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US Supreme Court Passes on Cyber Bullying Cases; School’s Try to Help

21 Jan

By
KSEE News


January 20, 2012

Updated Jan 20, 2012 at 10:24 PM PST

The US Supreme Court is taking a pass on a set of cyber bullying cases; it’s a big disappointment for those trying to fight off the online attacks.

The Court decided not to take up one case out of West Virginia; it involved a web page that alleged another student had a sexually transmitted disease. The court decided to let the suspension of the student who created it—stand.

Another case came out of Pennsylvania; two students wrote parodies about their principals on MySpace. The court stayed out of the rulings that said schools couldn’t discipline the two students.

As the courts step away, the problem of cyber bullying is continuing to plague students all across the nation.

It’s a social media virus that’s infecting our youth. “We asked kids how many people have been bullied online through text and the majority raised their hands,” says Hanford Chief Investigator Karl Anderson. “Then we asked how many told and adult—there were very few.”

It’s a problem the Supreme Court is leaving to the schools and a decision that is disappointing the National School Board Association who says, “We’ve missed the opportunity to really clarify for school districts what their responsibility and authority is,” said Francisco Negron, general counsel of the National School Boards Association. “This is one of those cases where the law is simply lagging behind the times.”

The law might be lagging but cyber bullying is growing. “Every case is different from the minute ‘I don’t like you, you’re ugly’ to trying to destroy someone’s reputation,” says Anderson. He gives cyber bullying classes at Pioneer Middle School. It’s just one of thousands of schools trying to prevent the painful scars words can leave behind. “Traditional bullying happened on a playground, someone pushed someone down; it stayed at school two or three people saw it,” says Anderson. Now, it’s become a phenomenon—texts, posts—it’s a virus that’s spreading and schools can only do so much. “We can’t look at students cell phones and we can’t get on their Facebook page or twitter page,” says Pioneer’s Principal Greg Henry.

If bullying happens on kid’s route to campus, the school could step in; if it happens outside of school, parents or students have to report it. The situation has to disrupt the education process. “It’s also a grey area,” says Henry.

It’s a fine line the Supreme Court—at this point—won’t define. “I do think the Supreme Court might have taken the easy way out but it’s a grey area and it’s going to grow from here,” says Henry.

Many parents may monitor their children’s social media activity but do you have the right page? During cyber bullying presentations investigators say numerous kids admit to having a fake profile for their parents and a real one for themselves.

Christina Lusby Reporting.

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http://www.ksee24.com/news/local/Cyber-Bullying---CLU-137794598.html

Judge Defines Bullying in Case Involving City Schools

24 May

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Judge Defines Bullying in Case Involving City Schools

by Emily Jane Goodman
May 2011

Bullying once meant dipping a schoolgirl’s braids in the desk inkwell or throwing snowballs at the new kids. But 21st century bullying can involve schoolhouse shootings, tormenting gay classmates, ruinous sex videos, devastating Internet abuse and suicides. The new extremes may be due to increasing violence among children, and, ironically, may also flow from diversity, which provides bullies with targets who look or sound different or may be gay, or have disabilities.

In a federal lawsuit brought against New York City’s Department of Education by the parents of LK, then a 12-year-old pupil at P.S. 6 on Manhattans upper east side, Judge Jack Weinstein of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York has framed a test for defining schoolhouse bullying. Although the child in this case has disabilities, Weinstein’s approach appears to be generally applicable.

Defining Bullying

The test, the judge wrote is, whether the conduct is “sufficiently severe, persistent or pervasive that it creates a hostile environment,” which the school does not correct and so “deprives a student of substantial educational opportunities.” The victim need only show that the bullying is likely to affect the student’s opportunity for an appropriate education.

The primary characteristic of bullying, as contrasted with rough play or teasing, involves power struggles based on a perception of strength (the bully) and weakness (the victim). According to a report of a recent White House Conference on Bullying Prevention, the critical element of bullying is “unequal and coercive power” or “at least a perceived advantage for the bully either physical or psychological.”

LK, originally diagnosed as autistic and later as learning disabled, was enrolled in a class of children of varying abilities. The allegations, officially undocumented but confirmed by special aides assigned to her while in school, included that other children laughed at her when she tried to speak in class, tripped her in the hallways and generally shunned her to the point of refusing to touch any object she had touched. In this case, the only report the school provided described LK as the aggressor.

Testifying at an administrative hearing, the school’s principal could not recall what, if any, investigation she had done into complaints made by LK’s parents. According to the plaintiffs — the parents — heir child was not protected at schools and became fearful and discouraged about school. As a result, the family transferred the girl to a private school at their own expense.

Alleging a failure by the city to provide LK with a suitable learning environment and education, the lawsuit sought recovery of the costs incurred for private school. The defendants, however, counter that the transfer was not necessary and so the public should not have to pay for the private school. Where the public school system is unable to or fails to provide an appropriate education for a child with disabilities and her needs can instead be met in a private school, the family need not pay the costs.

