Las Vegas Review-Journal

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Families: CCSD failing to protect children from abuse

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

Parents of special education students banded together on Monday to demand more protection for their children, alleging that Clark County School District employees and students have routinely abused special needs students in the district’s care and that the school officials have buried informatio­n about the mistreatme­nt.

Five families held a sidewalk news conference to highlight what they say is years of inaction over issues with the district’s special education program, which is also the subject of several recent lawsuits and settlement­s against the district.

The parents gathered to support Michael Brickner and his wife, who want their autistic, nonverbal daughter and son to be able to wear a location- and voice-monitoring device known as Angelsense. The family alleges their daughter was wearing the device when they heard what sounded like another student hitting her on the school bus.

The district, however, has opposed the use of such devices when parents have sought to use them.

That has drawn the ire of the parents, who are

demanding more transparen­cy on the care of their special education children and calling for cameras in special education classrooms.

Not a ‘safe environmen­t’

“Ccsd,youclaimov­erandover again that safety of all the students is your top priority,” said Andrea Esquivel, whose nonverbal, autistic son had his leg broken by another student on a special education bus in 2016. “We know firsthand that is not true. You are not providing the safe environmen­t that our kids of all ages and grades need.”

Esquivel said the district tried to take her children away when the couple found out about their son’s broken leg and threatened to alert immigratio­n authoritie­s about her husband. Only after hiring an attorney did the couple received the video from the bus that showed another student breaking their son’s leg, she said.

“You have denied informatio­n, erased videos, blamed families and (done) anything else you possibly can to cover up because you do not want to take responsibi­lity for what went wrong under your care,” she said.

Esquivel sued the district before settling the dispute out of court.

Valerie Webster lost her daughter to suicide after enrolling her at a Clark County middle school where she said a teacher’s aide repeatedly­bulliedand­madefunof the students.

Her daughter, Nazareen Drummond, was born with a rare disorder called neurofibro­matosis and had physical deformitie­s on her leg and foot.

“There was never anybody that shemetthat­didn’tloveheran­d that she didn’t love,” Webster said, holding back tears. “Until I put her in this one middle school. She was only there for four months, and she told me how bad it was with this teacher’s aide.”

Nazareen expressed self-loathing in a note she wrote before she died at age 15, Webster said. She mentioned the teacher’s aide, who had told her she could not remember anything.

“Jokes are jokes, words are words, but they can (really) hurt someone,” Nazareen wrote — words that her sister wore on the back of a T-shirt at the gathering.

Webster said she is considerin­g legal action over her daughter’s death.

‘It brings a lot of torment’

Unique Barnett said she did not realize her son’s teacher at Thiriot Elementary School was hitting students with a stick until Child Protective­serviceswo­rkersreque­sted anintervie­wwithhim.

“It brings a lot of torment to my son to go back to school,” she said. “He’s worried about if the teacher is going to whoop him. He’s already suffering from a learning disability andjusttoh­avethisbea­nother thing that he has to go through is really devastatin­g to me as a parent.”

School police say they are still investigat­ing a teacher at Thiriot accused of abusing students.

Special education parents have routinely expressed similar concernswi­ththedistr­ictbothina­nd out of court.

In May, Joshua and Britten Wahrer sued the district, alleging that their son suffered severe neglect and abuse while at Harmon Elementary School, including, the lawsuit said, abuse that his teacher Melody Carter inflicted on him with a pointer stick.

After Carter was arrested in 2018, the couple wanted their son to wear a location- and video-monitoring device to school, but the request was denied by the district.

The district said in a statement that it is unable to discuss individual student matters and does not comment on pending litigation.

“Additional­ly, devices such as Angel Sense are reviewed on a case by case basis,” a spokesman wrote in an email.

Contact Amelia Pak-harvey at apak-harvey@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4630. Follow @Ameliapakh­arvey on Twitter.

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