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  • Updated
    9
    Apr
    2013
    12:32pm, EDT

    Georgia middle-schooler commits suicide after bullying, being called 'snitch,' dad says

    The father of a Georgia boy who committed suicide says his son was the victim of cruel bullying at school. WLTZ's Sara Belsole reports.

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A 13-year-old Georgia boy who hanged himself after reportedly being bullied at school was remembered by family and friends as a hero at his funeral this week.

    Devin Brown moved to Columbus, Ga., six months ago to live with his father, who says the bullying began shortly after Devin started at his new middle school, according to NBC affiliate WLTZ-TV in Georgia.

    "He got jumped, or somebody beat him up," Ray Brown, Devin's father, told WLTZ. "He came home one time and had some peanut butter pies he had made for school. When he walked through the door he had some pie left, and he had it all over him. Someone had jumped on him and smeared it all over him."

    Brown voiced his concerns to Rothschild Middle School, but officials told him they hadn't heard of any issues, he said.

    "They just kind of let it go," Brown said. 

    It wasn't until last Thursday night that Devin's family realized how far the bullying had gone.

    "I hear [my stepmother yelling,] 'Oh my God, Ray, Ray, help me! I can't get him down, he hung himself,'" Cara Downs, Devin's older sister, told WLTZ. "I could see the black and blue around his neck and I tried to find a pulse, but couldn't find it."

    Brown believes being called a "snitch" at school pushed Devin over the edge. He told WLTZ that the day Devin took his life, he saw another student carrying a knife and threatening a teacher. Brown said Devin told his teacher about the knife; the other student was given disciplinary action.

    "He said, 'Everyone is calling me a snitch,'" Brown said. "He said, 'There's about 15-20 people who want to jump on me.'"


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Rothschild Middle School Principal Reginald Williamson denied Brown's account of his son's school experiences.

    "We have received no information on him being bullying whatsoever," he said. "We log all information as far as bullying is concerned."

    He also said there was never any threat to a teacher. 

    "We did have a knife incident that occurred. It happened before school started. The knife was retrieved," he said. But no threat was ever issued against a teacher during the incident, he said. 

    Muscogee County School District's director of communications also confirmed the incident.

    "It was discovered upon search in the student's locker. And of course any student discipline, while I can't talk about particular student discipline, was handled according to policy," Valerie Fuller said. 

    At his funeral on Wednesday, a large wooden box with the word "hero" carved on it was set up. Devin's friends dropped notes into it, thanking him for speaking up about the threat he saw at school, reported WLTZ.

    "I made this for him because he is my hero. He did the right thing and he knew he did the right thing," Brown told the affiliate.

    On Devin's gravestone, the inscription read: "You left too soon, but forever wouldn't have been long enough. Our hero - Devin Brown."

    This story was originally published on Fri Apr 5, 2013 12:49 PM EDT

    1209 comments

    Oh man, how sad. Kids need to know that there are other "outs". Other choices to make. It does get better. Not only are they too young to make most of their own decisions, but they're "way" to young to even contemplate suicide over such a simple little pier pressure thing man. He did the right thing …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: georgia, columbus, ray-brown, bullying, updated, devin-brown
  • 4
    Mar
    2013
    1:32am, EST

    12-year-old boy who was victim of bullying attack dies after weeks in hospital

    By David Chang, NBCPhiladelphia

    Family photo

    Bailey O'Neill

    PHILADELPHIA -- A young boy who was the victim of bullying has died, according to his family. Bailey O'Neill, who turned 12 on Saturday, was in a coma after suffering several seizures. His family told NBC10's Katy Zachry that he died at the hospital on Sunday. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Bailey's family says he was jumped by two classmates during recess at Darby Township School last January and suffered a concussion as well as a broken nose as a result.  He then began to suffer seizures the next day, forcing doctors to put him into a medically induced coma. Joy Fecanin, the boy's grandmother, told NBC10's Katy Zachry that he had to have a blood transfusion after getting pneumonia.

