• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: 20 children among at least 51 killed by vast Oklahoma tornado
  • Recommended: 'Bless you for posting': Facebook group reunites tornado victims with photos, documents
  • Recommended: More 'devastating' tornadoes possible on Tuesday, forecasters warn
  • Recommended: 'The school started coming apart': Trapped students had nowhere to hide

NBC News reporters bring you compelling stories from across the nation. For more US news, follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 9
    Jul
    2012
    2:21pm, EDT

    Man accused of threatening former high school classmates before 20-year reunion

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Bexar County Sheriff's Office

    Jason Carroll Moss, 38, was arrested Friday night.

    A 38-year-old Texas man who says he was bullied in high school has been accused of threatening his San Antonio classmates online before his 20-year reunion.

    Jason Carroll Moss was arrested Friday night, just as the reunion weekend kicked off at a bar in Fair Oaks Ranch, according to the San Antonio Express-News. Moss was charged with misdemeanor harassment and released early Saturday on a personal recognizance bond.

    Moss was arrested after some people who noticed the online posting contacted police.


    Police say Moss reportedly admitted to posting harassing messages on a Facebook page for the John Marshall High School Class of 1992, the Express-News reported. He claimed he did so to prevent further bullying during the reunion, according to the Express-News.

    About 150 people attended Saturday night’s event in the San Antonio area as police patrolled nearby.

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

    According to the Express-News, arrest warrant affidavit included Moss's Facebook comment:


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “I stayed away from graduation at the time because I would have started the Columbine shootings early. I was picked on and bullied by a bunch of you when I went to school and I wanted to kill everyone that hurt me. I'm still seeking vengeance on all those who bullied and harassed me when I was growing up or went to school. You people do not know what you did to me.”

    No published phone number could immediately be located for Moss and msnbc.com could not reach him for comment.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Kayaker being trailed by great white: I 'turned and paddled'
    • Relief from heat, but severe storms loom
    • Family: Man holding fake gun, but police shoot him
    • Teens dumped 76-year-old man in canal, police say
    • Video: Scott Peterson appealing murder conviction

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    62 comments

    Just goes to show the mental damage bullying does. I feel sorry for this man, what ever these bullies did to him caused him great grief over the years to carry a grudge this long.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, harassment, bullying, facebook, bully
  • 4
    Jul
    2012
    7:39am, EDT

    Report: Missile Defense Agency chief Lt. Gen. Patrick O'Reilly bullied staff

    Alex Wong / Getty Images, file

    Director of the Missile Defense Agency Army Lt. Gen. Patrick O'Reilly testifies during a hearing before the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee on September 24, 2009. He is described as a bullying manager in a report dated May 2, 2012.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    WASHINGTON - The U.S. Missile Defense Agency's chief routinely bullied his senior staff, chilling discussion of thorny issues in the multibillion-dollar program he runs, the Defense Department's inspector general said in a report made public on Tuesday.

    Army Lieutenant General Patrick O'Reilly, who has headed the Pentagon arm since November 2008, demeaned and belittled subordinates, making them reluctant "to speak up and raise issues during meetings with him," said the 19-page report dated May 2.


    The agency is developing, testing and fielding a layered shield against ballistic missiles that could be fired by countries like Iran and North Korea.

    It manages research, development, testing, purchases and stitching together complex systems on land, at sea and sensors in space.

    Russia tests missile designed to counter US defense shield

    The $10 billion-a-year effort has a long record of flight-test failures and successes as well as the biggest research budget of any Pentagon program. Some critics have derided it as a boondoggle for contractors including Lockheed Martin Corp, Boeing Co, Raytheon Co and Northrop Grumman Corp.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The inspector general interviewed O'Reilly and 33 other witnesses with knowledge of the matters at issue for a preliminary report. Another four were added at O'Reilly's request, but they were not in a position to comment on certain events at issue, the report said.

    Several witnesses testified that fear of O'Reilly's reactions "impeded the flow of information," the investigation found. It was first reported by The Cable, a Web-based newsletter of Foreign Policy magazine.

    'US Navy lit up the sky': Interceptor for Europe anti-missile shield tested off Hawaii

    A spokeswoman for the inspector general, Bridget Serchak, said such reports typically were made public only after receipt of at least three requests for them under the Freedom of Information Act.

    'Dirt beneath his feet'
    The report said five witnesses told inspectors that O'Reilly's leadership, described by the investigators as marked by yelling and screaming, was either the main factor or a contributing factor in their decision to leave the agency.

    "We received consistent testimony that as a result of his management style, even senior officials stopped communicating" with O'Reilly, the report said.

    Leon Panetta seeks another $70 million for Israel's 'Iron Dome' rocket shield

    The inspector general recommended the secretary of the army consider "appropriate corrective action" with regard to O'Reilly. Army representatives did not return phones calls seeking comment.

    The Cable quoted some descriptions of O'Reilly's leadership style highlighted in the report, including:

    • The worst manager I've worked for in 26 years of public service
    • As a leader, as a director, whatever, he's the worst
    • In terms of leadership, bottom
    • Absolutely last, out of all the generals I've served under
    • Without a doubt ... the worst leader I've worked for, the worst
    • He has probably been 100 degrees out from everything I've learned about leadership
    • How not to act
    • What doesn't kill you makes you stronger
    • Not the command climate I would have set

    One witness described his personality as "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," The Cable said.

    "LTG O'Reilly would 'berate you, make you feel like you're the dirt beneath his feet,' then pay a compliment to rebuild the employee and later repeat that cycle," the report said.

