Imperial Valley Press

Family says Black girl who died by suicide was bullied

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The family of a 10-year-old girl who died by suicide has accused a Utah school district that was recently reprimande­d by the U.S. Department of Justice for failing to address widespread racial discrimina­tion of not doing enough to protect their daughter who they said was bullied for being Black and autistic.

Salt Lake City police confirmed this week they are investigat­ing the weekend death of Isabella “Izzy” Tichenor as a suicide. Her death has generated widespread outrage, including Wednesday from Utah Jazz star Donovan Mitchell, who called the case “sickening.”

Tyler Ayres, an attorney representi­ng Izzy’s family, said Izzy was bullied by a small group of other students who called her the N-word, told her she was smelly and made fun of her for being autistic. Ayres said the family reported the bullying to teachers, as well as school and district administra­tors, but nothing was done to stop the harassment.

“We don’t take umbrage with the children,” Ayres said in a phone interview. “We take umbrage with the adults who chose not to do anything about it. The adults who were in charge there should have taken these kids aside.”

Ayres said the family is “completely distraught” and also concerned for Izzy’s younger siblings who attend the same school and have experience­d similar bullying from students.

Shauna Lund, a spokeswoma­n for Davis School District, said Foxboro Elementary School in North Salt Lake “worked extensivel­y with the family” and that the administra­tion responded appropriat­ely to the reports of bullying. Lund declined to share any further details to uphold the family’s privacy.

“We, like everyone, are devastated by the death of this child,” Lund said in a statement. “Our hearts go out to the family. Foxboro Elementary has worked extensivel­y with the family and will continue to provide help to them and others impacted by this tragedy.”

Several hundred people gathered at a vigil Tuesday night to remember Izzy.

Izzy’s death comes about two weeks after a federal civil rights investigat­ion found widespread racial harassment of Black and Asian American students at Davis School District, including hundreds of documented uses of the N-word and other racial epithets over the last five years.

Black students throughout the district told investigat­ors about similar experience­s of white and non-Black students calling them the N-word, referring to them as monkeys or apes and saying that their skin was dirty or looked like feces, according to the department’s findings. Students also made monkey noises at their Black peers, repeatedly referenced slavery and lynching and told Black students to “go pick cotton” and “you are my slave.”

District officials admitted to federal investigat­ors that their discipline data from at least four years revealed that staff treated students of color differentl­y than white students, but the district did nothing to correct these disparitie­s, according to the department.

The district acknowledg­ed in a statement the investigat­ion revealed incidents that “were not handled appropriat­ely” and pledged to resolve any previous complaints. Black and Asian American students are each roughly 1% of the approximat­ely 73,000 students enrolled in the district north of Salt Lake City.

Jeanetta Williams, president of NAACP’s tri-state conference area of Idaho-Utah-Nevada, is waiting to find out more from the school district’s investigat­ion to make any sweeping assessment­s but said the tragic case illustrate­s how bullying is a serious and pervasive issue around Utah and the country.

“It’s time that everybody look at their situations within their school district and make sure they are adequately addressing bullying, that they are adequately addressing discrimina­tion and making sure that every student feels safe,” Williams said.

 ?? SALT LAKE TRIBUNE VIA AP
LEAH HOGSTEN/THE ?? Brittany Tichenor- Cox, center, joined by her sister Jasmine Rhodes, right, speaks about her daughter Izzy Tichenor, as hundreds joined the Tichenor family in mourning the death of 10-year-old Isabella “Izzy” Tichenor during a vigil at Foxboro Hollow Park in North Salt Lake, Utah, on Tuesday.
SALT LAKE TRIBUNE VIA AP LEAH HOGSTEN/THE Brittany Tichenor- Cox, center, joined by her sister Jasmine Rhodes, right, speaks about her daughter Izzy Tichenor, as hundreds joined the Tichenor family in mourning the death of 10-year-old Isabella “Izzy” Tichenor during a vigil at Foxboro Hollow Park in North Salt Lake, Utah, on Tuesday.

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