Atlanta Educators given up to 20 years for cheating?!?! What?

You realize that nothing he said described a learning disability right? If someone is in the 6th grade and reading at a 3rd grade level it most likely means nobody gave a fuck about educating him and just pushed him through to the next grade. It doesn't mean he's incapable of learning. Special education was created to permanently handicap black children so they could perpetuate the stereotype they created of black children being less capable of learning at a normal rate than whites.

I have an ex with a 6 year old niece who's mother was always working, or at school, or coming up with some other reason not to spend time with her. Up until kindergarten she was in daycare and basically just watched tv all day. When she started kindergarten they grilled her mother about why a 6 year old can't count to 10 or why she doesn't know colors or the alphabet(forget about reading). I she dumb? Is she incapable of learning? No. She just hasn't been taught.

This is one of the bedrock principles of white supremacy: keep people from learning anything and then say they have an inherent inability to learn.

Stop blaming this shit on white supremacy. Just because they have a plan, doesn't mean people have to follow, or become complicit in that plan. Here is a question for you. What are us black folk doing to counteract their plan/principles? Better yet, what do you believe is the answer to their plan/principle that they are practicing on us?
 
If you kill someone and I kill someone....does me being a murderer somehow absolve you from being one? No. Quit all of the justification for this bullshit. You can say they were teaching for their jobs...well they could have moved to teach in better districts, reported this to a higher body,the Feds, etc. They didn't HAVE to participate. And AGAIN they were instructed to take the plea. I think we can all agree that those fines and probation were lenient as hell. If you looked some weren't even required to lose their jobs. I didn't even see revocation of their licenses in the those penalties. But let me guess they HAD to take it to trial too Huh?

That's what's wrong with us now. No accountability. Claim we are supreme to CAC but everything we do wrong we try to justify it with a cross comparison to the actions of a savage backward ass people. Niggas sell drugs? White people do it too!! We murder each other "white people do it too!" Niggas on welfare? It's more white people on welfare!!!!

Man shut the fuck up. If we are so supreme we should expect more from ourselves. White people don't ever justify their shit by saying we do it too unless we are talking saying "nigga" in a damn rap lyric. Same dudes kicking black power the same ones justify the rotting of our children by this no account bs.

We have to really stop with the excuses for bad behavior. Wrong is wrong no matter what.
 
If you kill someone and I kill someone....does me being a murderer somehow absolve you from being one? No. Quit all of the justification for this bullshit. You can say they were teaching for their jobs...well they could have moved to teach in better districts, reported this to a higher body,the Feds, etc. They didn't HAVE to participate. And AGAIN they were instructed to take the plea. I think we can all agree that those fines and probation were lenient as hell. If you looked some weren't even required to lose their jobs. I didn't even see revocation of their licenses in the those penalties. But let me guess they HAD to take it to trial too Huh?

That's what's wrong with us now. No accountability. Claim we are supreme to CAC but everything we do wrong we try to justify it with a cross comparison to the actions of a savage backward ass people. Niggas sell drugs? White people do it too!! We murder each other "white people do it too!" Niggas on welfare? It's more white people on welfare!!!!

Man shut the fuck up. If we are so supreme we should expect more from ourselves. White people don't ever justify their shit by saying we do it too unless we are talking saying "nigga" in a damn rap lyric. Same dudes kicking black power the same ones justify the rotting of our children by this no account bs.

Well dayum.
 
Wow you didn't read my original post, the article or what you typed. The article says those that didn't participate were terminated or threatened with termination. You just said they were threatened by the BOE so how is that not adversely affected?

And if you need proof where's the proof to support your assertion which was the same as the article?
NO muthafucka!! What YOU posted states that teachers were threatened with termination for poor performances and/or not meeting mandated passing thresholds. Thats what I said initially and is a HUGE difference from being threatened to be terminated for not cheating. My original point stands. Those who did not cheat were not adversely effected by those who did. Stfu!


If the student is not able to keep up and the parents are not able teach their kid/s to read. Then what is wrong with that kid receiving special education?
Everything if the kids illiteracy is a result of being neglected and passed through and NOT a diagnosed disability. Once a kid is assigned that designation it follows him throughout his tenure as a student and sets artificially low ceilings and expectations on his achievement and education. He is then sent through a curriculum designed for the mentally handicap which laves him ill equip to compete and function in society as a independent adult. This stunts his personal and professional and social growth and development as a human being.
 