    Highly intelligent
    O'Reilly, in a response summarized in the final report, questioned the accuracy of witness testimony and denied engaging in many of the alleged brow-beating practices.

    He stated that he had initiated weekly meetings with top aides to make sure that effective lines of communication stayed open. Richard Lehner, a spokesman for the Missile Defense Agency, had no comment on the report.

    A majority of the witnesses testified that O'Reilly was highly intelligent, "even brilliant," and possessed a high degree of expertise in managing purchases, the report said.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Kids cross border alone, fleeing drugs and games
    • Fire evacuation sparks panicked pet exodus
    • Inmate serving life sentence won't be charged in killing of another prisoner
    • Independence Day irony: PTSD has many vets dreading, avoiding fireworks
    • Could you pass the US citizenship test?
    • T-shirt fundraiser for wildfire relief takes off
    • Video: Casino seeks machine gun range
    • The doctor will see you now, for $5

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    96 comments

    This is pathetic. They guy is a mental misfit. He should be stripped of his stars, demoted 10 ranks, and court marshalled. There is no excuse for anyone using these kinds of de-humanizing techniques, even in a military environment. And we taxpayers are footing the bill for $10 billion a year for pro …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: security, pentagon, defense, missile, bullied, staff, featured, bully, patrick-oreilly
  • 29
    Jun
    2012
    2:51pm, EDT

    Parents of 'Bully' teen appeal dismissal of lawsuit over son's suicide

    Brian Ach / AP Images for National Center for Learning Disabilities

    David and Tina Long watch "Bully" director Lee Hirsch speak at the National Center for Learning Disabilities' 35th Annual Benefit Dinner at the Mandarin Hotel on April 18 in New York City.

    By msnbc.com staff

    The parents of a Georgia teen whose suicide was included in the 2011 documentary “Bully” are appealing a judge's decision to dismiss their federal lawsuit against the Murray County school district, which they blame for his death through “deliberate indifference” toward years of bullying.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The attorney for David and Tina Long says a notice of appeal was filed June 15, NBC station WRCB of Chattanooga, Tenn., reported.  The Longs’ son, Tyler, was found dead on Oct. 17, 2009, hanging by a belt tied to a closet shelf in his room.


    Tyler, who had Asperger’s syndrome, had been picked on since the fifth grade, the Longs claimed. He was unable to comprehend certain facial expressions and body language, so kids would take advantage of him, they said.

    The Chatsworth Police Department said it would not bring any criminal charges for events leading up to Tyler's death, WRCB reported in 2009.  

    The Longs in 2010 sued the school district and the principal of Murray County High School in Chatsworth, claiming Tyler killed himself because school officials failed to protect him from the bullying even though middle school and high school administrators had been told of the harassment and of Tyler’s medical conditions.

    On May 23, Judge Harold Murphy of the U.S. District Court in Rome, Ga., tossed out the suit in a 186-page ruling favoring the school district:

    "Even viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to Plaintiffs, the Court cannot find that Defendants' response was clearly unreasonable, caused additional harassment, or demonstrates an official decision by Defendants not to remedy disability harassment. Under those circumstances, the Court finds that Defendants' actions do not rise to the level of deliberate indifference."

    Tina Long  told WRCB after the ruling, "We're in shock. The judge seemed to agree with us, but has dismissed the case."

    The Longs this week told WRCB they are hoping to appeal, but say their ability to fight the case in court could be hampered by a lack of money.

    “Based on the ruling, even if a school is aware that a student is being severely abused on an ongoing basis and fails to protect him, they are immune from liability,” the Longs said in a prepared statement. “Parents all over the country need to know of this ruling. We, as parents, thought that the school was legally obligated to protect our kids, and we vow to try with everything that we have to make that happen."

    The Longs' lawyer, W. Winton Briggs, told WRCB in a statement:

    "This outrageous ruling and application of the law needs to be exposed. The decision is shocking in that the judge found that Tyler was the subject of ‘severe, nearly constant bullying.' The case came to rest on the exceedingly high standard constituting Deliberate Indifference, which needs to be reformed to protect our children.”

    Murray County school officials did not immediately respond to msnbc.com requests for comments.

    After Murphy’s ruling, defense attorney Martha Pearson said school officials were “extremely pleased with the result,” the Daily Citizen of Dalton reported.

    The film "Bully" features a town meeting hosted by WRCB in Chatsworth in 2009. The film also traces bullying incidents involving other families from around the United States.

    The Longs also took their anti-bullying case to national television, appearing with Ellen DeGeneres on “Ellen” in March with their twins, Troy and Teryn, who they said are still bullied at school even after Tyler’s death. “Bully” filmmaker Lee Hirsh also appeared.

     

     

    Msnbc.com's Jim Gold contributed to this article. Follow him on Facebook here.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • LA police: 'Teardrop Rapist,' wanted since 1996, may have struck again
    • Alleged Fort Bragg shooter faced court martial, discharge, officials say
    • Report: US student fighting for life after chimps attack
    • Video: Zoo chimps separated after mauling of baby primate
    • You're probably losing $155K from your 401(k) plan

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    169 comments

    The school admins get out of it... yet again. Nobody ever seems to notice bullying when it's going on, and as soon as something comes from it, the bully getting maced, or the victim committing suicide, the admins deny all knowledge. Or in the case of the victim fighting back, then THEY get punished  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: georgia, bullying, parenting, bully, tyler-long, charsworth, murray-county
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    6:16pm, EDT

    Around-the-world cruise? Private island? Where to go with a half-million-dollar vacation budget

    Three of the four boys who were taped tormenting a school bus monitor have apologized for their behavior in statements released through police. NBC's Craig Melvin reports from Rochester, N.Y.