    On Sunday, the following message was posted on the Building Hope for Bailey Facebook Page:


    I would like to thank everyone who has prayed and supported Bailey and his family!! Bailey has been the strongest toughest boy I know. He has fought this battle long and hard. There just wasn't a way to fix this. I wish I could say he will get better but I can't. Bailey has gone to be with God today :( I love you Jina Risoldi with all my heart and I will help you through this. Bailey I love you!!! Please keep Baileys family in your prayers!!!

    While the students who jumped Bailey were suspended for two days, police have not yet revealed whether they will be criminally charged.

    “I would like to see these kids punished,” said Fecanin when she spoke to Zachry last month. “Something has to be done. I don’t know what’s taking them so long.”

    Read more at NBCPhiladelphia.com

    Delaware County District Attorney Jack Whelan says investigators are trying to determine if the injuries Bailey received in the fight caused his seizures. Investigators interviewed kids and recess aides who were on the playground when the fight broke out.

    “We can assure them that we are going to continue with our investigation,” said Whelan.

    Bailey’s younger brother was taken out of the school because his parents were worried that he'd also be the victim of bullying. 

    View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

    1575 comments

    OMG this truely breaks my heart! Children learn primarily from watching and interacting with others, while there could be some influancce from peers, children participating in acts such as these have no fear of punishment at all. This seems to be turning into an epidemic these days. My thoughts and  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, crime, bullying, nbcphiladelphia
  • 9
    Dec
    2012
    4:06pm, EST

    Cyber-graciousness: Students set up Facebook sites for compliments

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    Eyal Hanfling was browsing Facebook one recent evening when he noticed that a friend, a student at Columbia University in New York, had received a glowing comment from an account called “Columbia Compliments.”

    Further down his newsfeed was a compliment for another friend from an account called “TJ Compliments,” for Thomas Jefferson High School.

    By midnight, Hanfling established an account for his school, Walt Whitman High in Bethesda, Md., a public high school of about 2,000 students. By the next evening, about 300 compliments had been submitted to Hanfling – at that point still an anonymous administrator – who in turn posted them. Those receiving the compliments were tagged in the post, but they didn’t know their flatterer.   

    Courtesy of Eyal Hanfling

    The Facebook page "Whitman Compliments" was inspired by Queens University Compliments in Canada, created in September. Students submit compliments, which are then posted online anonymously. There are now at least 98 similar sites at universities and high schools, most of them in Canada and the U.S.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

     


    The Facebook compliments craze was started in September by four students at Queens University in Ontario, Canada as an antidote to cyber-bullying and a way to spread joy across campus. The women who founded Queens U. Compliments have since started a hub page for all compliments groups, of which there are now 98, most of them in Canada and the U.S.

    Speaking with Time’s Techland blog, Queens U. Compliments co-founder Rachel Albi likened the page to the 2000 movie, "Pay It Forward," about an 11-year-old boy who starts a goodwill movement in which people do favors for people who, in turn, do favors for others.

    The compliments forums could have a “contagious effect in a positive sense,” Glenn Stutzky, an instructor at the School of Social Work at Michigan State University, told the Detroit Free Press.

    Courtesy of Eyal Hanfling

    Eyal Hanfling, a senior at Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda, Md., was inspired to create the Facebook page, "Whitman Compliments."

    “I like the idea of having something other than cyber-bullying,” Stutzky said. “This is cyber-graciousness.”

    Hanfling said there has been cyber-bullying at his school, but few turned up in submissions to Whitman Compliments. 

    “I was really worried that people would take advantage of the system and write horrible things about their classmates and peers,” he told NBC News. But of the 1,500 comments or so submitted over four days, just four or five were unkind, he said. Only one used a curse word.

    If anything, the complimenting became competitive. That’s not too surprising for a high school that graduates 88 percent of its students to four-year colleges and that was profiled in a book called, “The Overachievers.”

    “Students were overachieving in the compliments,” Hanfling said. “Someone would post a compliment, and someone else would post an even longer, even more supportive and even funnier compliment.”

    Among the more carefully considered compliments:

    "This is an appreciation post dedicated to your hair. Let us all marvel its beauty."

    And:

    "Youre the only person I know who can run a 5K with a smile on their face. Your style is impeccable and it looks like you're always swaggin out. You're there in the hard times and the great times and just an amazing friend who I am always happy to be around."