We have to really stop with the excuses for bad behavior. Wrong is wrong no matter what.

TOTALLY agree, but I still have a problem with the parents using this as the SOLE reason for their kids' failures. Like I said, some parents see this verdict as letting them completely off the hook. I'm glad at least ONE parent said something.
 
Quit all of the justification for this bullshit. You can say they were teaching for their jobs...well they could have moved to teach in better districts, reported this to a higher body,the Feds, etc.

Who do you think set this bullshit in motion in the first damn place? :lol:

The System in place is the problem along with the teachers doing this shit.

Don't absolve one side for the sake of accountability

It's funny how that shit always works.


Accountability for US no accountability for the people in charge of putting those policies in place creating this environment in the first place?


They're BOTH accountable.


The teachers gonna get 20 years like they fucking fucked the kids..oh wait.. like they sold cocaine


And the kids are still going to continue to get FUCKED because the teachers are still going to be preparing them for a standardized test that means dick as far as growing educationally
 
NO muthafucka!! What YOU posted states that teachers were threatened with termination for poor performances and/or not meeting mandated passing thresholds. Thats what I said initially and is a HUGE difference from being threatened to be terminated for not cheating. My original point stands. Those who did not cheat were not adversely effected by those who did. Stfu!


Everything if the kids illiteracy is a result of being neglected and passed through and NOT a diagnosed disability. Once a kid is assigned that designation it follows him throughout his tenure as a student and sets artificially low ceilings and expectations on his achievement and education. He is then sent through a curriculum designed for the mentally handicap which laves him ill equip to compete and function in society as a independent adult. This stunts his personal and professional and social growth and development as a human being.

So what is the solution besides just waiting for the system to "reform?"?
 
Lol@some of the comments.

Dont respond to the fag trolls

Also....are most justifying a crime....or speaking out against harsh sentencing?

Some of you are in here typing long ass emotional monologues via PERSONAL frustration and bitterness...has nothing to do with the argument tho.
 
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Who do you think set this bullshit in motion in the first damn place? :lol:

The System in place is the problem along with the teachers doing this shit.

Don't absolve one side for the sake of accountability

It's funny how that shit always works.


Accountability for US no accountability for the people in charge of putting those policies in place creating this environment in the first place?


They're BOTH accountable.


The teachers gonna get 20 years like they fucking fucked the kids..oh wait.. like they sold cocaine


And the kids are still going to continue to get FUCKED because the teachers are still going to be preparing them for a standardized test that means dick as far as growing educationally

And after all that.... Did it make them any less wrong ?
 
Who do you think set this bullshit in motion in the first damn place? :lol:

The System in place is the problem along with the teachers doing this shit.

Don't absolve one side for the sake of accountability

It's funny how that shit always works.


Accountability for US no accountability for the people in charge of putting those policies in place creating this environment in the first place?


They're BOTH accountable.


The teachers gonna get 20 years like they fucking fucked the kids..oh wait.. like they sold cocaine


And the kids are still going to continue to get FUCKED because the teachers are still going to be preparing them for a standardized test that means dick as far as growing educationally

You do realize this same system is in place for every school system in GA right? Yet how many do you see having parties so they can get drunk and change kids grades to passing so they can get bonuses? Shit is fuckin disgusting.
 
You do realize this same system is in place for every school system in GA right? Yet how many do you see having parties so they can get drunk and change kids grades to passing so they can get bonuses? Shit is fuckin disgusting.

Did you see these folks prior to all of this coming to light having parties?
 

So what is the solution besides just waiting for the system to "reform?"?
Who suggested waiting on the system to reform? I clearly said teach them how to fucking read. You asked a question and i answered it.

You have probably the most appropriate screen names on BGOL.

I always wondered why cats on here don't respect your dumbass now I see why...because you are an illiterate dumbass.
Who doesnt respect me? Name names and lets show how once again you are a misinformed fucktard incapable of comprehending or explaining the very shit you type. You're a fucking idiot with the perspicacity of a shitstain. Now do you want to continue to utter off easily debunked bullshit on this topic or would you rather keep with the personal insults? Im cool either way you ho ass nigga.
 