    By Harriet Baskas, NBC News contributor

    Question: Where does a 68-year-old school bus monitor who’s had it up to here with bullying kids go for some rest and relaxation?


    Follow @msnbc_travel

    That’s the $561,000 (and growing) question for Karen Klein. After a YouTube video showing her being verbally assaulted was posted Monday, more than 24,000 people have contributed to a campaign on fundraising website Indiegogo.com to give her a well-deserved vacation.

    The campaign has so far raised more than a half million dollars. “That’s the highest amount of funding an Indiegogo campaign has raised in such a short amount of time, said Rose Levy, a company spokesperson.


    Klein, a grandmother of eight, may not be ready to accept Southwest Airlines’ offer of a group trip to Disneyland, which is no doubt overrun with schoolchildren on summer vacation.

    So we asked several travel agents from Virtuoso, a network of luxury-focused travel agencies, for suggestions of how Klein might get some peace and quiet.

    “She definitely deserves a trip,” said Ansley Thomas, a travel advisor in Atlanta who works with New York-based SmartFlyer.com.

    The NOW w/ Alex Wagner panelists talk about how Karen Klein, a 68-year old school bus monitor who was bullied relentlessly from a group of seventh grade kids.

    “She might decide to take that Disneyland trip with her grandchildren after all,” said Thomas, “but after that I’d suggest an around-the-world trip with Crystal Cruises, a luxury line.” Cost: Up to $60,000 per person. 

    Thomas also suggested a first-class around-the-world trip by plane. “I’d suggest she visit the places on her bucket list or pick a theme, maybe the Seven Wonders of the World, and design her trip around that.” Cost: Up to $100,000.

    “After that terrible experience and all this attention, Klein might want to take a trip that’s all about regrouping and taking care of herself,” said Kristen Pike and Jessica Maxwell at Atlanta-based Currie & Co. Travels Unlimited. 

    Pike and Maxwell suggested Klein consider an island vacation.

    They suggest Sir Richard Branson’s 74-acre private British Virgin Islands retreat, Necker Island, which can accommodate up to 28 people. Cost: $42,500 to $56,000 per night.

     And there's Musha Cay, the 150-acre island in The Bahamas owned by entertainer and magician David Copperfield. Cost: $37,500 per night for 12 guests; $52,500 per night for 24 guests.

    “Of course we’d want to chat with Klein about her personal dreams and make an itinerary especially for her,” said Pike. “But without a doubt, for $500,000 she’ll be able to get exactly the type of trip she wants.”

    More stories you might like:

    • How hotels are embracing online customer reviews
    • Most popular cities in the world to visit
    • Mexican airline fined for failing to disclose bag fees

    Find more by Harriet Baskas on StuckatTheAirport.com and follow her on Twitter.

    52 comments

    Or she could retire! Isn't that the obvious choice?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, bully, harriet-baskas, bus-monitor
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    10:02am, EDT

    Donations for bullied bus monitor soar past $500,000

    The online campaign raising money to send a bullied New York school bus monitor on vacation has surpassed its goal – by more than half a million dollars. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The online campaign raising money to send a bullied New York school bus monitor on vacation has surpassed its goal – by more than half a million dollars.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The rapidly growing “Lets Give Karen – The bus monitor – H Klein A Vacation!” campaign on Indiegogo.com, a site devoted to raising money for various causes, reached nearly $550,000 by midday Friday, just two days after it was started. The original goal was set at $5,000.

    The campaign will remain open to donations for 28 more days.


    Karen Klein, 68, who earns about $15,000 a year as a bus monitor, said, “It’s a nice gesture, but I don’t know if it’s real or not,” after hearing about the donations. “It sounds too good to be true.”

    "This is definitely the highest-grossing and fastest-grossing campaign we've ever seen," Indiegogo.com spokesperson Rose Levy told msnbc.com, adding that the site has more than 5,000 campaigns at any given time. "Obviously this particular campaign went viral very quickly, which is a big reason for its success." 

    In the four years since the company was founded, Levy said, a number of campaigns related to bullying prevention have gained traction on the website. 

    Indiegogo keeps 4 percent of funds raised as a platform fee if a campaign meets or exceeds its goal. If a campaign fails to meet its goal, Indiegogo takes 9 percent of the total funds raised.

    The fund for Klein was set up after a 10-minute, profanity-laced video depicting her being relentlessly bullied and driven to tears by four middle school boys went viral earlier this week.

    Where to go with a half-million-dollar vacation budget

    Ashley Austell, one of more than 24,000 people who donated to the campaign, said it was the least she could do.

    “I couldn’t stop thinking, ‘What if that were my grandma?’” Austell, 24, told msnbc.com in an email after she saw the video. “When she cried, I started bawling because it was so heartbreaking. You felt for this woman. She could be any of our grandmothers.”

    Austell, who lives in Arlington, V.A., donated $100 because she “wanted to be part of a whole world showing Karen Klein that people care about her.”

    Two of the students and the father of a third implicated in the harassment have issued apologies to Klein via statements to police in Greece, N.Y.

    “I am so sorry for the way I treated you,” one of the students named Josh said in statement. “When I saw the video I was disgusted and could not believe I did that. I will never treat anyone this way again.”

