Sunday, August 13, 2023

Suiciding Public Education

An eleven-year-old child committed suicide in the bathroom of a public school while unattended.

I can tentatively go along with the decision to bring a Criminal Charge against the teacher. It's an open question whether there is enough evidence to secure a Conviction, and if there's not then Charges shouldn't be brought (I know, I'm old-fashioned).

***IF*** the article is accurate--and often articles like this are nothing more than a regurgitation of press releases and various "leaked" reports—the teacher was derelict in her duties (intentionally malicious; alternatively callous indifference to such a degree that malice can be inferred) such that it rises to the level of a Criminal offense.

But if the teacher is to be Prosecuted, so should the “mental health professionals” who put the child into that condition. Along with the “medical professionals” that gave the child the “vaccines” that likely led to his learning challenges, and likely contributed in other ways as well to his “mental health issues”. Dumped in a public school following inpatient treatment while still being a high risk for suicide? That would be like a cop pulling someone over that was high on booze or methamphetamine, then letting the person drive away.

Schools are supposed to be schools, not sanitariums or “mental health facilities”. It sounds like the child's condition was too precarious and unstable for him to be released from “extended...in-patient treatment” in the first place. Then, instead of being schooled at home, or at a facility constructed to provide constant surveillance, he was dropped into a place that was hardly capable of providing more “in-patient treatment”--all it could really do was monitor symptoms.

Missing from the article, which is par for the course and don't hold your breath waiting for that information to ever come out, is the child's medication history, past and through the day of his demise. That wouldn't let the teacher off the hook, but it would shed light on how far and wide the net should be cast on Prosecuting the "mental health professionals" and “medical professionals” who are likewise culpable.
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Amelia Giordano, a music teacher at Carpenter Elementary School, in southeast Wyoming, was slapped with the misdemeanor charge [child endangerment] last month by the Laramie County District Attorney’s office after fifth-grader Paul Pine hanged himself on a bathroom stall coat rack in January — despite school staff being instructed to monitor him in the restroom — the Wyoming Tribune Eagle reported.

[Snip]

In October, Pine, who had struggled with reading and fell behind at school, told his mother, Chandel Pine, 34, that he planned to kill himself in the school’s bathroom.

Chandel Pine said that her son went on an extended leave of absence for in-patient treatment afterward, and she alerted Carpenter Elementary administrators about her son’s mental health issues.

Pine’s mother said that safety plans were put in place afterward, with the principal instructing all staff to not let any fifth-graders go to the restroom unattended.

[Sounds like a concentration camp—If one person breaks the rules, all must suffer the consequences].
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“The surveillance footage showed her just being irritated that he wasn’t answering,” Chandel Pine told The Post.

“The surveillance footage shows her rolling her eyes, putting her hands on her hips, as if irritated. “

“All the while, Paul was dead in the bathroom.”


Teacher pleads not guilty in connection to boy, 11, who committed suicide inside school bathroom after he said he planned to do it: report



Substack Permalink:
https://terrylclark.substack.com/p/suiciding-public-education

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