Not one banker went to jail for the crash....not one for the documentation fraud that was rampant during the subprime economy killer...


But they are sending these teachers away for 20 years...which for someone that is 40+ is damn near a life sentence.


Fuck outta here

This article speaks to exactly what you just stated!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/....html?utm_hp_ref=black-voices&ir=Black Voices


It isn't every day that people who abuse their positions of authority are held accountable for wrongdoing. Actually, to be statistically precise about it, it isn't any day that happens, really. But there is some good news on that front, for a change: This week, in an Atlanta courtroom, some malefactors finally got nailed.

Per the Associated Press:

A group of former Atlanta educators convicted in a test cheating scandal were locked up in jail Thursday as they await sentences that could send them to prison for years.

In one of the nation's largest cheating scandals of its kind, the 11 defendants were convicted Wednesday of racketeering for their roles in a scheme to inflate students' scores on standardized exams.

Yes, that's right, in the most recent scandal of its kind, a group of educators, including one principal and a number of school administrators, were caught altering the results of one of those daffy standardized tests that now subsume the lion's share of all pedagogical opportunities in America's public schools. Only this time, some are saying that this is a huge story and the biggest development in American education law since forever.

From AP again:

"This is a huge story and absolutely the biggest development in American education law since forever," University of Georgia law professor Ron Carlson said. "It has to send a message to educators here and broadly across the nation. Playing with student test scores is very, very dangerous business."

There's really no doubt that those convicted did a Very Bad Thing -- like, you know, The Worst Thing "since forever" OMG -- if for no other reason than that their actions will scandalize other public school educators, who are currently described so frequently in media accounts as "embattled" it's like their homeric epithet. The only people more demonized by political elites from either party are sadists who attempt to set up demented death-cult caliphates.

And sweet fancy Moses, did they ever lay the wood to those folks they convicted! Per the AP: "Over objections from the defendants' attorneys, Superior Court Judge Jerry Baxter ordered all but one of those convicted immediately jailed while they await sentencing. They were led out of court in handcuffs."

They took them out in chains! That's hardcore. That's humiliating. That's a sight that will make other people think twice before committing similar crimes -- it's what real accountability looks like.

Or at least that's what a horrifyingly unequal justice system looks like when it plays out right before our eyes. Last year The New Yorker took a close look at the teachers and administrators involved in this scandal and, well, read the story for yourself and decide whether these are people who should be shackled; or if, rather, society should apologize for creating the terrible circumstances into which they and their students were thrown.

So while an Atlanta judge somehow found the courage to lock these educators up even before they've been sentenced -- again, not a thing that happens to white-collar criminals (with an emphasis there on "white") -- the justice system typically has little appetite for such accountability. These educators stumbled into one of the few areas of American life where a willingness to lower the proverbial boom on a corrupt actor actually exists.

Let me give you a blueprint for how this sort of thing would have gone down if the scofflaws were high-flying bankers. What if you had a situation where, say -- I don't know -- a big bank laundered money for drug cartels and aided and abetted the transfer of funds between rogue nations and terrorist organizations.

This is an actual thing that an actual bank -- HSBC -- actually did. They broke the sort of laws that, had someone like you or I done the same, we would be lucky to avoid being flayed alive in the town square for it.

But when an organization like HSBC gets caught engaged in these sorts of crimes, what happens next is that the authorities tasked with meting out accountability invoke something called "collateral consequences."

Collateral consequences is an idea that Attorney General Eric Holder laid out near the end of a famous memo that everyone initially thought was going to be a new, punitive guideline to disciplining bad banks. But "collateral consequences" encapsulates this notion that the state has much more important things to consider than "holding people accountable for their actions."

From that memo:

In the corporate context, prosecutors may take into account the possibly substantial consequences to a corporation's employees, investors, pensioners, and customers, many of whom may, depending on the size and nature of the corporation and their role in its operations, have played no role in the criminal conduct, have been unaware of it, or have been unable to prevent it.

