At least 181 K-12 educators charged with child sex crimes in first half of 2022 - Reddit: Uh, actually, teachers are hero’s. Now show me bussy for an easy A.


At least 181 K-12 educators, including four principals, were arrested on child sex-related crimes in the U.S. in the first six months of 2022, ranging from child pornography to raping students.

An analysis conducted by Fox News Digital looked at local news stories week by week featuring arrests of principals, teachers, substitute teachers and teachers’ aides on child sex-related crimes in school districts across the country. Arrests that weren't publicized were not counted in the analysis, meaning the true number may well be higher.

The analysis found that at least 181 have been arrested between January 1 and June 30, which works out to exactly an arrest a day on average.

The 181 educators included four principals, 153 teachers, 12 teachers' aides and 12 substitute teachers.


At least 140 of the arrests, or 77%, involved alleged crimes against students.

Men also made up the vast majority – 78% – of the arrests.

Many of the arrests involved especially heinous allegations.

Roger Weaver Freed, the 34-year-old former principal at Williamsport Area High School in Pennsylvania, was arrested in June and charged with sexual contact with a student, corruption of a minor, furnishing liquor to a minor, sexual assault and aggravated indecent assault without consent.

Freed is accused of having a years-long sexual relationship with a male student.

Shannon Hall, a 31-year-old former teacher at Jamaica Gateway to the Sciences High School in New York City, was arrested in June and charged with forcible touching, endangering the welfare of a child and aggravated harassment.

Hall is accused of grabbing a 14-year-old female student's breast inside his classroom and of sending texts to a 16-year-old student that said he wanted to have sex with her and threatening to kill her if she told anyone.

Norman Merrill, a 45-year-old former teacher at Green Mountain Union High School in Vermont, was arrested in May and charged with production of child sexual abuse material and possession of child sexual abuse material.

Merrill is accused of secretly video recording female students walking past him at school and of producing videos showing nude children.

Anessa Paige Gower, a 35-year-old former biology teacher at Making Waves Academy in Richmond, California, was charged with 29 counts of child molestation on April 8.

Gower is accused of sexually abusing seven students between 2021-2022 when she was a teacher at Making Waves, with allegations including forcible sodomy of minors and sharing sexually graphic photos over online platforms


Anessa Paige Gower, a 35-year-old former biology teacher at Making Waves Academy in Richmond, California, was charged with 29 counts of child molestation on April 8. (Richmond Police Department)

John Doty, a 35-year-old former biology teacher at Career Academy South Bend in Indiana, was charged with two counts of rape, one count of attempted rape and six counts of child seduction on Feb. 9.

Doty is accused of repeatedly raping a 16-year-old female student and threatening to kill her. He is scheduled to stand trial in January 2023.

The analysis comes after the U.S. Department of Education released a report last month, titled, "Study of State Policies to Prohibit Aiding and Abetting Sexual Misconduct in Schools," which analyzed state policies prohibiting "passing the trash," or allowing suspected sexual abusers to quietly leave their jobs to possibly offend again in a different school district.

A bipartisan provision of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), which was originally proposed by Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, requires all states receiving federal education funding to enact law prohibiting the practice of "passing the trash."

The Education Department’s report, however, found that laws against the practice are varied across the states, and that while all states require prospective employers to conduct criminal background checks on educators, and most states – 46 – require fingerprinting, only 19 states require employers to request information from an applicants’ current and former employers.

Moreover, only 14 states require employers to check an applicant’s eligibility for employment or certification, and 11 require applicants to disclose information regarding investigations or disciplinary actions related to sexual abuse or misconduct.

Toomey, who pressured the Education Department to release its report for months, said he’s "deeply concerned" by the findings.

"While I appreciate that the Department of Education has finally fulfilled its obligation to investigate whether states have implemented policies, laws, or regulations to stop the heinous practice of ‘passing the trash,’ I am deeply concerned with these findings," Toomey said in a June statement. "Any educator who engaged in sexual misconduct with a child should be barred from ever teaching in a classroom again, yet too many states do not have policies to ensure that is the case. Releasing this report is only the first step—the department must hold states accountable and use the tools at its disposal to enforce the law."

Christopher Rufo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, called for a new national study on child sex abuse in schools.

"This is a scandal that the political Left is doing everything in its power to suppress," he said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "The basic fact is incontrovertible: every day, a public school teacher is arrested, indicted, or convicted for child sex abuse. And yet, the teachers unions, the public school bureaucracies, and the left-wing media pretend that the abuse isn't happening and viciously attack families who raise concerns."

It's time to take this problem seriously," he said. "I call on Congress to appropriate $25 million for a national study of child sex abuse in public schools, so victims can finally get justice and parents can have greater confidence that schools will be safe for their children."

The Department of Education last released a report on the topic in 2004, which claimed that nearly 9.6% of students are targets of educator sexual misconduct sometime during their school career.
 
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FireShot Capture 446 - pedophile teachers - Twitter Search _ Twitter_ - https___twitter.com_se...png
 
Men also made up the vast majority – 78% – of the arrests.
i would have expected this to be over 90% tbh, i'm surprised that it is so low. maybe they count trannies as women in the stats, that would explain this i guess?