    And:

    "you're one of the sweetest guys I've ever known. We grew so close last year and I love talking to you because you're such a genuine listener. You're an incredibly strong person and I really admire that. Never change! You're amazing."

    Hanfling closed Whitman Compliments at midnight on Thursday. In a column for the student newspaper, the Black and White, he identified himself as the creator and manager of the forum. Not even his parents or younger sister had known. Hanfling wrote:

    When was the last time we complimented a random person in one of our classes? When was the last time we actually wished a random athlete “good luck” in the hallway before their game or congratulated someone on their victory at a tournament? Friends can “like” online posts, but real-life conversations are always more meaningful.

    After the column was published online, Hanfling enjoyed momentary stardom. He walked into a classroom and received a standing ovation. At a hockey game, he was given a similar reception.

    And while he hopes his classmates compliment each other in person now, there was another reason Hanfling curtailed the Facebook page: homework. For the four days that Whitman Compliments existed, Hanfling dedicated his evenings, from 5 p.m. to midnight, to the forum.   

    “I do not have enough hours in my day to copy and paste so many compliments,” he said.

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    33 comments

    How cool is that? Makes you realize how sucky we all are most of the time. Did you say something nice to someone today? Or did you just respond to a post with "idiot" and "moron"?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: tech, good-news, bullying, facebook, featured, compliments, walt-whitman-high-school
  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    9:14am, EDT

    Teen picked for homecoming court as prank shines at ceremony

    Whitney Kropp, the teen who was elected to the court as a hurtful prank by classmates, attended the homecoming dance in  West Branch, Michigan, wearing a donated dress as her entire town rallied around her. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    By NBC News staff

    In a red, ruffled dress and flowers in her hair, Whitney Kropp, the Michigan high school student picked by her classmates to be on her school’s homecoming court as a prank, took to her school’s football stadium Friday for the ceremony. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “I had thoughts about not coming, but you know what, I’m glad I changed my mind and actually came out,” Kropp told NBC News. 

    Kropp's appearance was met with thunderous applause and camera flashes from her fellow students at Ogemaw Heights High School in West Branch, Mich., and even members of the opposing team.

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Whitney Kropp, third from left, waits for the ceremony to begin at Ogemaw Heights High School's homecoming football game on Friday.

    At Kropp’s side was Josh Awrey, the class of 2015’s male representative, the Bay City Times reported. 

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    After the ceremony, Kropp, who said she had been bullied throughout her time in high school, told reporters that she was glad she decided to remain on the court.

    “I’m overwhelmed," Kropp said. "I’m so happy – this is so much right now for me. The school is fantastic they treated me so well."

    'Easy target'
    Kropp said last month she was initially surprised to learn that her classmates nominated her to be in the running for her school’s homecoming queen. But she said she soon felt humiliated and betrayed when she found out that it was all a joke.

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Sophomore homecoming representatives Whitney Kropp and Josh Awrey give each other a hug during the homecoming ceremony on the Ogemaw Heights High School football field on Friday.

    “People had bullied on me, I guess, for my looks, how I did my hair, how I dress, my height, so I guess they thought, you know, maybe someone that is different is someone that’s an easy target,” Kropp said. 

    But, Kropp said she pulled through with the support of her mother and the rest of the town. 

    "You want to protect your kid, and you feel angry and mad at what has happened, but at the same time the outpouring to help her has been beyond expected," Kropp's mother Bernice Kropp said. 

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    Word spread quickly through the community of about 2,100 residents in West Branch. Resident Jamie Kline started a Facebook support page, gaining more than 4,000 likes in Michigan and nationwide. Personal stories of bullying and messages of encouragement filled the page.

    A salon owner in West Branch donated service to cut, color and style Kropp's hair, and other local businesses paid for her dinner, gown, shoes and tiara for the dance. 

    Sophomore student Whitney Kropp never saw herself as part of the "in" crowd at her high school, so she was surprised to find out she was voted to homecoming court. It turned out to be a prank, but now the community is rallying behind Whitney to show their support for her. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    Before the game, a local company even made T-shirts in support of Kropp in her favorite color, orange, adding to the messages of encouragement that Kropp says helped her prevail. 

