Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Redlands teacher facing five counts of sexual abuse

Ex-student files lawsuit against middle-school educator, school district

- By Joe Nelson jnelson@scng.com

A Redlands middle school teacher has been criminally charged with sexually abusing a former student who has sued him and the school district for negligence.

The San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office charged Joseph Nardella, 53, with five felony counts, including one count of continuous sexual abuse of a child under the age of 14, two counts of sodomy against a person under the age of 18, and two counts of sodomy of a person under the age of 16, said district attorney spokeswoma­n Jacquelyn Rodriguez.

The alleged abuse occurred from 2015 to 2020 when Nardella was an eighth grade English teacher, according to the District Attorney’s office.

Two days after charges were filed, sheriff’s deputies arrested Nardella for the second time at his Highland home on Friday.

He was booked at the Central

Detention Center in San Bernardino and held on $500,000 bail, according to the Sheriff’s Department. Online booking logs show Nardella was released on bail shortly after 10 p.m. Saturday.

Nardella has been a seventhgra­de world history teacher and eighth grade U.S. history teacher at Clement Middle School since it opened in 1997.

He served as Clement’s social studies department chair for 15 years and ran the school’s lunchtime intramural sports program. Currently, he is on administra­tive leave from the school district.

He was first arrested in January after sheriff’s investigat­ors received a complaint from Nardella’s alleged victim, then 18, who claimed the teacher sexually abused him from the time he was 12, when he was a student at Clement, until he was 17.

Nardella subsequent­ly posted bond and was released from custody, thereby delaying the filing of criminal charges and allowing prosecutor­s more time to build their case.

In January, Irvine attorney Morgan Stewart sued Nardella and the district on behalf of the alleged victim, claiming negligence.

In May, Stewart filed a second lawsuit against Nardella and the district after another alleged victim came forward, alleging Nardella repeatedly sexually abused him in class and at Nardella’s home.

Prosecutor­s, however, declined to file charges against Nardella on the second alleged victim due to lack of evidence, Rodriguez said.

In a statement Monday, Stewart said he was pleased to hear about the charges being filed against Nardella.

“We believe this process will lead to his ultimate incarcerat­ion for the significan­t alleged crimes that he perpetrate­d against children within his care,” Stewart said. “Ultimately, we wish that Redlands Unified School District would take accountabi­lity for their actions and failures that led to those abuses.”

Nardella could not be reached for comment. He declined to comment in January following his first arrest.

Nardella’s criminal case and the affiliated civil litigation is the latest developmen­t in a sexual abuse scandal that has rocked the Redlands Unified School District for the past decade, prompting the district to pay out more than $41 million since 2016 to settle lawsuits filed by former students alleging they were preyed on and sexually abused by teachers.

However, no such allegation­s had surfaced since the district adopted a series of reforms in 2018 designed to educate administra­tors, teachers and staff about their responsibi­lities to report such abuses, school officials said.

Earlier this year, the San Bernardino County civil grand jury, following an investigat­ion prompted by a Southern California News Group article related to the sex abuse scandal, concluded that school and district personnel still struggle with their legal duty to weed out predators within their ranks and were vague on the state’s mandated reporter law.

In April, the district began a series of parent workshops on how to recognize grooming behaviors of child sexual predators.

District spokespers­on Christine Stephens said two workshops were held in April, and the district is in the process of scheduling more in the coming year at the middle school and high school levels. She said the district continues to enhance safety protocols, policies and systems, especially pertaining to mandated reporting responsibi­lities.

“The district will initiate an internal investigat­ion upon consent by the District Attorney’s Office. Any employee who failed to report as mandated will be held accountabl­e,” Stephens said.

Nardella is not the first Clement teacher arrested for allegedly sexually abusing students. Former Clement Middle School English teacher Sean Ramiro Lopez is serving a 74-year prison sentence for sexually abusing three students, all preteen and teenage boys, from late 1999 to 2001. Stewart represente­d some of Lopez’s victims in civil litigation that the school district settled in September 2021 for $11 million.

In a statement Monday, the district thanked the Sheriff’s Department and District Attorney’s office for their “prompt response in this situation” and encouraged anyone with informatio­n relevant to the case to contact the DA’s office at 909-382-3800.

The triple-digit highs are expected to finally recede by Wednesday, but temperatur­es in the 90s are still expected inland, he said.

Inland Orange County highs are expected to remain in the 80s Wednesday, Gregoria said.

The decreasing highs are part of a cooling trend that is expected to continue through the Fourth of July holiday weekend, Gregoria said.

By Saturday, temperatur­es are projected to be in the 80s for the Inland Empire and in the 70s for much of Orange County, he said.

On Monday, some monsoonal moisture entered the region, producing clouds over the mountains in San Bernardino and Riverside counties

with the potential for some thundersto­rms, Gregoria said.

As of 4 p.m., some of the only precipitat­ion seen had been around the Idyllwild area, Gregoria said.

“If anything (thundersto­rm related) would develop, the storms would have the tendency to move into the

Inland Empire, like around Hemet,” Gregoria said.

Lightning strikes remained a concern throughout mountain areas for possibly sparking brush fires, but no lightning activity had been reported as of early Monday evening, according to the Angeles and San Bernardino national forests.

At least 15 fires were sparked by lightning strikes in the Angeles National Forest by last week, said Dana Dierkes, spokespers­on for the Angles National Forest.

The threat for thundersto­rms was expected to linger with the heat wave as well, with an increased chance for precipitat­ion this afternoon, Gregoria said.

 ?? ?? Nardella
Nardella
 ?? PHOTOS BY MILKA SOKO ?? Jackson Staley, 2, grabs a rubber duck toy with instructor Joel Velazquez during a swimming lesson on a hot day Monday at Shamel Park in Riverside. Temperatur­es in the area are expected to be in triple digits today and Wednesday.
PHOTOS BY MILKA SOKO Jackson Staley, 2, grabs a rubber duck toy with instructor Joel Velazquez during a swimming lesson on a hot day Monday at Shamel Park in Riverside. Temperatur­es in the area are expected to be in triple digits today and Wednesday.
 ?? ?? From left, Magnolia Barkley, 4, Taraji Williams, 4, and Camila Stevens, 3, enjoy their swimming lesson on a hot day at Shamel Park on Monday.
From left, Magnolia Barkley, 4, Taraji Williams, 4, and Camila Stevens, 3, enjoy their swimming lesson on a hot day at Shamel Park on Monday.

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