As a theoretical construct, this is fairly reasonable -- don't wreck the innocent on your way to punishing the guilty. But the way this precept has been applied has been much different. As Dealbook's Ben Protess and Jessica Silver-Greenberg reported, it's the principle that got HSBC largely off the hook: "State and federal authorities decided against indicting HSBC in a money-laundering case over concerns that criminal charges could jeopardize one of the world's largest banks and ultimately destabilize the global financial system."

As punishment for directly aiding some of the world's most noteworthy sociopaths, HSBC was forced to pay $1.9 billion in restitution. That sounds like a big number! But bear in mind that this penalty amounted to "little more than half of the $3.5 billion in pre-tax profits the bank earned in the third quarter of 2012," and just a sliver of the $16.8 billion the bank netted in 2011. HSBC also earned a deferred prosecution deal (where you don't get prosecuted as long as you super-duper promise to stop laundering money for drug cartels and terrorists), and was made to apologize. "Our bad," said the bank's spokesperson, probably.

As Reuters reported, former U.S. Treasury official and University of Notre Dame Law professor Jimmy Gurule said that this settlement made "a mockery of the criminal justice system," and recommended that HSBC be subject to the same sort of treatment as these Atlanta educators:

In his view, the only way to really catch the attention of banks is to indict individuals.

"That would send a shockwave through the international finance services community," Gurule said. "It would put the fear of God in bank officials that knowingly disregard the law."

But the way we prosecute banks is actually designed to prevent such shockwaves. Matt Taibbi, whose book The Divide offers a thorough filleting of the way "collateral consequences" has become a promiscuously dispensed "Get Out Of Jail Free" card, explained how this works in an interview with Amy Goodman, "Of course it makes sense to not always destroy a company if you can avoid it. But what they've done is they've conflated that sometimes-sensible policy with a policy of not going after any individuals for any crimes."

And so you get Lanny Breuer, the Obama administration's alleged point man in holding Wall Street's feet to the fire, telling the New York City Bar Association that he adheres to a strict, "sit down, you're rocking the boat" principle:

We are frequently on the receiving end of presentations from defense counsel, CEOs, and economists who argue that the collateral consequences of an indictment would be devastating for their client. In my conference room, over the years, I have heard sober predictions that a company or bank might fail if we indict, that innocent employees could lose their jobs, that entire industries may be affected, and even that global markets will feel the effects. Sometimes -- though, let me stress, not always -- these presentations are compelling. In reaching every charging decision, we must take into account the effect of an indictment on innocent employees and shareholders, just as we must take into account the nature of the crimes committed and the pervasiveness of the misconduct. I personally feel that it's my duty to consider whether individual employees with no responsibility for, or knowledge of, misconduct committed by others in the same company are going to lose their livelihood if we indict the corporation. In large multi-national companies, the jobs of tens of thousands of employees can be at stake. And, in some cases, the health of an industry or the markets are a real factor. Those are the kinds of considerations in white collar crime cases that literally keep me up at night, and which must play a role in responsible enforcement.

Being too big to jail "is a good thing," to borrow a phrase of Martha Stewart's (who apparently wasn't big enough). Meanwhile, Breuer now works for the people he was supposed to punish, a fine reward for a job well (not) done.

In the case of the fraud committed by these Atlanta educators, dogged investigators and prosecutors were allowed to make their case and are now hailed public guardians of justice. In other words, they weren't treated as shabbily as former SEC investigator Gary Aguirre was by his own agency.

Once again, here's Taibbi:

Aguirre joined the SEC in September 2004. Two days into his career as a financial investigator, he was asked to look into an insider-trading complaint against a hedge-fund megastar named Art Samberg. One day, with no advance research or discussion, Samberg had suddenly started buying up huge quantities of shares in a firm called Heller Financial. "It was as if Art Samberg woke up one morning and a voice from the heavens told him to start buying Heller," Aguirre recalls. "And he wasn't just buying shares -- there were some days when he was trying to buy three times as many shares as were being traded that day." A few weeks later, Heller was bought by General Electric -- and Samberg pocketed $18 million.

After some digging, Aguirre found himself focusing on one suspect as the likely source who had tipped Samberg off: John Mack, a close friend of Samberg's who had just stepped down as president of Morgan Stanley. At the time, Mack had been on Samberg's case to cut him into a deal involving a spinoff of the tech company Lucent -- an investment that stood to make Mack a lot of money. "Mack is busting my chops" to give him a piece of the action, Samberg told an employee in an e-mail.