The vast majority of teachers who sexually abuse children are leftists and troons.
i'm not so sure about that, because most of the grooming and indoctrination the leftists and trannies do to kids in school isn't even illegal and does not show up in these stats. only actual crimes do, and when it comes to crime (especially violent sex crimes against children) i don't think the personal politics or ideology of the perpetrator is very relevant. there's plenty of normies and conservatives to be found among sex offenders.
 
@Chucklenuts gaze upon this and tell me I'm paranoid of a boogeyman that doesn't exist.

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A kid aged 12-17 is twice as likely to have been shot than a K-12 educator is to be a sex criminal. Yes, it's a bit apples-to-oranges, but I don't know how else to you're going to understand how small a percent of a percent is.
It's not a problem that "doesn't exist," but it is extremely exaggerated to scare gullible retards like you into vilifying teachers, schools, and education in general. In the same way we have school shooter drills, I wouldn't be against teaching kids to speak up about adults preying on them- particaurly about adults with power of them- but only because it would be good lesson in general and not because of some country-wide pedophile epidemic that you are disturbingly hopeful to exist.
I don't know how you managed to find the headspace for me to live in there rent free but yet can't get this into your thick skull.
 
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365 charged pedophiles per year over a total teacher population of 3,500,000 gives us .01% odds of any given teacher molesting a student in a given year. Which doesn't sound that high, except you're in school for 13 years, and at any given time you probably have an average of five different teachers. .01% * 13 * 5 = .65%. Still pretty low...except I've spent my entire life being told that 95% of rapists are never even arrested (seriously, that's the number they use), which means we have to multiply that number by 20 to get the "real" number, which is 13%.

So either the teaching professions is so rife with pedophilia that the two should be synonymous, or RAINN is lying to us and we don't live in a rape culture after all. I'm excited to see which one they pick!

EDIT: This may be the best ninja of my life.
 
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A kid aged 12-17 is twice as likely to have been shot than a K-12 educator is to be a sex criminal. Yes, it's a bit apples-to-oranges, but I don't know how else to you're going to understand how small a percent of a percent is.
It's not a problem that "doesn't exist," but it is extremely exaggerated to scare gullible retards like you into vilifying teachers, schools, and education in general. In the same way we have school shooter drills, I wouldn't be against teaching kids to speak up about adults preying on them- particaurly about adults with power of them- but only because it would be good lesson in general and not because of some country-wide pedophile epidemic that you are disturbingly hopeful to exist.
I don't know how you managed to find the headspace for me to live in there rent free but yet can't get this into your thick skull.
So running the numbers it looks to me that over a 40 year career every single teacher has close to a 1-in-200 chance of being arrested for sex crimes against children? Not the own you think you posted.
 
365 charged pedophiles per year over a total teacher population of 3,500,000 gives us .01% odds of any given teacher molesting a student in a given year. Which doesn't sound that high, except you're in school for 13 years, and at any given time you probably have an average of five different teachers. .01% * 13 * 5 = .65%. Still pretty low...except I've spent my entire life being told that 95% of rapists are never even arrested (seriously, that's the number they use), which means we have to multiply that number by 20 to get the "real" number, which is 13%.

So either the teaching professions is so rife with pedophilia that the two should be synonymous, or RAINN is lying to us and we don't live in a rape culture after all. I'm excited to see which one they pick!

EDIT: This may be the best ninja of my life.
Except that sexual abuse towards children is more frequently reported- and those reports acted upon- than 'regular' sexual assault. Children are far more likely to be assaulted by a relative or 'family friend' than a teacher.
 
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A kid aged 12-17 is twice as likely to have been shot than a K-12 educator is to be a sex criminal. Yes, it's a bit apples-to-oranges, but I don't know how else to you're going to understand how small a percent of a percent is.
It's not a problem that "doesn't exist," but it is extremely exaggerated to scare gullible retards like you into vilifying teachers, schools, and education in general. In the same way we have school shooter drills, I wouldn't be against teaching kids to speak up about adults preying on them- particaurly about adults with power of them- but only because it would be good lesson in general and not because of some country-wide pedophile epidemic that you are disturbingly hopeful to exist.
I don't know how you managed to find the headspace for me to live in there rent free but yet can't get this into your thick skull.
you're twisting and mixing up your numbers in a way that makes the comparison meaningless
if you want to do the comparison properly you have to actually approach both cases from the same direction, not compare perp stats in one case to victim stats in the other case

either do victim side stats for both scenarios (total number of children molested by teachers vs total number of children shot by legally owned guns)
or do perp side stats for both scenarios (number of criminals who commit crime using their legally owned firearms divided by total number of legal gun owners on the one side, number of child molesting teachers divided by total number of teachers in the country on the other side)
 
