Los Angeles Times

Elite school sued over alleged sexual abuse

Teen says Brentwood failed to protect him from teacher who now faces several charges.

- By Richard Winton richard.winton @latimes.com

A former student sued the elite Brentwood School on Monday in the wake of a female teacher’s being charged with sexually abusing the minor, alleging that other faculty members encouraged the unlawful behavior and failed to report it to authoritie­s.

The lawsuit accuses the private school, whose students include the children of many of Hollywood’s elite and L.A.’s powerful, of acting negligentl­y and allowing Aimee Palmitessa to abuse and batter the teenager sexually.

The student was abused in summer 2017, the suit alleges, after one of the school’s counselors offered words of encouragem­ent to the then-17-year-old, identified in the suit only as John Doe, to engage in an illegal relationsh­ip with the teacher.

According to the lawsuit, the school allowed Palmitessa, a teacher with a reputation for inappropri­ate conduct with students, to groom the teen in 2016 before eventually subjecting him as an 11th-grader to repeated sexual acts on campus, at an upscale hotel, and at both of their homes last year.

Mike Riera, Brentwood’s head of school, said in a statement posted Monday on the school’s website that an internal investigat­ion begun after Palmitessa’s August 2017 arrest resulted in the teacher’s departure. “It also led to enhanced communicat­ion of the school’s clearly articulate­d policies about boundaries and behavior as well as additional faculty/staff training,” Riera said.

He said the school was assessing the lawsuit and its “legal counsel will respond as appropriat­e.”

“Despite the litigation, we sympathize with the student and family for the pain this situation has caused them. We remain committed to all of our students and to respecting their privacy. We ask that you do the same,” he wrote.

Palmitessa, 46, was arrested and charged with multiple sex crimes after the boy told his family and revealed explicit messages, photos and videos, authoritie­s said. A grand jury indicted Palmitessa on 12 felony counts of unlawful sex with a child, sodomy and other sexual abuse.

She has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

In May 2016, according to the suit, the teen was among a group of students discipline­d by the school’s honor board for being on a yacht where some Brentwood School students were captured on video singing rap lyrics that included the Nword. The school’s actions, the lawsuit said, effectivel­y branded the shy honors student a racist and made him particular­ly vulnerable.

Palmitessa seized the opportunit­y to become his advocate before the honor board and “therefore seduced him,” the suit alleges.

In May 2017, as the teen crossed the senior quad, the teacher called out his name and grabbed his hand for 30 seconds in full sight of students and staff, the lawsuit says.

Confused, the boy reached out to a school counselor, Robert Jost, the suit says. The boy confessed his love for an older woman he saw every day and under questionin­g admitted she was a teacher, the lawsuit alleges.

“Remarkably, Mr. Jost counseled John Doe by encouragin­g the relationsh­ip,” the suit says, claiming the counselor cited the example of French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte, who is 24 years his senior and his former French teacher.

“Mr. Jost’s advice indelibly changed the course of John Doe’s life” and encouraged him to become involved with the teacher, the suit said. Instead of reporting the activity, Jost instead advised Palmitessa to “keep her distance” from the boy, according to the suit.

School officials did not respond to requests for comment Monday.

When Palmitessa was arrested last year, parents were told that school officials were “shocked and distressed,” and that the school — where tuition was nearly $41,000 last year — had cooperated with Los Angeles police.

But the suit alleges that others on the staff who shared an office with Palmitessa “witnessed the evolution of the relationsh­ip” with the boy and that a female colleague advised her to “stay away” from the teen. Despite being required to report suspected sexual abuse under state law, none of them made a report to police, the suit said.

Attorneys for the now-18year-old noted that the school’s core values include trust, respect, responsibi­lity, honesty and caring.

“Brentwood School failed in every way to live up to their stated mission and core values concerning our student,” said Sean Walsh, speaking on behalf of the law firm Browne George Ross. “None of those stated principles was afforded to our student and we wonder how many others have had their trust violated.”

The teacher did little to hide her behavior, the suit alleges.

In August 2017, she took the teen to a concert, where other students saw them together; they spent the next few days together, the suit said.

His father learned about the alleged abuse when he checked his son’s whereabout­s via an iPhone app, the suit said, and saw he was not at football practice but at Palmitessa’s house in Hollywood. The boy, confronted by his father, admitted what had been happening, and his family went to the police.

In recorded calls, the teacher begged him not to reveal their activities, threatened him and continued to talk about their sexual activity, according to the suit. Detectives seized videos, audio recordings and texts.

The suit seeks damages for sexual battery, fraud and negligence, asserting that the school failed in its oversight of Palmitessa.

School officials, the suit added, were aware that another male student had photos of the teacher “nude or partially nude” on his phone and “bragged about sexual conduct with her.”

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