Miami Herald

District upholds firing of teacher over crude TikTok videos

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A school district will not reinstate a Florida middle school teacher who lost his job last year after making “lewd and offensive” TikTok videos that were seen by his students.

The Lake County School Board agreed last month to uphold the terminatio­n of Todd Erdman’s teaching contract, the Orlando Sentinel reported.

Erdman, 45, had taught at Umatilla Middle School for 12 years.

He was fired in September 2019, shortly after the videos were brought to the district’s attention, the newspaper reported. Officials said the videos amounted to profession­al misconduct.

The videos included one of Erdman cursing and joking as he drank a beer in the morning, saying he needed alcohol because of the “idiots” he worked with. Other showed a candlelit bathtub, where he made or lip-synced crude sexual comments.

“This is probably one of the most disturbing and most appalling things I’ve seen from an educator,” Superinten­dent Diane Kornegay testified during a July administra­tive hearing on Erdman’s case.

Parents and staff contacted the school’s principal and assistant principal on Sept. 4, 2019, saying they had seen them and that students viewed them as well.

Erdman had no prior discipline issues and had positive evaluation­s. He said the videos were private and blamed them on someone stealing his phone, and then hackers accessing his Tik

Tok account, the newspaper reported.

The superinten­dent told an administra­tive law judge hearing the case that it didn’t matter.

“He bears the burden to make sure if they were not intended for outside viewing, that that not occur. And it did,” she said.

Judge Robert Telfer agreed, and noted in his written order that parents testified that their children had shown them a handful of the videos, which one mother said made her “disgusted.”

Judge Robert Telfer also said he did not find credible Erdman’s explanatio­n for how the videos became public.

Erdman was fired in November 2019. He appealed the decision, but the hearing wasn’t held until July, in part because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Telfer heard two days of testimony and then ruled in November that the school district had just cause to fire Erdman, the newspaper reported.

“Those TikTok videos contain lewd and offensive material,” he wrote in his Nov. 6 order. “Those TikTok videos made their way into the public sphere, and were viewed by students and parents in the school district, as well as school district personnel.”

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