One would imagine that an SEC investigator, provided with evidence of brazen insider trading, would be given the opportunity to make a case. But what happened next will probably not astonish you. Aguirre was sandbagged by his superiors at the SEC and pressured by Morgan Stanley's lawyers -- among them several who'd spun through the revolving door between regulators and the regulated -- to drop the case. When the still-undaunted Aguirre continued anyway, he was dismissed from his job. The happy ending, I guess, is that the government was finally compelled to fork over $755,000 after Aguirre successfully sued for wrongful termination. (Mack was finally deposed by the SEC, conveniently "days after the five-year statute of limitations on insider trading had expired in the case.")

These Atlanta teachers were, astonishingly, prosecuted under Georgia's version of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, the theory being that their actions were not some hasty, sloppy, misguided attempt to save their school from closing, but actually an elaborate criminal enterprise concocted for the purpose of securing teensy bonuses. The invocation of RICO -- which is more often used to bring down dangerous mafia families and much less often on dodgy schemes cooked up in a teachers' lounge with a busted microwave oven -- means that these educators face the prospect of decades-long jail sentences for crimes in which little money was at stake and resulted in the death of nobody. It really is something of a legal coup that prosecutors found it so easy to convince a judge that RICO was appropriate here.

Would that RICO could be successfully applied in banking cases! The very proposition is essentially treated as something of a fantasy. Prosecutors are currently attempting to apply RICO to a case in which Bank of America stands accused of "effectuating a captive reinsurance scheme that defrauded plaintiffs ... and compelled them to fund illegal kickbacks and referral payments in the form of purported reinsurance premiums to Bank of America," but it looks like the bank will dodge this on a technicality.

It's a pity the prosecutors in that case are unlikely to be as successful as bringing the RICO sledgehammer to bear as those who prosecuted these Atlanta teachers. And those teachers probably rue the fact that they were much easier to prosecute, as well. As ProPublica's Marian Wang describes, standard operating procedure for cases in which regulators actually put together iron-clad cases against Wall Street criminals looks something like: 1) go after the scofflaws with all the skittishness of a newborn kitten, 2) if at all, and 3) at best, secure financial settlements so teensy-tiny that the judge presiding over the case stands up in court and calls you a disgusting, quivering coward.

Yes, that happened, too. U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff, who presided over the 2011 case Securities and Exchange Commission v. Citigroup, spent a sizable part of his opinion -- in which he refused to endorse the negotiated settlement -- lambasting the SEC regulators for their long-form imitation of an invertebrate.

But while such prosecutorial performances may stand out as gutless in the Southern District of New York, anyone who's spent time near Capitol Hill recognizes it as bog standard. As we've recently learned, if someone like former Rep. Aaron Schock commits the sin of fraudulently applying for a higher mileage reimbursement than that to which he is entitled, suddenly everyone in Washington becomes infused with the courage of Eowyn facing down the Witch-King at the Battle of Pelennor Fields.

And yet many of the same, serious people who talked so tough about the representative from Downton Abbey and his misdeeds, also consider it an open question as to whether skeevy financial advisors should be brought to heel for systematically defrauding their clients to feather their own nests. Why, such a move could imperil the entire financial sector of the economy! There could be collateral consequences!

In the end, I think that these Atlanta teachers have learned a lesson: Be a banker. Or a polluter. Or run a for-profit education scam. Or snooker people with predatory mortgage agreements. Or rip off people with penny-stock schemes. Or run a college sports cartel. Or create a super PAC. Or "torture some folks."

Just don't ever change the answers on a standardized test.
 
Who suggested waiting on the system to reform? I clearly said teach them how to fucking read. You asked a question and i answered it.

You want the teachers to teach them how to read. Well if that is not happening or the student can't keep up. The question is what is the alternative besides special education? Since you are against putting kids in special education.
 
dayam,

this system is a fuckin joke tho, steal all you

want, just be a high level white exec for goldman sachs,

buy the whorish u.s govt and laugh at the folly of it all...
 