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Kristy Erway, Hannah Gebnard, and Paige Sharp of Cadillac High School hang a banner in support of Whitney Kropps in West Branch, Mich., on Friday.

    “The kids that are bullying you do not let them bring you down," she said. "Stand up for what you believe in, and go with your heart and go with your gut. That’s what I did and look at me now. I’m just as happy as can be.”

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    753 comments

    Good for her!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: homecoming, bullying, featured, educaton, whitney-kropp
  • 25
    Sep
    2012
    9:29am, EDT

    Teen picked for homecoming court as prank: I felt like 'piece of trash'

     

    Sophomore student Whitney Kropp never saw herself as part of the "in" crowd at her high school, so she was surprised to find out she was voted to homecoming court. It turned out to be a prank, but now the community is rallying behind Whitney to show their support for her. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    By Sevil Omer and Kevin Tibbles, NBC News

    Dale G. Young / The Detroit News

    Whitney Kropp was named to the homecoming court as a joke by her classmates, but the tiny farm town of West Branch, Mich. has rallied around her.

    Whitney Kropp, a sophomore at Ogemaw Heights High School in West Branch, Mich., said she was surprised to learn that she was picked by her classmates to be in the running for her school’s homecoming queen.

    “I never thought I would be part of it because, really, it’s just for, like, the big popular people,” Kropp, 16, told NBC News' Kevin Tibbles on TODAY.

    But she was soon humiliated when she learned Sept. 13 that her selection to the homecoming court had been part of a prank by other students. She said students pointed at her in the hallways and laughed, and the boy who was picked with her withdrew.


    “Some kids thought it would be funny just to put me in there as a joke to make fun of me,” Kropp said. 

    But Whitney’s ridicule didn’t stop didn’t there. Her mother, Bernice Kropp, told NBC News on Monday that the bullying continued on Facebook.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Kropp said her daughter, a sophomore, had been picked on before at school, but not to the extent of the peer vote that selects students to the court, which traditionally names a queen, king and princes and princesses from each class. The high school has about 800 students.

    “I felt like I wasn’t worthy. Why even be a part of this community, this world if I’m just going to be tossed around like basically a piece of trash?” Whitney Kropp said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    But then, her mother said, “other kids started coming up to her and saying, ‘Whitney, don’t let them stop you from going to homecoming. You need to go ahead, you need to do it.'”

    Bernice Kropp described her daughter as quiet, polite and kind, rarely finding fault with peers and people. She said Whitney has decided to attend the dance despite the prank as businesses and neighbors in the tiny farming town have rallied around Whitney. 

    Kropp said Whitney even has a date for the dance this Saturday, "and it’s her boyfriend who has been very quiet and supportive through all of this." 

    "You want to protect your kid, and you feel angry and mad at what has happened, but at the same time the outpouring to help her has been beyond expected," she said. 

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Word spread quickly through the community of about 2,100 residents in West Branch. Resident Jamie Kline started a Facebook support page, gaining more than 4,000 likes in Michigan and nationwide. Personal stories of bullying and messages of encouragement filled the page, among them:

    "You go, girl! From here in California, it looks like you won the vote legitimately but some of your "friends" got jealous and nasty about it. Their "joke" never really happened! Hold your head high and have a good time," Raymond Puffer.

    "Whitney YOU are a beautiful gal inside and out and dont ever let anyone tell you any different,” Karen Morrison Gross.

    "I am so proud of this young lady ((((You GO, Girl))))), her family and the awesome community we share! It's high time we ALL take a stand against bullies. They come in all sizes, ages and social arenas. Be Kind ALWAYS,” Ginger Warren.

    Jen Case, who is with Whit’s End Salon in West Branch, said the salon owner donated services to cut, color and style Kropp’s hair. "Bullying is a big thing and we wanted to turn this into a positive moment," Case said.

    Other local businesses are paying for Whitney’s dinner, gown, shoes and a tiara for the dance.

    "We live in this community and we’re about the community and giving back," Case told NBC News. "We wanted to help this young lady have a special night."

    “I’m excited to go because I can prove everyone wrong and say, you know, I’m not this joke that you guys thought of. You guys doing this has made me stronger and I’ve got more self-esteem than what I had," Whitney Kropp said.

