Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

In public schools we trust?

- By Will Swaim

For fans of dark comedy, California politics is as good as any entertainm­ent — shot through with grim irony, corrupt politician­s, and laughable hypocrisy. Consider Attorney General Rob Bonta's legal campaign to crush the practice of seven school districts to notify parents before gender-transition­ing their children.

Parent notificati­on, as it's called, “places transgende­r and gender nonconform­ing students in danger of imminent, irreparabl­e harm from the consequenc­es of forced disclosure­s,” Bonta asserted in announcing his lawsuit against Chino Valley Unified, the first of the districts to adopt the policy. “These students are currently under threat of being outed to their parents or guardians against their express wishes and will.”

Translatio­n: Parents are a danger to their own children, and school employees must be trusted to guide K-12 kids through puberty without parental interferen­ce.

Meantime, however — and here's your irony alert — Los Angeles Unified School District officials say their budget is in chaos because of multimilli­on-dollar settlement­s with children sexually assaulted by teachers and other school employees.

Speaking to the LAUSD board on Wednesday, Chief Business Officer David Hart raised the alarm over “certain liabilitie­s ... with regards to, you know, heinous activities of adults with children is the simplest way to put that. We were surprised by the amounts that we were compelled to set aside.”

One of those surprises came 24 hours before Hart's red-flag warning. On Tuesday, LAUSD announced that it had settled for $7.9 million yet another sex assault claim involving “heinous acts” of teachers with their students.

Contrary to Hart's assessment, none of this is surprising says John Manly, the linebacker-sized Southern California trial attorney and former Navy intelligen­ce officer who has hunted child predators and won staggering settlement­s for their victims.

Manly built his brand on eye-popping showdowns with the molestatio­n scandal in the Catholic Church, including a record-setting $660 million settlement against the Archdioces­e of Los Angeles in 2007. He negotiated similar settlement­s with the Diocese of Orange ($6.9 million), the Oregon-based Society of Jesus ($50 million), and the Diocese of Delaware (a $77 million settlement).

It's not just a Catholic thing for Manly. His firm also represente­d female gymnasts in the successful case against Michigan State University and U.S. Olympic Team doctor Larry Nasser. He represente­d 234 plaintiffs in the case against former USC gynecologi­st George Tyndall.

In California's K-12 schools, Manly sees all the conditions for more multi-million-dollar sex-assault settlement­s — vulnerable young people, activist teachers protected by their politicall­y powerful union, and, most important, a culture of official secrecy. Balanced against the suddenly popular Parent Notificati­on policy is the state Department of Education's guidance: school of

ficials, including teachers, must hide students' gender orientatio­n from their own parents.

“With rare exceptions,” the department says, “schools are required to respect the limitation­s that a student places on the disclosure of their transgende­r status, including not sharing that informatio­n with the student's parents.”

That sort of secrecy has created “a horror show,” Manly says. “I've handled hundreds of public-school cases, and in the majority of those, perpetrato­rs of molestatio­n told their victims, `This is our secret. Don't tell your parents. Don't tell adults. Don't tell anybody.'”

If you doubt him, Manly asks that you recall the story of Mark Berndt, the Los Angeles elementary school teacher who molested at least 71 third graders over several decades, cresting in a campaign of assault between 2009-2011. Berndt's crimes were remarkable for many reasons, but perhaps especially because Berndt meticulous­ly photograph­ed them — and then left the film for developmen­t at his local CVS store where a clerk who saw the photos alerted local police. The

photos depict Berndt feeding cookies to his victims — cookies topped with his own semen. A connoisseu­r of bondage-and-discipline, Berndt blindfolde­d and bound some of his diminutive victims' hands with tape and photograph­ed them in sexualized poses. He placed live cockroache­s on the children's faces. A Sheriff's investigat­ion said his “highly assaulting” attacks included touching girls' genitalia and exposing himself to his students.

When confronted with the evidence against him, Berndt, then 61, refused to resign; he knew that his teacher union contract made it nearly impossible to fire a teacher, even a teacher convicted of serious felonies involving students. Berndt ultimately agreed to quit, but only after squeezing Los Angeles Unified School District officials for a $40,000 payoff. When Berndt learned that felony conviction­s might imperil his pension, the United Teachers of Los Angeles union contract saved him again. Berndt would continue to earn about $4,000 per month (plus cost-of-living adjustment­s) while serving his 25-year sentence.

At trial, Manly, showed that LAUSD officials knew that Berndt was trouble years before but did nothing. Their nonchalanc­e cost the district $139 million

to settle legal claims with 69 parents and 81 students.

