Достопримечательности России
Tag Archives: bully cases

Rutgers Cyberbully Case: Defendant Plays Ball

7 May

PHOTO: Molly Wei

function displayCompanionBanners(banners, tracking) {
tmDisplayBanner(banners, adCompanionBannerObj, 300, 250, null, tracking);
}
function hideCompanionBanners() {
tmHideBanner(adCompanionBannerObj);
adContainer = document.getElementById(adCompanionContainer);
if(adContainer){
adContainer.innerHTML = ”;
}
}

The cyberbullying case of Tyler Clementi, the Rutgers University student who killed himself in 2010, reached a partial conclusion today as former Rutgers student Molly Wei agreed to cooperate with authorities. In exchange for help in the prosecution of a fellow student, Dharun Ravi, Wei agreed in court today to join an intervention program that requires her to perform 300 hours of community service over the next three years and undergo counseling for cyberbullying.

Wei and Ravi faced charges after Clementi, an 18-year-old Rutgers freshman, threw himself off the George Washington Bridge in September 2010, upon learning that Ravi had encouraged fellow students to view a webcast of Clementi and another man having sex. Wei’s laptop was used to view the webcam video; Wei also allegedly watched the sexual encounter.

Clementi’s family issued a statement today that said, “Actions have consequences. We wish that Ms. Wei will become a person who will make better decisions, will help people, and show kindness to those she comes in contact with.”

Wei’s attorney, Rubin Sinins, countered that while his client took responsibility for her actions, she had been unfairly maligned.


PHOTO: Molly Wei

PHOTO: Molly Wei













“She has been demonized as a cyberbully and sort of the poster child for cyberbullying, which could not be further from the truth,” said Sinins. He added, “Even before there was any arrest, even before there were any charges Molly was fully cooperative with law enforcement…”

New Jersey’s pretrial intervention program is available to first time non-violent offenders. If Wei meets all the requirements of the program, the charges against her will be dropped after a three-year period. She might otherwise have faced jail time for alleged invasion of privacy and other charges.

Clementi’s suicide caused national outrage and became a symbol of the problem of cyberbullying, much like the case of 15-year-old Phoebe Prince of South Hadley, Massachusetts. She killed herself in January 2010 after being bullied by classmates at South Hadley High School.

This week, five students in the Phoebe Prince case also faced a judge and pled guilty to various crimes. All five received sentences that included probation and community service. In court this week, Phoebe Prince’s mother, Anne O’Brien, lashed out at her daughter’s tormentors, calling one a “predator” and crying that another was “not capable of compassion.”

In their statement today, the Clementi family also denounced the callous behavior of their son’s fellow students.

“We are here to witness this criminal proceeding on Tyler’s behalf, on our own behalf, and on behalf of the many people throughout the country and the world following this case who are concerned that there be accountability for violations of basic standards of decent human behavior.”

But in an interview after Ms. Wei’s court appearance, attorney Sinins argued that sometimes those basic standards of decent human behavior were being violated by the very people who denounced cyberbullying.

“The paradox of this case and others like it is that those who may be accused of cyberbullying are maligned — and how are they maligned? In the context of this 24-hour online news cycle where misinformation spreads like wildfire… that’s the irony of the whole thing.” He said he wondered where Wei would go to get her reputation back after the charges against her were dropped.

The case against Dharun Ravi is still proceeding.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/rutgers-cyberbullying-case-defendant-molly-wei-cooperates-prosecutors/story?id=13546931

Legal maneuvering continues in York civil case alleging bullying caused …

23 Feb

Legal maneuvering continued Wednesday afternoon in York-Poquoson Circuit Court in the civil lawsuit brought by a York County mother who alleges that negligence by school officials contributed to her son’s suicide.

The defendants’ lawyer continued his argument that sovereign immunity clears the school officials of liability for simple negligence in the case, and substitute Judge Randolph T. West ruled on access to documents that he had reviewed since the last court date on Jan. 5.

West has given every indication that the case will end up before a jury, and continued to do so Wednesday. No trial date has been set, but West indicated the court will have a permanent judge in place by the time it gets underway.

Alise Williams is suing four current and former York County School Division officials for $10 million for wrongful death. Her son, Christian Taylor, a 16-year-old freshman at Grafton High School, took his life May 31, 2010, and Williams has accused school officials of failing to protect him from bullying at school.

Named in the lawsuit are 2009-10 Grafton High staffers: Principal Paul Hopkins, assistant principals Craig Reed and Karen Fahringer, and counselor Joseph Erfe.

The four defendants were present at the Jan. 5 hearing, but were not called to testify. Their lawyer, David Corrigan, said he was called in advance of Wednesday’s hearing and told they weren’t needed.

“This case is high-profile and you’d have a hard time finding jurors who haven’t read or heard anything about it,” West said. “The more we open up here, the more difficult it will be to find them. After reading the brief, I didn’t think I’d need witnesses to make a decision this afternoon.”

West said the case will go forward with the pleadings as they are, though the lawyers briefly debated sovereign immunity.

West ruled on the availability of documents that were subpoenaed from the York County School Board and York-Poquoson Social Services. He said some of them will be made available to lawyers from both sides, but can only be viewed at the courthouse for note-taking purposes with no photocopies being made.

He further restricted access by warning the lawyers that no one else should see their notes, and denied a request by Williams’ lawyers that an expert witness be allowed to see the documents.

“These are juveniles and I’m trying to protect their names,” West said.

http://www.dailypress.com/news/york-county/dp-nws-bullying-hearing-0217-20110216,0,7979247.story