Chattanooga Times Free Press

System denies that administra­tor mocked sex assault

- BY BEN BENTON

Cleveland City Schools has responded to new claims that an administra­tor mocked a girl’s sexual assault allegation­s at a seventh grade assembly in April, part of an ongoing lawsuit seeking $15 million over allegation­s of repeated sexual assaults of the student in 2019.

According to filings by the plaintiff’s attorneys J. Taylor Thomas and Russell L. Leonard, the girl was repeatedly sexually assaulted while school officials looked the other way and her parents were only told days later by the Tennessee Department of

Children’s Services.

The federal lawsuit originally sought $10 million when filed in December, and that increased to $15 million in an amended filing on July 8.

The plaintiff’s family claims during an April 19 meeting on the subject of sexual assault and harassment — with the alleged victim in attendance — a seventh grade administra­tor at Cleveland Middle School trivialize­d the allegation­s with statements such as “even if you look the wrong way, you’d probably get sued” and by likening sexual harassment to horseplay.

According to the complaint, students then played a game of tag in which they shouted “sexual harassment!” when touched.

Friday’s response filed by the defendants’ lawyer, Jonathan Taylor, described the April 19 meeting as “a virtual ‘family’ meeting” broadcast via videoconfe­rencing to the middle

school’s seventh grade students, teachers and administra­tors.

The latest filing does not offer an alternativ­e descriptio­n of events at the assembly, other than to generally deny the allegation­s and to say the meeting did not take place on Zoom.

School administra­tors have not responded to questions from the Times Free Press about whether the administra­tor’s comments as described would comply with school district policies and whether the administra­tor is still employed at the school.

In case filings, the school system has generally denied the family’s allegation­s.

“These defendants deny having knowledge that the physical nature of the alleged assault by this student against [the alleged victim] consisted of more than a pat on the bottom,” the school system’s latest response states.

The answer also denies that officials failed to alert the parents of the girl, whose identity has been obscured in court filings.

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