kiss your wounds.’ [Black women] don’t work like that. That doesn’t work with us.”

    Call To Action

    Domestic violence advocates say black women should be particularly active in writing and calling their congressmen to support the reauthorization of the VAWA because it affects them more than any other racial group. In fact, Black women experience domestic violence at a rate 35 percent higher than white women.

    Advocates say VAWA needs to include language that:

    1.) Puts control of domestic and sexual abuse prevention in the hands of the community, and placing less emphasis on law enforcement. “Police are not the only answer,” Tanis says.

    2.) Empowers members of immigrant communities who, for example, would go to their Vodoun or Santeria priest for help before reaching out to a more traditional source of assistance like a domestic violence hotline.

    3.) Specifies the different facets of domestic abuse and that verbal violence should be legally prosecutable.

    4.) Recognizes that sexual assault in black community is a growing epidemic that requires special attention and resources.

    5.) Encourages and educates men, especially black men, on the issue domestic and sexual violence.

    This final point, is perhaps the most contentious issue of domestic and sexual violence in the black community.

    Kereen Odate, Acting Director at the Center for Women’s Development at Medgar Evers College in New York, says black women are reluctant to discuss sexual and domestic abuse for fear of “vilifying the black man.”

    Odate says there has always been something of an unexplored history of sexually dysfunctional behavior in the black community that dates back to slavery. For example, Odate cites mating practices that forced black male slaves to have intercourse with female slaves as the origin of shame that keeps black communities silence about domestic and sexual abuse to this very day.

    “You were raped,” Odate says, “but you weren’t raped because it was for the for purpose of making more kids to work on the plantation, so there’s a whole history involved.”

    Tanis, citing the 60 percent sexual assault rate, urges black women to be more proactive in advocacy issues like supporting VAWA because no one else will fight for needs on Capital Hill.

    “Its critical, whether or not we feel comfortable talking and doing something about it,” Tanis says”

    NEWSONE RESOURCES: Are You Being Abused?

    If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, there are organizations nationwide just a phone call away that can assist you.
     
  12. 4north1side2

    4north1side2 Well-Known Member

    I can't say how precise the above report is but I certainly can relate...

    Low point of my life, when my older half sister told my Mother that my Father was molesting her for years. Even tho I was young at the time, I always had the sneaking suspicion he was doing something he wasn't supposed to be doing because he would get up and go to the basement in the middle of the night where my sister stayed on a daily basis. Sometimes I'd creep up on on him but he'd hear before I get to the basement and pretend to be washing clothes.

    My Mother was severly hurt and angry ready to kill him but instead she was going to press charges... Thought it over and didn't press charges because ain't no way in hell she could of supported 3 kids on her own so she made him seek counseling.

    Like many other men, he walks around freely...but my Mother and Sister milks him for every penny at every chance rightfully so.
     
  13. FG

    FG Well-Known Member

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/...scandal-second-teacher-removed_n_1252540.html

    2nd Miramonte Teacher Identified in School Sex Scandal

    One if them has been in the school for 30 years and kids that have been subject to very disgusting treatment have parents that had the same teacher and was also subject to the same.

    Apparently, he had this game where he blind folded kids and fed them his sperm mixed w sugar and on cookies...

    Back in mid nineties two girls independently (apparently did not know eachother) reported him for presumably masturbating under his desk but they were dismissed for lying.


    Weirdest thing is that there was a teacher there that committed suicide in 2010 - it was assumed he did it over LA times publication of teacher evaluations but there was no suicide note and now, people wonder if it had anything to do with this scandal.

    http://articles.latimes.com/2010/sep/28/local/la-me-south-gate-teacher-20100928
     
  14. Stizzy

    Stizzy Well-Known Member

    Stupid fucks
     
  15. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

    I read about this the other day. Scandalous. Disgraceful. I'm sorry, but if you molest little children, you should be dragged into town, castrated, hands chopped off and dumped upside down in a trash can. Planet earth can do without vermin predators like him.
     
  16. Jase

    Jase Active Member

    I remember that guy. Wow he went to that school too?? Man talk about some bad luck with the faculty.
     
  17. qnet

    qnet New Member

    Dang! that's pretty nasty. I knew it was a mistake to read this story. I know I need to be informed but, I hate a lot of the stories in this section.
     
  18. FG

    FG Well-Known Member

    Well, no a woman teacher is suspected of having protected and abetted the sperm feeding sicko. That is a part fo what looks like a cover-up. This story is getting weirder by the minute. The original dude was warned he would get fired so he could resign before that happened and therefore save his pension and health insurance!
     
  19. TCFLORIDAGIRL

    TCFLORIDAGIRL Well-Known Member

    This is just not right, why the hell should he get pension and insurance after what he has done.....he really doesn't need that in prison anyway, does he....?
     
  20. FG

    FG Well-Known Member

    Apparently, a teacher at this very school was sentenced to 15 years due to lude acts with school children in 2003 - The school was to pay 1.6 millions in damages. This is just getting very weird.
     

Share This Page