    Another student, Wesley, said he feels “really bad” about the incident.

    The father of a third student said, “I would like it if he could do some work for you or help you in some way,” in a statement to police. “I am embarrassed, angry and sad about the awful way he treated you.”

    Two of the four boys who were taped tormenting a school bus monitor have apologized for their behavior in statements released through police.

    In the video, four students taunted Klein with a tirade of verbal insults and physical ridicule that included one comment from a boy who said Klein does not have family because “they all killed themselves because they didn’t want to be near you.”

    Klein said her son committed suicide 10 years ago.

    The video has sparked disbelief among viewers and anger targeted at the four students, noted Capt. Steve Chatterton of the Greece, N.Y., Police Department. “Their families have been threatened. Their brothers and sisters have been threatened,” he said at a press conference Thursday.

    Klein said she doesn’t want to see those boys expelled but would like to see them banned from riding the school bus for at least a year and not allowed to participate in team sports.

    At a press conference Thursday, school officials said they are still investigating the incident, but promised strong disciplinary action.

    In addition to the mass compassion for Klein, Southwest Airlines has offered to fly her and nine other people to Disneyland for free.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • BMW misses parking spot, lands on Jaguar, Mercedes
    • Alleged police impersonator busted pulling over actual cop
    • $150,000 Salvador Dali painting stolen from art gallery
    • Video: 10-year-old gets tattoo, grandpa gets in trouble
    • Park ranger falls to death during Mt. Rainier rescue

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    1921 comments

    These kids aren't really sincere in their apologizes. This was all just for show.Kids now a days are mean as snakes.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, bully, bus-monitor, middle-school-bullies
  • 18
    May
    2012
    2:23pm, EDT

    25 years after bullying, Facebook poem prompts Class of 1987 to make amends

    Ahead of their 25-year high school reunion, former classmates come together to make amends with a woman who was taunted for being poor. KNSD-TV's Tony Shin reports.

    By msnbc.com's Sevil Omer and NBCSanDiego.com's Tony Shin

    A woman says a  Facebook poem she posted about bullying has brought pleas for forgiveness from former classmates who tormented her at a California high school 25 years ago.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Now, some of those classmates want to make amends and have asked Lynda Frederick, 42, of Rochester, N.Y., to attend her 25th high school reunion in Escondido, Calif., on July 27, compliments of the Orange Glen High School Class of 1987.

     “I am nervous,” Frederick told msnbc.com on Friday. “I am looking forward to seeing them, even knowing that what has happened has happened. I have forgiven those who have hurt me in the past.”


    See NBCSanDiego.com's report on Frederick and the Class of 1987

    Frederick said she received phone calls, emails and Facebook messages from former classmates after she posted a poem on the Orange Glen High School Class of 1987 Facebook page.

    In her poem, she wrote:

    that little girl who came to school with the clothes she wore the day before
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her
    the little girl who had to walk to school while others rode the bus
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her
    the little girl who had bruises and was dirty
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her
    the little girl who was always crying
    instead of asking why.. you picked on her

    “They’re all apologizing now for how I was treated,” Frederick said. “I had one man call me up and we talked for an hour on the phone. He cried and cried. I kept saying, ‘You can’t fix yesterday, so let’s fix today.’”

    Frederick said she posted the poem on the Facebook page as a way to send a message to her peers about how bullying affects victims.

    “It never leaves you,” Frederick said. “I wanted people to know that for the one who is doing the bullying, it could just be a phase, but for the person who is being bullied, it stays with you all your life.”

    Lynda Frederick, second from right, says she was bullied 25 years ago in high school. She's pictured with her sons and daughter.

    'I cried'
    Lisa Wallace was among the Facebook users to read it.

    "This poem touched me so bad I could not sleep. I cried," Wallace told NBCSanDiego.com.

    Kristi Malone remembered Frederick and how brutal kids had been to the bespectacled brunette.

    "Looking at her being bullied horribly and thinking, ‘I feel so bad for her,’" Malone told NBCSanDiego.com. "But never thinking in my head that I could stand up for her, and not once did anyone back her up."

    Other classmates have read the poem and many have said they feel overwhelmed by guilt.

    "Just people in tears, like 'How could we have done this to her,' Malone said. They "were just crying, saying 'Why did I do that?'"

    After graduation, Frederick said, she packed up her belongings and headed to New York state to begin anew.

    "I needed to get out, to get away,” Frederick told msnbc.com.

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

    Today, Frederick has three children, 22-year-old Eric, 20-year-old Bryson and 14-year-old Amanda, who is currently dealing with bullying issues at school, she said.

    "She’s overweight and doesn’t wear the trendiest clothes and it’s been very difficult,” Frederick said. “I tell her to look at the people and say, ‘If you don't like what I'm wearing, if you don't like the way I look, then don't look.’"  

    She said she hopes her daughter’s classmates will change their behavior.

    Organizers for the Orange Glen High School Class of 1987 reunion have collected more than $800 to Frederick an airline ticket to California for the event.

    She has accepted and plans to stay for a week. She said she is looking forward to seeing everyone, no matter what happened in the past.

    "She really is my hero because she succeeded through all of this," Wallace said.  "I look up to her."