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    482 comments

    We can make a difference. Let's tell Whitney Kropp and other victims of bullying, "We stand with you." by signing this petition: So far, 775 people have signed in half a day.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: homecoming, bullying, educaton
  • 24
    Sep
    2012
    1:57pm, EDT

    Michigan town rallies around teen pranked for homecoming

    Dale G. Young / The Detroit News

    Whitney Kropp was named to the homecoming court as a joke by her classmates, but the tiny farm town of West Branch, Mich., has rallied around her.

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    A tiny farming town in Michigan is rallying around a 16-year-old girl who was voted to be on a high school homecoming court as part of a prank. Local businesses are picking up the tab for her special night, while a neighbor started a Facebook support page.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "It’s been overwhelming," Bernice Kropp told NBC News on Monday. Her daughter, Whitney Kropp, is at the center of the controversy at West Branch’s Ogemaw Heights High School, north of Saginaw.

    Kropp said Whitney was humiliated when she learned Sept. 13 that her selection to the homecoming court had been part of a joke. She said students pointed at her in the hallways and laughed, and the boy who was picked with her withdrew.


    "She was getting ridiculed in school and on Facebook," Kropp said.

    "But then," Kropp added, "other kids started coming up to her and saying, 'Whitney, don’t let them stop you from going to homecoming. You need to go ahead, you need to do it'."

    Kropp said her daughter, a sophomore, had been picked on before at school, but not to the extent of the peer vote that selects popular students to the court, which traditionally names a queen, king and princes and princesses from each class. The high school has about 800 students.

    "I thought I wasn't worthy. I was this big old joke," Whitney told The Detroit News.

    Dan Cwayna, the superintendent of the West Branch-Rose City School District, told NBC News he is aware of the situation. “I do not have much to add at this time,” he said, adding “I am hesitant to say anything out of privacy and concerns for the student involved.”

    Kropp described her daughter as quiet, polite and kind, rarely finding fault with peers and people. Kropp said Whitney has a date for the dance this Saturday, "and it’s her boyfriend who has been very quiet and supportive through all of this."

    "You want to protect your kid, and you feel angry and mad at what has happened, but at the same time the outpouring to help her has been beyond expected," Kropp said. 

    Word spread quickly through the community of about 2,100 residents in West Branch. Resident Jamie Kline started a Facebook support page, gaining more than 4,000 likes in Michigan and nationwide. Personal stories of bullying and messages of encouragement filled the page, among them:

    "You go, girl! From here in California, it looks like you won the vote legitimately but some of your "friends" got jealous and nasty about it. Their "joke" never really happened! Hold your head high and have a good time," Raymond Puffer.

    "Whitney YOU are a beautiful gal inside and out and dont ever let anyone tell you any different,” Karen Morrison Gross.

    "I am so proud of this young lady ((((You GO, Girl))))), her family and the awesome community we share! It's high time we ALL take a stand against bullies. They come in all sizes, ages and social arenas. Be Kind ALWAYS,” Ginger Warren.

    Jen Case, who is with Whit’s End Salon in West Branch, said the salon owner donated services to cut, color and style Kropp’s hair. "Bullying is a big thing and we wanted to turn this into a positive moment," Case said.

    Other local businesses are paying for Whitney’s dinner, gown, shoes and a tiara for the dance.

    "We live in this community and we’re about the community and giving back," Case told NBC News. "We wanted to help this young lady have a special night."

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    1073 comments

    I love it when things work out the way they should! You go girl, enjoy your evening knowing you had such great support!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: homecoming, bullying, educaton
  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    10:36am, EDT

    Mom who 'smooshed' son's alleged bully: No regrets

    Bus surveillance video shows a Florida mother fighting her son's alleged bully on the school bus. WESH's Stephanie Kolp reports.

    Flagler County Sheriff's Office

    Felecia Phillips was arrested after getting into a fight with a 17-year-old student at a bus stop in Bunnell, Fla.

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Florida mother who faces child abuse charges after a school bus brawl was caught on camera says she has no regrets about going after a teenager she says was bullying her son.