The parent also asserted that LK had progressed in school, an issue the judge said did not nullify the hostile environment or bullying.

Weinstein wrote, “This case presents the largely unresolved issue of the extent to which bullying by other students inhibits a disabled child from being educated appropriately, and what her school must do about it.”

Outlawing Bullying

Under federal law, all public schools receiving federal funds must provide an education appropriate to each childs abilities and disabilities. Federal law further requires that harassment of someone because of a disability must be investigated and responded to promptly and appropriately. The question to be asked and answered in this case and all cases, Weinstein said, is “Whether school personnel [were] deliberately indifferent to, or failed to take reasonable steps to prevent bullying that substantially restricted a child with learning disabilities in her educational opportunities.”

In a long opinion replete with citations to academic articles on education, psychology, sociology, and law, Weinstein referred to New York State’s recently enacted Dignity for All Students Act, which is to become effective in 2012. That law is meant to assure “all students in public schools an environment free of discrimination and harassment.” (For more, see Governor Signs Bill to Combat Bullying.) But the city has not implemented its own version of an anti-bullying law, although a regulation has been adopted. State law, when it goes into effect, would be available to victims in city public schools.

LK’s parents had also claimed that they were not included in the child’s Individualized Learning Plan, a program required for all students with disabilities, but the court dismissed this claim.

Based on Weinstein’s preliminary findings and operative definition of bullying, the case can now proceed to trial to determine whether LK’s treatment and neglect falls within the judge’s parameters of what constitutes bullying. Trial evidence must establish whether she was the victim of bullying, and whether the unchallenged harassment in school had the effect of denying her a full, appropriate public education.

Emily Jane Goodman is a New York State Supreme Court Justice

Discuss this Article

View the discussion thread.

Other Related Articles:
As School Suspensions Soar, Many Seek a Different Approach (2011-04-01)

Education Department Slashes Plans for Building More Schools (2011-03-18)

City Students Fall Short in Science (2011-03-10)

With More School Closings, Debate About Policy Continues (2011-01-31)

Council Approves Bill to Require School Safety Reports (2010-12-21)

Same-Sex Marriage, Abortion on Crowded Civil Rights Agenda (2010-12-16)

Parents, Officials Seek to Rid Schools of Toxic PCBs — Now (2010-12-10)

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http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/Law/20110524/13/3532

Three more teens in bullying case head to court

5 May


but we begin this half hour with new details from the
phoebe
prince case. she’s the
young girl
who took her own life after bullies bully bullied her at school. jeff is in hadley, massachusetts.

reporter:
this case set the tone. if you’re a bully, you can be charged with real crimes by police and prosecutors. the kids, six of them in hadley, massachusetts, were charged with serio serious, serious charges. most are striking plea deals to avoid jail time altogether. we never heard from them themselves. they’ve never spoken about what happened. they never apologized until now. in court wednesday, one of the so-called
mean girls
broke down. she now admits she bullied 15-year-old
phoebe
prince at school and online.


i am sorry,
phoebe
. i’m sorry for ton kind things i said to others about you. i’m sorry about the unkind posting on my facebook page. but mostly i am sorry for
january 14th
of
2010
in the library and in the hallway when i laughed one someone said humiliating things at you. i’m sorry for the tramgy and the prince family who i know has been suffering since that awful day.


but
phoebe
prince would never live to hear that apology. for this
young girl
the torment was too much. according to the court papers they called her a whore, threatening to punch her in the face. while walking home from school they said, why don’t you just kill yourself and she did. she hanged herself at home. her mother has been silent ever since but opened up for the first time wednesday, facing
phoebe
‘s alleged bullies in court.


as i said my final good-bye to
phoebe
at the crematorium, i held her for the very last time. my
little girl
once so full of life was not so cold. i asked her what am i going to do. people trusted
sean
mulvespill, guide her through the maze of the school. i can only imagine the pain that she felt in his unrelenting desire to harass and humiliate her.

reporter:
wednesday both reached deals with prosecutors.


guilty.


thank you, sir.

reporter:
misdemeanor, criminal harassment. probation and one year of
community service
. sources close to the case tell nbc news three others will strike the same deal later today.


is
phoebe
‘s family satisfied with this, the kids get nothing jail time?


yeah. i don’t think anybody wanted to see the kids go to jail.

reporter:

phoebe
‘s mom signed off to akroid going to trial but you can hear the hurt in every word.



phoebe
ended her pain by the harass management.

reporter:
heart-wrenching to be sitting there in the courtroom. there really wasn’t a dry eye in the entire house. it’s been nearly a year. the
criminal case
will come to an end. as we mentioned the five or six kids have struck plea deals. this boy is charged with
statutory rape
. he denies that charge. he apparently isn’t wheeling and dealing with prosecutors and plans on fighting the charge, meredith. he eelg be in court over the summer.


thank you very much. emily is a writer and senior editor for “slate” magazine. good morning. as jeff pointed out all six of these teens, two of them have pleaded guilty to criminal harassment and criminal misdemeanor. we’ll probably see the same lenient sentence. are you surprised by the outcome here?