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Mysterious object nearly downed plane over Denver
    • Highway murders: Suspect held in 'fake cop' case
    • Video: Scientist bit by alligator: 'A little out of my size range'
    • Chicago braces for major protests as NATO summit looms
    • 'Green Team' kids urge Crayola to recycle plastic markers

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    428 comments

    I was severely, brutally, and continuously bullied throughout elementary school. It's refreshing to see people owning-up to it and making amends in adulthood. In my case, though, sometimes teachers and other adults would take part in the bullying themselves, or just watch and laugh.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, bullying, bully
  • 3
    May
    2012
    3:25pm, EDT

    Bullied gay teen faces expulsion after firing stun gun at school

    Michelle Pemberton / The Indianapolis Star

    Darnell "Dynasty" Young, (left),high fives his twin brother Darrell Young (right), as his mother Chelisa Grimes watches. Dynasty, a gay student at Arsenal Tech High School, is on suspension and faces possible expulsion after using a stun gun to scare off a group of six kids who used gay slurs and threatened to attack him on campus.

    By msnbc.com news services

    A gay teenager who said bullying drove him to bring a stun gun to school -- and fire it in the air when he felt threatened -- may be expelled, a local media report says.

    Darnell “Dynasty” Young, 17, was facing daily harassment from bullies at Arsenal Technical High School in Indianapolis who would taunt him, throw rocks and bottles at him and follow him home, according to the Indianapolis Star. A rumor also was spread that he performed sex acts in the bathroom. At one point, Young contemplated suicide.

    "God gave me this life," Young said to the newspaper. "I love life. I'm trying to be strong.”

    After reporting the bullying to the school more than 10 times, his mother, Chelisa Grimes, said she gave him a stun gun for protection, because school authorities weren’t doing enough.

    For more, visit IndyStar.com

    "It has been a nightmare," Grimes told the newspaper. "I'm trying to fight for my baby's education."

    Principal Larry Yarrell said the school had tried to look into the bullying reports, but Young was not always able to identify all of those who had harassed him. He said they had interviewed staff and students.

    The school had been trying to help Young, who transferred there last year, Yarrell said, by recommending that he "tone down" his accessories.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    "If you wear female apparel, then kids are kids and they're going to say whatever it is that they want to say," Yarrell told the newspaper. "Because you want to be different and because you choose to wear female apparel, it may happen. In the idealistic society, it shouldn't matter. People should be able to wear what they want to wear."

    Lawyer: Autistic boy's teacher denies 'bullying' claim
    $4.2 million settlement for student paralyzed by bully

    But, they weren’t trying to place the blame on Young for the bullying, he said.

    Young said the harassment escalated on April 16, when a group of students encircled him at school and threatened to beat him up. Then he took the stun gun, which he had stashed in his backpack for a few weeks, and fired it off in the air. The students dispersed, but within minutes, school police had arrested Young -- who was later suspended.

    Stun guns are not allowed at school in Indiana and it is a misdemeanor to give a stun gun to a minor.

    An expulsion meeting was held on Wednesday before an independent arbitrator who will decide if Young can stay at the school. A decision was expected within a few days, the newspaper said.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • What is torture? Ex-CIA official wades into debate
    • Neo-Nazi who killed family described as 'cruel,' 'controlling'
    • Video: 'Jetman' takes spectacular flight over Rio
    • Police: Boastful motorcyclist's 170 mph joy ride ends in arrest
    • Solution found for dead cows stuck in mountain cabin: saws

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    435 comments

    And the bullies, backed by the school administration, win again

    Show more
    Explore related topics: gay, teen, bully
  • 19
    Apr
    2012
    2:59pm, EDT

    $4.2 million settlement for student paralyzed by bully

    Rosenstein family

    Sawyer Rosenstein with his father, Joel, and mother, Cheri, on a family vacation in Scottsdale, Ariz., in 2011.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

     

    When Sawyer Rosenstein was 12, a punch from a bully changed his life forever, leaving him paralyzed, and at times, near death from the complications of his condition.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Now, six years after the assault, the New Jersey school board in the district where he was a student has agreed to a $4.2 million settlement.


    “It feels really great to finally have just a sense of closure … that this really difficult part of my life is behind me,” Rosenstein, an 18-year-old freshman majoring in communication at Syracuse University, told msnbc.com. “I can actually focus on all of the successful things that I am doing now and all of the successful plans that I have for my future.”

    The Rosenstein’s lawyer, Jeffrey Youngman, said the settlement was “absolutely unique.”

    “I see stories virtually, if not daily, every other day on bullying and … it’s one of the first stories where there actually was a result that’s positive and truly helps the family,” he told msnbc.com, noting that the Ramsey Board of Education does not admit liability.

    “But the facts surrounding this case are unbelievable, I mean they’re dramatic in that you have a child who actually was pro-active” about dealing with the bullying, he said.

    Youngman was referring to emails written by Rosenstein to officials at Eric Smith Middle School – a guidance counselor, an assistant principal – about the harassment.

    "I would like to let you know that the bullying has increased," he wrote to his guidance counselor three months before the assault that left him paralyzed, in an email that was reported by The Record. "I would like to figure out some coping mechanisms to deal with these situations, and I would just like to put this on file so if something happens again, we can show that there was past bullying situations."

    On May 16, 2006, a bully punched Rosenstein so hard that he fell to his knees. Two days later, he screamed out at home.

    “We picked him up and called an ambulance,” his father told the newspaper. "He hasn't walked since."

    Rosenstein was paralyzed from the waist down due to a clot that had formed after the blow in a major artery above his abdomen. When the clot moved down to his spine, it burst, leaving him paralyzed. Complications resulting from his paralysis, such as scoliosis, led to 19 surgeries and a complete spinal fusion. He almost died several times, Youngman said.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Rosenstein said he turned the corner during one of those hard days thinking “why me” after one of the many surgeries in which he considered his options.