Let's be clear - I'm a licensed school psychologist . One of my main duties is testing students to meet the "criteria" by state board of eds for categories of special education. In the African American community, we have such a criminalizing attitude toward special education when, in fact, regardless of the reason - if a sixth grader isn't meeting the academic ability of his same-aged peers, according to many STATE definitions, he/she would qualify as special education. I've sat across from many proud parents who haven't done jack shit for their black boys (especially) as year after year, we tell them how they can help at home, what they can do, etc. And, just because a student is classified as learning disabled, it does not mean he/she will always be classified as such. A reevaluation is done every three years - and learning disabled has nothing to do with a cognitive or intelligence deficit. It, in fact, means your intelligence is average or perhaps even above average, BUT, your academic performance is not within the same range (generally 15 or more points lower than your IQ.)
 
Harsh sentence:smh:. Murderers and sex offenders have done less time. Maybe probation and permanent ban on getting a teaching license should be enough.
 
dayam,

this system is a fuckin joke tho, steal all you

want, just be a high level white exec for goldman sachs,

buy the whorish u.s govt and laugh at the folly of it all...

Think about it like this, the sentence is a mutha, yes. But!

If a 3rd grader fails his reading exam, and you change the score so he passes, what the fuck does the kid do in 4th grade and he can't read? And if the system does the same shit to him again at 4th grade, well shit, if this keeps up he's going to graduate from school illiterate. And more than likely in jail. That's just fuckin unacceptable. I hate to see those teachers go down like that but best believe the same shit is going on in a lot of urban schools right this moment with no one to step in and stop it.
 
You want the teachers to teach them how to read. Well if that is not happening or the student can't keep up. The question is what is the alternative besides special education? Since you are against putting kids in special education.
How many times can i give you the same answer? This is circular at this point. Again, teachers and parents need to do their fucking jobs. Supplemental education programs and tutorials are better alternatives than a special education designation and curriculum.

Let's be clear - I'm a licensed school psychologist . One of my main duties is testing students to meet the "criteria" by state board of eds for categories of special education. In the African American community, we have such a criminalizing attitude toward special education when, in fact, regardless of the reason - if a sixth grader isn't meeting the academic ability of his same-aged peers, according to many STATE definitions, he/she would qualify as special education. I've sat across from many proud parents who haven't done jack shit for their black boys (especially) as year after year, we tell them how they can help at home, what they can do, etc. And, just because a student is classified as learning disabled, it does not mean he/she will always be classified as such. A reevaluation is done every three years - and learning disabled has nothing to do with a cognitive or intelligence deficit. It, in fact, means your intelligence is average or perhaps even above average, BUT, your academic performance is not within the same range (generally 15 or more points lower than your IQ.)
The result is still the same. You have capable and mis labeled kids relegated to a substandard special ed curriculum that cripples them going forward. Even in your best case scenario of being reclassified in 3 years has the students at a 3 year disadvantage from those in standard curriculum.

Think about it like this, the sentence is a mutha, yes. But!

If a 3rd grader fails his reading exam, and you change the score so he passes...
Standardized test scores dont determine whether children pass or fail. Are we now seeing how ridiculous it all is??
 
They'll be sentenced next week, but the prosecutor has already said that there'll be no leniency. A RICO charge for this shit was over the top. What they did was inexcusable, but a RICO charge? GTFOH!

They're stupid and should have accepted the plea that was offered to them.

Fuck them.


Fuck them.

The got damn GBI was investigating them, they should have accepted their plea deal.

Once again, fuck them.
This. :yes:
2. employees of APS who failed to satisfy targets were terminated or threatened with termination, while others who achieved targets through cheating were publicly praised and financially rewarded.

This means not only were they getting paid but they were fucking up the livelihood of the teachers who didn't want to cheat. So the victims were the teachers who didn't want to participate. Who will now have to sue to get their jobs back and pensions.
This. Class action lawsuit against APS is the REAL issue the white establishment is trying to get at...back pay to 2011 will bankrupt APS, paving the way for the charter school district overseen by the state department of education.

Ask New Orleans how that has been going in the last 10 years since Katrina.
.
2nd, 170+ teachers/staff got charges, EVERYONE OF THEM was offered a plea.
most with NO JAIL TIME, just probation, and they didnt take the plea deal.



while the superintendent, got over $100,000 in BONUSES
and the school board, had to pay her legal defense.
but she died of cancer last month, FUCK dat bitch. (may she rot in hell)
yet her family /estate gets to keep ALL THE MONEY.