it’s hard to square the outcome with the very serious felony charges that were filed but i’m not surprised to the degree that
phoebe
‘s family supported the deal and also i think a sense of proportional punishment took over in the d.a.’s office.


why are you not surprised her family, specifically her mom, is all right with this because obviously she’s heartbroken and angry.


absolutely. but her father wanted them to acknowledge their wrong and apologize. and we saw i think kayla do that in a moving and brave way yesterday.


do you believe in your report that justice has been done here? i ask you that because the last time you were on you had written a piece that had suggested quite clearly that you felt maybe these kids should not be charged with any crimes.


i do think there’s a question about using the
criminal justice system
in situations like this, but i also think that listening to the facts recounted yesterday that a misdemeanor harassment and seeing them acknowledge what they had done seemed like it was bringing some relief to
phoebe
‘s family, and perhaps to them as well in the sense that these cases are over. these very serious charges have been hanging over the heads of these kids for a year and that is punishment itself.


and the kind of ha asment they subjected
phoebe
to, they have been received, death threats, messaging over the internet, the reaction if the people you saw there when these sentences were handed down.


you know, it was just a very sobering moment and occasion, and i think that there was a way in which
phoebe
‘s mother was able to speak. and i hope that gave her some comfort. she really expressed herself clearly as did kayla. so there was a senn of kind of a
public accounting
.


so you didn’t get a sense that because there was such outrage that that continues to be the case? have you seen those sentences come down?


i think that’s right. i think there’ll be pockets of upset online, but i think a lot of people, particularly in
south hadley
, feel relief that this case is coming to an end.


and there is another student that’s involved in this,
austin
. he was charged with
statutory rape
as was
sean
. do you anticipate the charge will also be dropped for
austin
?


i do think that would be a fair outcome given the outcome of
sean
‘s
statutory rape
charge.
austin
‘s is different in the case that there isn’t necessarily a lesser case for him to plead to. we’re talking about an 18-year-old who allegedly had sex with a 15-year-old and who denies it. you know, those are the facts at issue.


and finally do you think there is a message here that kids will receive loud and clear about bullying, specifically during this period where
social media
is so prevalent, that it can be criminalized?


it can be and it’s risky. kids write all kinds of really mean things on facebook and most of the team people don’t pay attention, but sometimes it can really come back to bite you because there’s a permanent record of the krult you are part of.


sad all the way around.


really sad.

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/42915959/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

High court hears case of bullied Mentor teen

21 Feb

Click to enlarge

Eric Mohat

The Ohio Supreme Court heard oral arguments Wednesday in the case of a teen who killed himself after he was allegedly repeatedly bullied at Mentor High School.

Justices must now decide whether certain claims made by the estate of 17-year-old Eric Mohat can proceed in federal court.

U.S. District Judge Donald C. Nugent previously asked state justices to rule on whether a lawsuit filed by the teen’s parents against the school is void because Eric’s estate was not established until after the lawsuit filing deadline had passed.

Neither side disputes the estate was mistakenly opened in Cuyahoga County nearly three months after the suit was filed.

Mohat attorney Kenneth D. Myers argued the complaint is not barred by the two-year statute of limitations and that a separate probate attorney who filed the estate did not mean to misrepresent anything to the court.

“There’s room for those types of things to be corrected,” Myers said. “The error was corrected.”

Attorney Paul Flowers, who also represents Bill and Janis Mohat, told justices, “There’s no question mistakes were made in this case.”

Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor questioned why the high court should allow the case to go forward with “mistake after mistake after mistake.”

The school district’s attorney, David Kane Smith, said the estate’s claims are time-barred and void.

The Mohats filed a lawsuit in 2009 claiming their son shot himself in the head on March 27, 2007, after months of persistent bullying in math class.

The Mohats claim teachers and other employees witnessed Eric being teased and hit but took no action.

School attorneys claim his parents’ own negligence contributed to the suicide.

Justices are not expected to rule on the question of law for several months.

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http://morningjournal.com/articles/2011/02/17/news/doc4d5d09949587b240145278.txt

CMPD investigates cyberbullying from "burn page"

19 Feb

CHARLOTTE, N.C.–The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department is investigating a case of cyberbullying that involves a 14-year-old student pictured on what’s called a “burn page.”

Those burn pages have popped up all over Facebook and are often associated with schools.

Students use them to slam other students, posting gossip and sometimes vicious opinions.

The case reported to CMPD involves the “Ranson Burn Page” associated with Ranson Middle School off Statesville Road.

The victim’s mother, Amber Lee, says she got a phone call from her 14-year-old daughter after some students made reference to a picture and sexually explicit comment posted on the page.

“Right there, on the front page was a picture of my daughter,” she says.

The “Ranson Burn Page” is now private, but as of Friday afternoon, was still on Facebook.

It has been reported, and it is not clear why it hasn’t been removed.

http://www.wcnc.com/news/local/CMPD-investigating-cyberbullying-from-burn-page-116504028.html