    “For me, I saw it as a challenge to say, ‘Okay, in your face, society. I’m going to take this and I’m going to hand it right back at you. You give me lemons, I’m going to throw a lemon tree in your face,'” he said.

    He missed a year of school but still graduated on time and made the honor roll every semester, Youngman said.

    “The way that he carries himself is just amazing, he's an inspiration,” he said.

    In 2009, the Rosensteins filed their lawsuit against the school board, various administrators, other individuals and the boy who punched Sawyer; the settlement was agreed to at the end of March. Part of the family’s case included claims that school officials knew or should have known that Sawyer’s attacker had violent tendencies, Youngman said, citing prior punching incidents with others. The family settled with that student two years ago. The terms are confidential.

    “What the school was doing was just indicative of what the schools do in these instances: they just have policies and don’t know how to enforce them,” Youngman said. “You can have a written policy all you want, but if it is not put into effect and it's not enforced effectively, you’ve got a policy in name only.”

    In a statement, the Ramsey Board of Education said that after three years of depositions and pre-trial discovery, its insurance carriers agreed to the settlement.

    “There has been no admission by the Board or by any of its employees of a violation of any law or duty owed to the Plaintiffs,” the statement said.

    The board denied allegations that it or its employees had “failed or compromised its responsibility to develop and to implement effective policies and procedures to protect the safety and rights” of the school community, the statement continued, noting that the district "prides itself for the role which it has played in recognizing and developing an awareness of the dangers of bullying, intimidation and harassment in the school setting." 

    Cheri Rosenstein

    Rosenstein at the Intrepid Sea, Air, and Space Museum where he met the crew of the final space shuttle mission, STS-135.

    Sawyer Rosenstein only recently shared his story publicly after much long discussion with his family, deciding to do so to raise awareness. Otherwise, he doesn’t like telling his story.

    “I don’t want it to be ‘woe is me’ and sympathy. I want it to be more of a story of success, that even with all this, I was still able to prevail,” he said. “I want people to root me on in whatever I’m doing and help me through it.”

    He encouraged anyone suffering from bullying to document it as he had, believing it was a key factor in making his case. Though he was constantly bullied and remembered how much he wanted it to stop, he wanted others to know that it does end.

    Today, Rosenstein, who wants to be a news reporter, hosts and edits a podcast he helped to co-found called Talking Space. He said he attended the final space shuttle launch as the youngest ever accredited reporter at 17.

    What he hopes that people will get out of his story is that they understand “this is an issue, this is something that needs to be taken care of, and this kid has taken something terrible and made something great out of it. I can do the same.”

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • More Secret Service resignations expected to be announced
    • Drought forecast for Southwest: Getting worse
    • Private plane with 'incapacitated' pilot plummets into Gulf 
    • Video: Can longtime senator be too moderate for GOP?
    • 474-year-old painting stolen by Nazis given to heirs

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    1304 comments

    The student that punched him should have been caned in front of the entire school class. That'll stop it!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: school, bully, paralyzed
  • 10
    Apr
    2012
    12:15pm, EDT

    Family: Bullying by 'wolf pack' led to Texas teen's suicide

    Michael Zamora / Caller-Times

    Family friend D. Garcia (right) hugs Mingo Molina, father of Ted Molina, last Wednesday during a rally against bullying outside Flour Bluff High School.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Bullies had been hounding high school freshman Teddy Molina for years, making fun of him for being mixed race and threatening to hurt or even kill him, his family says.

    The teasing from a group known as the “wolf pack” grew so bad that Molina wound up leaving his Corpus Christi, Texas, school last month. Then he took his life last week with a hunting rifle.


    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Molina’s death has triggered outrage and tumult in his South Texas community: an anti-bullying rally erupted into violence, a rumored gun threat online led to a stepped up police presence at Flour Bluff High School and a number of parents have come forward claiming that the district is not doing enough to combat bullying.

    “We need to come together and we need to stop this, and we need to do it peacefully,” his sister, 18-year-old senior Misa Molina, told msnbc.com.

    Bullying has become one of the hottest issues facing schools, with a newly released documentary focusing on the issue, and sites like Facebook and Twitter allowing rumors and taunts to spread like wildfire.

    The family of Teddy Molina says the Texas teen took his own life after being bullied for years by a group of students who call themselves the "wolf pack." KRIS-TV's Lindsay Curtis reports.

    While there are no hard and fast statistics linking bullying to suicide, Dr. Melissa Reeves, a school psychologist and expert on bullying, says harassment by peers can be a “big factor” in youth suicide but that it’s usually one among many causes.

    “When they really get to a sense of hopelessness and helplessness, you know, where they see no other way out of this particular situation, then, unfortunately that is when we do see completed suicides,” said Reeves, chair of a National Association of School Psychologists’ Prepare Working Group on Crisis Prevention and Intervention.

    Suicide is the third-leading cause of death among people between the ages of 10 and 24, with males making up 84 percent of the approximate 4,400 victims reported a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Hispanic and Native American teens and young adults have the highest rates of suicide-related fatalities.

    MPAA changes 'Bully' rating to PG-13

    The trouble for Molina, who was part Korean and part Hispanic, began at Flour Bluff Intermediate School in Corpus Christi, a port city of 300,000 along the Gulf of Mexico.