    "I mean, I really, honestly can't say I won't do it again," Felecia Phillips, 35, of Bunnell, Fla., told NBC Orlando affiliate WESH.com of Wednesday morning's fight. "I just wanted him to leave my son alone, you know? What's the problem?"

    The trouble began on Tuesday, according to Phillips, when her 15-year-old son, Terez Smith, got beat up at Flagler Palm Coast School by a friend of the teen she confronted on the bus, 17-year-old Justin Mickens.

    Worried about her son's safety, Phillips decided to accompany Smith on Wednesday to the bus stop. Before the students even got on the bus, Phillips and Mickens began to argue, and Phillips pushed the teen, witnesses told deputies. Phillips believes Mickens was behind the attack on her son. 

    Watch the school bus surveillance video from WESH.com


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Words kept going back and forth or whatever, and he called me out," Phillips said. "And I smooshed him in his face or whatever." 

    Mickens slammed Phillips to the ground as the bus arrived, deputies said. Phillips then allegedly followed him onto the bus, grabbing his hair as the bus driver yelled that she needed to get off the bus and other students tried to stop the brawl.

    "She chased me on the bus and pulled me by the back of my head," Mickens told WESH.com. "I don't even talk to her son. I don't even hang around him ... None of that ain't true."

    Phillips was arrested and charged with child abuse and trespassing on school property. Her bond was set at $2,500. 

    After paying bond, she told Florida's News4Jax.com she felt Mickens got what he deserved.

    "That's what they need; a good old-fashioned whooping," she said. "We're not able to do that because we end up in jail-- child abuse charges."

    Mickens is not currently facing any charges, Debra Johnson, a spokeswoman for the Flagler County Sheriff's Office, told NBC News on Thursday. When he pushed Phillips, he was acting in self-defense in the deputies' opinions, she said.

    Phillips' son, Smith, defended what she did.

    "I feel great about it because I know a lot of people wish they had a mom that had their back," he told News4Jax.com. "Some parents, when you tell them, they just ignore it."

    Smith is just looking to get an education, Phillips told 10 News in Tampa, and she didn't feel bad about confronting the boy who was "messing" with her son.

    "I don't want anybody picking on him, and messing with him. Leave my son alone," Phillips said. "He's not looking for trouble. I don't even raise my kids that way. He's not messing him, why are you messing with him? So no, I don't regret it."

    The Flagler County school district discouraged other parents from dealing with bullying in the fashion that Phillips chose to.

    "While we encourage parents to be involved in their students' education, we don't encourage parents to go onto buses. Buses are really for students only; parents are certainly welcome to speak to bus drivers through the window, through the door, but they shouldn't come on buses to handle incidents like that," Mike Judd, senior director of school operations for Flagler County public schools, told NBC News on Thursday. 

    "If there's a problem they either need to contact law enforcement or school administration, but they should not take matters into their own hands," he said, adding he didn't know if Phillips had reached out to authorities prior to Wednesday's altercation.

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    1141 comments

    while she shouldn't have touched the kid - i'd defend her yelling at him until he backed into a corner and cried - perhaps he's never had a dose of his own bullying. standing up for our kids is what parents should do - but parents should also teach kids how to solve problems and how to stand up for  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: florida, bullying, trespassing, child-abuse-charges, felecia-phillips
  • 1
    Sep
    2012
    3:53pm, EDT

    Teacher placed on leave after student hazing incident

    By NBC News

    A Washington state middle school teacher has been placed on leave after video surfaced showing a student allegedly being roughed up by the teacher and other students.

    "I was horrified by what I saw," Chuck Cuzzetto, the acting superintendent at Kopachuck Middle School in Gig Harbor, Wash., told NBC News.

    Watch the video above for the full story about the incident.

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    35 comments

    This makes me MAD AS HELL!!!!!!! When teacher's not only allow this sort of abuse it is WRONG - when a teacher is INVOLVED - REALLY!!! I've been teaching for thirty years and have NEVER seen such a thing!! FIRE HIM, yes! Take his teaching certification away - yes! Make this an example, you idiots …

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    Explore related topics: education, bullying
  • 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.

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    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.