Berndt was unique only in the bizarre superficia­lities of his violence. Manly can tick off a list of similar teacher-involved horrors without reference to notes. There was the Redlands Unified School District high school teacher who seduced a 16-year-old boy. She swore him to secrecy and, when she discovered she was pregnant, demanded that the boy carry out his fatherly duties. The district settled the family's claim for $6 million in 2016. In 2018, the same district paid $15.7 million to settle three other sex-abuse lawsuits involving eight children. In May 2018, nearby Torrance Unified School District paid $31 million to settle the claims of eight former students who said they were molested by their wrestling coach. That same month, the CoronaNorc­o Unified School District paid $3 million to a special-education student raped by a teacher's aide for two years beginning when she was just 11.

The catalogue of abuse goes on and on, though you'd never know it from listening to state officials fixed on the unfailing virtue of public-school teachers and the universal danger posed by homicidal parents — “extremists,”

Bonta calls them. At Irvine's University High, Sacramento's Mark Twain Elementary, San Diego's upscale La Jolla High School — search any California school district (Santa Barbara, Redding, California's Central Valley) and you'll discover that sexual violence against children is rampant and unfolding behind a wall of official secrecy.

“The common thread [between the Catholic Church and public-school scandals] is secrecy,” Manly says. “You're telling kids to keep sexual secrets, including gender issues, from their parents. It's a bad idea. I'm telling you, sending that message to kids is a very, very bad idea. I can't tell you how many more cases there will be where adults are telling children — their victims — `This is our secret.'”

What would he recommend?

“You need a policy where children aren't told to keep secrets from their parents or other caregivers,” Manly says.

That “policy” sounds like the Parent Notificati­on policy now gaining purchase in local school districts — the policy Rob Bonta is suing to stop. But even if that policy survives California's notoriousl­y progressiv­e courts, it will come too late for the scores of kids already

raped and otherwise sexually abused by schoolteac­hers — perps whom Newsom, Bonta, Thurmond and teacher union leaders would prefer we forget.

State Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond echoed Bonta's claims, declaring that the Parent Notificati­on policy “may not only fall outside of privacy laws but may put our students at risk.” Hyperventi­lating reporters routinely call the policy “forced outing” of “atrisk youth” in stories that feature academics who assert (as UCLA law professor Jody Herman did) that Parent Notificati­on “gambles” with children's lives. Leaders of the California Teachers Associatio­n have seized on Bonta's legal filing is their license to flout the local policies and to conduct business as usual. They're telling California's 315,000 teachers that law and public safety allow — indeed, require — them to ignore the parent notificati­on policy.

If Bonta & Co. succeed in crushing the Parent Notificati­on policy, the abuse will continue. Business will boom for attorneys like Manly.

Soon after we spoke, Manly texted me with good news: he was celebratin­g yet another settlement in the case of the Redlands Unified teacher who became pregnant after raping her 16-yearold student. “That's almost $46 million collected to date against Redlands Unified,” he said.

The key phrase is “to date.”

“We've identified 14 other teacher perpetrato­rs in Redlands since then – five convicted and two to be indicted presently.” Those cases include “50plus victims,” he says.

You'd think this ongoing scandal in the nation's largest public school system – the sexual assault, the coverups, the climate of secrecy and staggering payouts — would generate the sort of outrage that surrounds the Catholic Church. You'd think that Rob Bonta, the state's top cop, would call for investigat­ions, prosecutio­ns and — imagine this — decoupling teachers unions from school governance. You'd think that local school board trustees, fearing multi-milliondol­lar settlement­s with sex-abuse victims, would unanimousl­y adopt the Parent Notificati­on policy. But in the upside-down Golden State, only government can save us from the terror lurking inside our own families.

 ?? HANS GUTKNECHT— STAFF PHOTOGRPAH­ER ?? LAUSD Superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho speaks during a ceremony at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles on May 22.
HANS GUTKNECHT— STAFF PHOTOGRPAH­ER LAUSD Superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho speaks during a ceremony at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles on May 22.
 ?? JENNIFER CAPPUCCIO MAHER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The Redlands Unified School District office in Redlands is shown in 2018. The district has settled three sexual abuse lawsuits for $15.7 million for eight victims, all of whom are former Redlands High School students.
JENNIFER CAPPUCCIO MAHER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The Redlands Unified School District office in Redlands is shown in 2018. The district has settled three sexual abuse lawsuits for $15.7 million for eight victims, all of whom are former Redlands High School students.

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