'It is not illegal to teach drunk': Woman arrested for child endangerment faces no charges - Yet another reason to keep your kids out of public school

by WKRC
Tue, June 11th 2024 at 4:16 PM
Updated Tue, June 11th 2024 at 8:53 PM

SUTTER COUNTY, Calif. (WKRC) - A teacher who was arrested for being intoxicated while teaching her second-grade class will not face any charges.

Wendy Munson, a second-grade teacher at Nuestro Elementary, was arrested in October 2023 when a coworker expressed suspicions that Munson was teaching while drunk.

Investigators said they tested Munson's blood alcohol content at the scene, which was two times the legal limit.

Sutter County District Attorney Jennifer Dupre said she spent months searching for something to charge Munson with, but came up with nothing.

"It is not illegal to teach drunk," she said.

Dupre initially believed Munson drove to school intoxicated, but was unable to prove it, saying "There was the possibility that she drank after she arrived at the school."

She said that to prove Munson had been publicly intoxicated, "we would have to prove that she is unable to care for herself and others, and the investigation didn't show that."

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(Photo by Jon Cherry/Getty Images)

Dupre also explained a difficulty with enforcing the child endangerment law. Dupre had to prove that Munson "would" harm the children, and not just that she "may" harm them.

"We couldn't prove that her intoxication would endanger them," Dupre said.

Despite authorities reporting Munson's BAC at double the legal limit, Dupre was not able to bring any criminal charges on the teacher.

Dupre said, "We tried because I don't like the conduct. It's not acceptable, but it's unfortunately not criminal."

Parents have expressed their concern about the precedent that this case sets. Can teachers be drunk in the classroom without punishment?

Matthew Cudney, a nearby resident, said, "If you show up to any job intoxicated, that's a fireable offense."

Nuestro Elementary's staff handbook says that violators of its alcohol-free restrictions will be terminated if termination is required by law. Munson is no longer listed on their website as a teacher, but they have not made a public comment on the situation.

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The law is not absolute nor all encompassing, neither is it always right. An inability to understand common sense is wrong regardless.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Absolutego
An exchange, reported to me in middle school by those who were present for it:

Ray, a student: Mr. Walkowiak, are you drunk?

Mr. Walkowiak, a teacher: Ray, are you fat?

(Ray was indeed the fattest kid in the school)
 
I don't think it's good or right she was teaching drunk, and she absolutely should have been fired, but yeah, she shouldn't have been arrested.

I don't think it was this one, but there was another video I was watching about a similar situation a few months back. They called the cops, she tried to deny it, and they tested her. She said she felt the school staff didn't like her and were out to get her, and you could see a little smugness on the part of the principal and hr drone in the meeting.

She agreed to resign, which they were really trying hard to get her to do, and then they still insisted on arresting her. The cop first suggested she get a ride home and she said she would, but then he flipped it and said he was arresting her anyway. Not for allegedly driving drunk to work, but for being there drunk. She also seemed visually sober and wasn't publicly wasted or anything, but as soon as she signed the paper he reneged on allowing her to just get a ride and arrested her.
If it was the one I am thinking of the teacher was stalling and refused to call someone to pick her up. When the principal collected her things from her class they found alcohol in her cup and she tries to wipe it out, that's when the cop decides to arrest her.

 
I never thought that was a law that needed to be made, but I guess maybe we need something like that. Sure it wasn't illegal but it wasn't smart either
 
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