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    Explore related topics: crime, harassment, bullying, facebook, bully
  • 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.

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    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  …

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    Explore related topics: georgia, bullying, parenting, bully, tyler-long, charsworth, murray-county
  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    4:25pm, EDT

    Brooklyn boy: I was blinded in one eye after school attack at middle school

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Andrew Siff, NBCNewYork.com

    NEW YORK -- A Brooklyn teenager was blinded in one eye after being assaulted by bullies who shouted anti-gay epithets during an attack at his middle school, his family says. 


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Kardin Ulysse, 14, has undergone two surgeries on his right eye since the June 5 attack in the cafeteria at Roy H. Mann Junior High School in Bergen Beach, his family said.

    "I can't see from my right eye," Ulysse during a news conference on Tuesday. "I can't see from it at all." 


    Ulysse now wears a bandage over his right eye. Doctors have said they are not sure if the blindness occurred as a result of the punches or by shards of glass from his eyeglasses.

    "They were beating him, kicking him, punching him in the face many, many times," Ulysse's father, Pierre Ulysse, said. 

    Read NBCNewYork.com's story on Brooklyn boy's account of school attack

    New York City Department of Education spokeswoman Margie Feinberg said in a statement that the boy's beating was "taken very seriously," noting that two students were arrested.

    "The matter is under investigation," Feinberg added.

    The eighth-grader says he was beaten up by a pair of seventh-graders who shouted insults and slurs at him, including "transvestite" and "gay," according to a report released by the Department of Education.

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    One classmate pinned Ulysse down while the other punched him repeatedly, according to the boy. The fight continued in the cafeteria until it was broken up by school safety officers and school aides, Ulysse said. 

    The Ulysse family has filed a lawsuit against the New York City Department of Education, seeking $16 million for failing to properly supervise the students. Their lawyer said the school report was evidence that the attack was unprovoked. 

    "This should not have happened in this school," said Sanford Rubenstein, the family's attorney in Brooklyn. "This should not have happened in this school system." 

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    58 comments

    bullying is not new to the school system! When I was in grade school way back in the day , living in an upscale neighborhood, going to one of the best schools around. I was bullied because I was wearing hiking boots and "no girl should wear hiking boots." the bullies stepped repeatly on my shoes, br …

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    Explore related topics: of, attack, education, department, bullying, brooklyn
  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    1:10pm, EDT

    Vacation fund for bullied bus monitor tops $300,000

    Seventh graders who cruelly taunted their 68-year-old school bus monitor, Karen Klein, will be punished. In the meantime, Klein has received hundreds of thousands of dollars to help her retire and take her dream vacation. NBC's Craig Melvin reports.

    By Jim Gold, NBC News

    Updated at 6:16 p.m. ET: Bullied school bus monitor Karen Klein might have more than $335,000 to vacation far away from the Greece, N.Y., pupils who bullied her in a profanity-laced video that went viral this week.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Nearly 10,000 online sympathizers had donated that much money by Thursday evening on the fund-raising site Indiegogo.com in a campaign called “Lets Give Karen – The bus monitor – H Klein A Vacation.”

    Graphic content warning: The video on YouTube 


    The fund-raising was set up through a reddit.com member, identified as Max Sidorov of Toronto, Canada, after he saw the video called "Making the Bus Monitor Cry" posted to YouTube on Monday.

    “It’s an incredible campaign,” Slava Rubin, who cofounded Indiegogo.com in 2008, told msnbc.com. “We’re seeing good Samaritans come together to support this brave woman.”

    An Indiegogo spokesperson earlier told msnbc.com that the website was in touch with Klein, and she  would receive her money when the campaign is over, scheduled for July 20.

    Indiegogo charges 4 percent for the fund-raising, Rubin said.

    Klein was featured Thursday on the TODAY show, and later said she doesn't really want the “nasty kids” charged.

    On TODAY.com: Karen Klein won't press charges 

    Earlier: Vacation of a lifetime pledged for bus monitor bullied in viral video

    Follow Jim Gold at msnbc.com on Facebook here.

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    694 comments

    if i found out that one of my kids was doing this i'd f**k them up!!!!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, bullying, youtube, karen-klein
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