Orlando Sentinel

Kissimmee teacher is sentenced to 30 years

Man, 21, pleads guilty to molesting student

- By Leslie Postal Staff Writer

A 21-year-old man who’d taught at a private school in Kissimmee has pleaded guilty to molesting a student at the school and sentenced to 30 months in prison, Osceola County court records show.

Domynik Lewis, of Altamonte Springs, pleaded guilty to three felony charges this month, admitting he engaged in sex acts with the child.

The Osceola County Sheriff’s Office said the incidents occurred in late 2016 at a classroom in Esther’s School of Kissimmee, when he was a teacher there, and involved a 12-year-old girl. Lewis was arrested Nov. 1, 2017.

By that time, Lewis and his mother, who’d also taught at Esther’s School, had left that school and opened a new one, Grace Excellence Academy, which operated out of a Kissimmee church. Both schools accepted Florida scholarshi­ps, or vouchers, which pay for students from low-income families or those with disabiliti­es to attend private school.

After the Orlando Sentinel reported Lewis’ arrest, the Florida Department of Education revoked Grace Excellence’s scholarshi­ps. The school had fewer than 20 scholarshi­p students enrolled, state figures show.

The school appealed the revocation with Lewis’

mother, Adrienne Grace, writing in December that “without the assistance of the scholarshi­ps we will be forced to close our doors.” Students at the school, she added, are “thriving in this environmen­t and separating them at this time would probably do more harm than good.”

The school has not been reinstated in the scholarshi­p programs, however, and has not received any state funds since it was suspended from participat­ing in November, the department said Thursday.

The telephone numbers listed for the school were not working, and Grace, who in state documents is also called Adrienne Lewis, could not be reached.

Lewis and his mother’s positions in both the Kissimmee schools showcased some of the same problems the Sentinel detailed in its “Schools Without Rules” series.

The stories, published in October, documented how private schools that take state scholarshi­ps have falsified fire and health inspection­s, set up shop in rundown facilities and hired teachers without college degrees and with criminal records. State law imposes only limited rules on these private schools. But the investigat­ion found that some schools ignored even those requiremen­ts and that state enforcemen­t of them was sometimes lax.

This school year, about 2,000 private schools in Florida will collect nearly $1 billion in scholarshi­ps for about 140,000 students.

At Esther’s School, with 113 scholarshi­p students enrolled last year, Lewis was hired as a teacher with a high school diploma as his only credential. For two other teachers at the school, 11th grade was their highest level of education, documents sent from the school to the state show. Unlike public schools, there are no state required teacher credential­s at the private schools that take state-backed scholarshi­ps.

Lewis’ mother was hired at Esther’s, too, though she had not passed a required criminal background check, according to documents from the education department.

In March 2017, after discoverin­g that, the department told Esther’s via letter to fire Adrienne Lewis. In a response letter, Esther’s School told the state she had been terminated.

Less than four months after that correspond­ence, the education department approved the new Grace Excellence as a scholarshi­p school, with Adrienne Lewis listed as the school’s principal.

Department officials later said that Domynik Lewis — under investigat­ion at that point but with no prior criminal record — was listed as the new school’s owner, and the state required background checks of the owners of new scholarshi­p schools, not principals. So the department approved the new school to take state scholarshi­ps — Gardiner, McKay and Tax Credit — with a principal it had previously declared ineligible to work on a campus with scholarshi­p students.

In announcing Domynik Lewis’ arrest, the sheriff’s office noted that during its investigat­ion he’d operated Grace Excellence, “where he continued to have daily contact with children until the time of his arrest.”

On April 11, he pleaded guilty to two counts of lewd or lascivious molestatio­n and one count of lewd and lascivious battery stemming from the 2016 incidents at Esther’s School.

A judge in Osceola circuit court sentenced him to 30 months in prison and then 10 years of probation, with special conditions for sex offenders, such as not living within 1,00 feet of a school, park or playground.

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