    The problems escalated in junior high school, when Molina joined the football team, where, his sister said, the players picked on him and the coaches allowed it. She said her brother told her that some of the bullies repeatedly said they were going to kill him and that she had helped come to his rescue when some teens cornered him at a taco stand and appeared ready to jump him.

    Courtesy of Molina family

    Ted Molina, also known as Teddy, earlier this year.

    “It got really worse this year, and that’s when my mom pulled him out of school” in March, she said, adding that Teddy had expressed a desire to commit suicide a few times over the bullying.

    A close family friend, Annette Westerkom, 41, said Teddy Molina endured the harassment quietly.

    “He kept a lot of it to himself because he did not want the family to know that they were being derogatory toward his family,” she said, noting that Molina was a fun-loving kid who enjoyed hunting, fishing and being around his family. “He internalized a lot of his pain -- he did confide in some of his friends.”

    His mother Judy had filed complaints about the bullying, said Westerkom, a junior high school teacher in another district.

    “I’m a school teacher, I see it daily,” she said. “We deal with bullying and we take care of it.”

    Michael Zamora / Caller-Times

    Flour Bluff senior Misa Molina (left), sister of Ted Molina, hugs her grandmother, Mary Ann, on Wednesday during a rally outside Flour Bluff High School. Family, classmates and community members gathered outside the school following Ted Molina's funeral to call for an end to bullying, which they said led Molina to commit suicide.

    When asked last week by a local NBC station if the Flour Bluff School District – one of six in Corpus Christi -- had trouble with bullying, spokeswoman Lynn Kaylor said: “No, ma’am, we don’t.”

    But Rita McKenzie, a parent, told the TV station that she removed her two children from the district’s junior high school in February due to bullying.

    "They know about this problem. They ignore it and do nothing to try to fix it," she said, adding that she told school officials: “I don't feel like my kids are safe here. I just don't.”

    When rumor, the Internet and school violence fears collide


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Superintendent Dr. Julie Carbajal disputed that characterization, saying the district starts anti-bully efforts early, with kindergartners going through some awareness programs. She said it also has a strong code of conduct, has implemented the character education program “Heart of a Champion," uses Crime Stoppers for anonymous reporting and has security staff on hand.

    “We have strong policies and procedures for bullying and we have followed” those, she said.

    In 10 years as superintendent of the 5,600-student district, Carbajal said she had not seen any similar incidents, adding that the loss of Molina has been devastating.

    “We want to be able to mourn Teddy ourselves and we want to do something for him in his memory. We’d love to have a memoriam,” she said. “But we've just not been able to bridge that kind of discussion with the family at this point, and we’re respecting their privacy until they’re ready to talk to us.”

    The school district will be increasing security at all of its campuses, she said, after an altercation at an anti-bullying rally organized by Molina’s family in front of the school last Wednesday, the day of Teddy’s funeral.

    Local media reports say the man charged by police in that incident – Tommy Martin, 38 -- was a parent of a student. Efforts to reach Martin for comment by msnbc.com were not successful.

    Police said a witness told them an object was thrown from the crowd at Martin’s car. He allegedly then got out of the vehicle and attacked those he believed responsible. He was charged with assault and public intoxication. 

    After the violence, which several television stations caught on camera, a number of students came forward to say they had been bullied by the same youths who targeted Molina – a group some referred to as the “wolf pack.”

    Not much is known about the group, but a law firm representing the Molina family -- Hilliard Muñoz Gonzales L.L.P. -- said the “wolf pack” was formed by a handful of athletes a few years ago.

    The local NBC station spoke with a friend of Misa Molina, Andrew Gonzalez, who said members of the group had bothered him too but that not everyone was involved -- just a few bad apples.

    Referring to the group, Superintendent Carbajal said: “Any issues that have been brought forward about the ‘wolf pack’ … the school has investigated that and has addressed any issue that involved them, but I can’t comment on it as it is related to Teddy at this point.”

    Adding to the tumult, parents were warned Thursday that the high school had received “secondhand reports” on social media “of a possible threat of someone bringing a gun” to school. Extra police were present on campus that day, Carbajal said, and there were no reports of any trouble.

    Julea Chel Bendis, a woman who said her daughter – a freshman at the high school -- was friends with Molina, kept her daughter and son home for few days last week because she “knew this was going to escalate. All of the Facebook pages for the in-town news, everybody is up in arms about it.”

    “He (Molina) was friends with almost everybody in the freshman class besides the people bullying him, and I think that’s where most of the anger is coming from right now is just the loss and the anger and the grief,” Bendis said.

    Though parents and students had to sign a “no bullying tolerance” form at the beginning of the school year, Bendis feels that educators “preach it, but they don’t enforce it.”

    The Molina family’s lawyer, Bob Hilliard, is looking into possible legal causes of action, which his firm said may include breaches of his rights under the 14th Amendment and possible Title IX violations.

    “I’ve got to find out what the school district knew and what they did not do once they knew about it,” he said.

    Molina’s parents made more than a dozen complaints about their son being bullied – either verbally or in writing, according to Hilliard’s law firm.

    Carbajal, the superintendent, said school officials had talked to Molina’s mom about her son, though she declined to specify if those discussions included bullying.

    Not everyone agrees about the depth of the problem in the Flour Bluff schools.

    Pam Kasperitis, a mother of five who has two children at the high school, said her children had never heard of the “wolf pack” and was concerned about hysteria fueling the news reports on Molina’s death.