If only the schools had more money and more administrative positions, they could prevent this.
No.
Once tenure happens it is REALLY hard to get rid of one. Tenure needs to be reformed so for example one cannot be fired for having a different opinoin- such as there are only 2 sexes.
Also politics.
LOT of politics.
A kid aged 12-17 is twice as likely to have been shot than a K-12 educator is to be a sex criminal. Yes, it's a bit apples-to-oranges, but I don't know how else to you're going to understand how small a percent of a percent is.
It's not a problem that "doesn't exist," but it is extremely exaggerated to scare gullible retards like you into vilifying teachers, schools, and education in general. In the same way we have school shooter drills, I wouldn't be against teaching kids to speak up about adults preying on them- particaurly about adults with power of them- but only because it would be good lesson in general and not because of some country-wide pedophile epidemic that you are disturbingly hopeful to exist.
I don't know how you managed to find the headspace for me to live in there rent free but yet can't get this into your thick skull.
I assume this is bait.
Piss poor bait.
 
There have been two instances where I was extremely creeped out this year by my coworkers when it came to students and teachers. This came from a middle school:

1. The Dean of discipline got a letter from a student professing the students love for her. Now chalk it up to 7th grader whatever, but the Dean always wanted to be friends with the students instead of actually disciplining them. Used to make her office the “cool spot”instead of actually giving detentions etc. I am convinced that this Dean was not innocent especially since she was out 2 weeks after the note got out for “vacation.”

2. The director of facilities or some token title used to always have the 8th and 7th grade girls off to the side and chatting with them. Now teachers would do this because it’s a public space and it was usually to discuss in class issues. This dude was laughing and joking with the kids which just sent off red flares.

Now I also know someone who was wrongly accused because the student got in trouble and wanted to punish her teacher it’s a go to of students now or you’re a racist. This is why when I student taught I would never sign a students shirt at homecoming which was a high school tradition or take pictures with students at home when I chaperoned. Some teachers walk that line and get burned. It’s utter stupidity sometimes.
 
Roger Weaver Freed, the 34-year-old former principal at Williamsport Area High School in Pennsylvania, was arrested in June and charged with sexual contact with a student, corruption of a minor, furnishing liquor to a minor, sexual assault and aggravated indecent assault without consent.

Freed is accused of having a years-long sexual relationship with a male student.
This is why they're trying so hard to ban the word groomer. They don't want you to notice stuff like this.
 
you're twisting and mixing up your numbers in a way that makes the comparison meaningless
if you want to do the comparison properly you have to actually approach both cases from the same direction, not compare perp stats in one case to victim stats in the other case

either do victim side stats for both scenarios (total number of children molested by teachers vs total number of children shot by legally owned guns)
or do perp side stats for both scenarios (number of criminals who commit crime using their legally owned firearms divided by total number of legal gun owners on the one side, number of child molesting teachers divided by total number of teachers in the country on the other side)
You're correct, and you'll have to forgive me since I just woke up to some schizo pinging me about his inane pedo obsession.
I actually did try to do the first but victim privacy laws mean it's very hard to get numbers on victims of sex crimes versus gun crime, particaurly when they are underaged, and even more so to find anything as recent as 2022. I'd be interested in seeing the latter but I really can't be arsed to put any more energy into this than I've already wasted.
I'm just tired of people who are downright obsessed with kids getting raped without actually showing any real concern or desire for a solution like @MarvinTheParanoidAndroid . This isn't some epidemic plaguing the nation- it's a problem certainly, but one that has actually been reduced with abuse awareness campaigns, improved reporting methods, and shifts in cultural attitude. In 1989, around 43% of high-school graduates in North Carolina reported being the victim of sexual comments, looks, or gestures by teachers. A similar survey about 15 years later- in 2004- had 10%. As much as people in this thread would like to joke about it, the founding of organizations like RAINN in '94 and the 2000s initiatives by the Childrens Bureau really did significantly improve the cultural attitude towards child welfare, and in particular, sexual abuse. While I think every kid having access to a phone and the internet since age 5 is overall bad, I would wager it has been the next big step in the reduction of abuse (even if we account for the increase because of cesspools like Discord, Twitter, and Reddit). It's become increasingly difficult for districts to just sweep reports under the rug when students can put them in hot water with just a few keystrokes. The next issue to tackle would be the one presented in the article- the rehiring of accused teachers by different districts, or "passing the trash." It's the same tactics police use- make the the problem quit instead of addressing them and hope someone else catches the heat when they inevitably fuck up again somewhere else.
I'm also immediately suspicious of people who make it their life's work to point fingers- like blue-checkmark Twitter warriors who harangue against anime or something and then get busted for having an HDD full of horrible shit. I'm sure someone knows the exact guy I'm thinking of, but I can't remember his name. There's also been a more recent category of people who do this- politicians using it to push dubious shit into schools and on children, on either side of the aisle.
 
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This is just who's been arrested. We don't know what hasn't been reported. Among other things.

For example, I knew a girl who went to an all girls school. She told me one of the teachers was found in a relationship with an underage student. The parents threatened to press charges and sue the school. So the school, wanting to protect it's reputation, paid off the family, and the teacher was sent to a different school.
 
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