APS_Teacher_Hall_Beverly.jpg

Only about 80 educators were indicted...the other 90 were "accused" or "implicated" but evidence was lax so the new superintendent let them resign with no option to return to the district. However...that doesn't mean they can't file a lawsuit for wrongful termination...class action there..this shit is far from over.

That shit is crazy. I would have taken the plea deal for the misdemeanor false statements and had that shit expunged under first time offenders. :smh:
:hmm: Saw this shit

Fire them and move on

wasting tax payer money on this bullshit
See above, they had a chance to resign 3 years ago...fuck em. Let em rot. :smh:
Maybe they should have accepted the plea which included what you just said.

Again...this. These 12 niggas are the dumbest alive. We don't even know the names of the other 150 who resigned or plead out...

Also, Dr. Hall's right hand woman...Kathy Augustine was suspiciously absent, never questioned, never charged...but she approved all actions in the district. That is the rat...she the "T.I." of education.
 
Definition of a Rico charge.

Racketeering is when organized groups run illegal businesses, known as “rackets,” or when an organized crime ring uses legitimate organizations to embezzle funds. Such activities can have devastating consequences for both public and private institutions. Consequently, the federal government and numerous state governments have created systems of laws designed to prosecute these criminals.



Sounds like exactly what they were doing.
Well thats bullshit. RICO sounds EXACTLY like what the bankers were doing that bankrupted this whole fucking country and not ONE of them mutherfuckers did a day. Get the entire fuck out of here with that logic.

This RICO shit, and these drug laws have the harshest penalties reserved for us. Its not right, period. There are obviously 2 standards of law.
 
Think about it like this, the sentence is a mutha, yes. But!

If a 3rd grader fails his reading exam, and you change the score so he passes, what the fuck does the kid do in 4th grade and he can't read? And if the system does the same shit to him again at 4th grade, well shit, if this keeps up he's going to graduate from school illiterate. And more than likely in jail. That's just fuckin unacceptable. I hate to see those teachers go down like that but best believe the same shit is going on in a lot of urban schools right this moment with no one to step in and stop it.

if this is a 20 year sentence, there wouldn't be enough jails to house all of the teachers and principals who have passed along failing students. Do you grasp that?
 
In Georgia they do.

If your child fails the CRCT your child can be held back.
Look man, respectfully, pay attention to what you quote. I said they dont determine whether a student passes or fails. And they dont. "can" be held back is different form "will" be held back. If a student fails, he has a mandatory tutorial session and retest. If he fails again, a meeting of teachers and administrators must ALL agree that the student cannot succeed in the next grade before they can be retained. And even this rule only applies to 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade (IIRC). So again, the CRCT does NOT determine whether a child is detained in grade or not. Period. Further highlighting how fucking insane this all is.
 
If you kill someone and I kill someone....does me being a murderer somehow absolve you from being one? No. Quit all of the justification for this bullshit. You can say they were teaching for their jobs...well they could have moved to teach in better districts, reported this to a higher body,the Feds, etc. They didn't HAVE to participate. And AGAIN they were instructed to take the plea. I think we can all agree that those fines and probation were lenient as hell. If you looked some weren't even required to lose their jobs. I didn't even see revocation of their licenses in the those penalties. But let me guess they HAD to take it to trial too Huh?

That's what's wrong with us now. No accountability. Claim we are supreme to CAC but everything we do wrong we try to justify it with a cross comparison to the actions of a savage backward ass people. Niggas sell drugs? White people do it too!! We murder each other "white people do it too!" Niggas on welfare? It's more white people on welfare!!!!

Man shut the fuck up. If we are so supreme we should expect more from ourselves. White people don't ever justify their shit by saying we do it too unless we are talking saying "nigga" in a damn rap lyric. Same dudes kicking black power the same ones justify the rotting of our children by this no account bs.
They ain't trying to hear that bro
 
Judge gave them a sweet last minute deal and most of them spit in his face. Refused to accept responsibility. That's why he hit them hard. They didn't want to do any time, now they are looking at a lifetime...well at least they kept they right of appeals.
 
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