    “I don’t want to disparage this child and this family, but as a parent, you know, when something like this happens, I think they are looking for someone to blame,” she said.

    Kasperitis noted that her son was bullied in the 5th grade, but school officials handled it right away. She said she had found the district responsive to the various issues she had brought to their attention.

    Bullying is serious, she added, “so let’s focus on what the issue is, how to fix it, how to move on, how to help these kids, how to put a stop to it. Let’s stop hurling accusations and threats, and having fights.”

    In the meantime, Misa Molina is continuing to hold anti-bullying rallies in front of the school.

    “We don’t need any more people dying because kids can’t stop being mean to each other,” she said. “Hopefully, this will teach them a lesson that a life is very precious and we should hold onto that, we should keep that in our hearts to make … each and every one of us a better person.”

     

     

    1090 comments

    The school district should not be the ones to handle bullying. This should be directed back to the parents of the students. If that doesn't work, file charges with the police. Schools are there to educate, not to police students and certainly not to enforce the law.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, security, suicide, molina, asian, teen, hispanic, bullying, bully, bluff, flour, teddy, anti-bullying
  • 12
    Mar
    2012
    2:22pm, EDT

    Cops: Losing coach bites off winner's ear

    By NBCConnecticut.com

    SPRINGFIELD, Mass. -- A middle school basketball rivalry took a violent turn on Friday, after one losing coach bit off part of another coach’s ear, police said.

    Police said the assistant coach of the losing team, Timothy Lee Forbes, 34, of Springfield, assaulted the coach of the winning team after a championship tournament game and bit off part of his ear.


    Police received a report of a disturbance at the Holy Name School in Springfield during a sixth-grade boys' basketball game.

    Read NBCConnecticut.com's story on biting coach's ear

    People at the game pulled Forbes off the coach, police said, and Forbes ran out of the gym before police arrived. The victim, a 34-year-old Springfield man, was rushed to the Baystate Medical Center in an ambulance to have his ear reattached. He has been released.

    Forbes has been charged with mayhem, assault and battery and other charges. He will be arraigned on Monday afternoon in Springfield District Court.

    Police said neither team is affiliated with the Holy Name School.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

    • Hurt on the stairs: Child treated every 6 minutes
    • New claims about Saudi who left US before 9/11
    • Cops: Student planned campus rampage
    • Shot by sibling, police officer's daughter dies

    US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    465 comments

    Timothy Lee Forbes, 34, of Springfield, assaulted the coach of the winning team after a championship tournament game and bit off part of his ear. Mike Tyson changed his name! I was wondering what he's been up too!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: coach, tyson, mike, forbes, featured, ear, bully, biting

Browse

  • featured,
  • crime,
  • military,
  • weather,
  • california,
  • updated,
  • florida,
  • environment,
  • us-news,
  • new-york,
  • shooting,
  • texas,
  • education,
  • chicago,
  • police,
  • gulf-oil-spill,
  • kari-huus,
  • nbcnewyork,
  • los-angeles,
  • murder,
  • new-jersey,
  • guns,
  • afghanistan,
  • obama,
  • colorado,
  • sandy,
  • nbclosangeles,
  • trayvon-martin,
  • barack-obama,
  • crime-and-courts,
  • politics,
  • gay,
  • veterans,
  • connecticut,
  • fire,
  • crime-courts,
  • religion,
  • arizona,
  • boston-marathon-tragedy
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Harriet Baskas

Award-winning writer and radio producer, happiest in an airport or an unusual museum.

Andrew Mach

Miranda Leitsinger

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (305)
    • April (608)
    • March (548)
    • February (510)
    • January (563)
  • 2012
    • December (457)
    • November (460)
    • October (477)
    • September (432)
    • August (525)
    • July (519)
    • June (508)
    • May (566)
    • April (538)
    • March (576)
    • February (471)
    • January (417)
  • 2011
    • December (455)
    • November (190)
    • October (9)
    • September (3)
    • August (51)
    • July (8)
    • June (3)
    • May (12)
    • April (5)
    • March (3)
    • February (1)
    • January (8)
  • 2010
    • December (5)
    • November (1)
    • October (2)
    • September (28)
    • August (40)
    • July (35)
    • June (177)
    • May (50)
    • April (9)
    • March (2)
    • February (2)
    • January (4)
  • 2009
    • December (5)
    • November (5)
    • October (2)
    • September (11)
    • August (4)
    • July (12)
    • June (1)
    • May (1)
    • April (1)
    • March (3)
    • February (3)
    • January (2)
  • 2008
    • December (3)
    • November (2)
    • October (6)
    • September (30)
    • August (26)
    • July (10)
    • June (4)
    • May (8)
    • April (13)
    • March (9)
    • February (7)
    • January (6)
  • 2007
    • December (10)
    • November (6)
    • October (22)
    • September (11)

Most Commented

  • Obama calls IRS flap 'inexcusable,' announces resignation of acting IRS chief (3703)
  • NTSB recommends lowering blood alcohol level that constitutes drunken driving (1582)
  • Benghazi, IRS, AP: A guide to the 3 storms confronting the White House (2543)
  • Fired lesbian teacher: Catholic educators union won't back me (2040)
  • Majority of Colorado sheriffs file suit against new gun laws (1945)
  • At least 51 killed, including 20 children, as tornado tears through Oklahoma (1761)
  • Judge blocks Arkansas' tough new abortion law (1870)

Other blogs

  • The Body Odd
  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • PhotoBlog
  • Open Channel

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • US news on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise