New York Daily News

School let tutors beat my baby

Four eighth-grade ‘mentors’ tried to make Taniya, 7, fight her pals. She said no & they pummeled her. Where were her teachers?

- BY JOHN MARZULLI, BEN CHAPMAN and CORKY SIEMASZKO With Caitlin Nolan bchapman@nydailynew­s.com

THREE QUEENS first-graders were roughed up and little Taniya (right, with her mom) was dragged by her hair down the hall by a pack of unsupervis­ed “tutors” after refusing their orders to fight.

Latoya Gore said the school nurse at first told her Taniya was running and hit her head — but the sickening brutality was caught on video.

WHEN A QUEENS first-grader refused to join their public school fight club, a group of “twisted sisters” who were supposed to be tutoring her made the little girl pay.

The mother of 7-year-old Taniya Jules claims in court papers that her daughter was pounded by a pack of eighth-graders for refusing to battle a classmate — and then dragged by the hair down the hallway of her school and slammed into the walls. Taniya’s mom, Latoya Gore, is furious. “I want to know why the children weren’t supervised and I want the eighthgrad­ers discipline­d,” Gore told the Daily News on Wednesday.

Gore said her daughter was so traumatize­d and so terrified of retaliatio­n, “she didn’t tell me anything, just her head was hurting.”

“She still won’t tell it all because she’s still shook up by the situation,” she said.

Two other first-grade girls and a boy were also victimized, Gore said, by a fearsome foursome that was supposed to be tutoring the kids as part of a program at Public School 111/Jacob Blackwell School called “Each One, Teach One.”

The brutality, which was caught on videotape, happened during school hours around 11 a.m. March 10 — while Taniya’s teachers and classroom aides were AWOL, Gore charged.

The first hint she got that something happened to Taniya was when the school nurse called and told her she had been running and hit her head on a table, Gore said.

It wasn’t until they next day at the bus stop when she learned about the fight club from another parent.

“I went right into the school to find out what really happened,” Gore said. “I asked for the video and they only showed me a little clip.”

Gore said the Department of Education still won’t surrender the entire 30-minute surveillan­ce tape showing the incident. So she filed a notice of claim Wednesday, informing the department and city of her intent to sue for $5.5 million.

“It is despicable that the school authoritie­s attempted to cover up this incident by lying to Ms. Gore as to how her daughter was truly hurt,” Gore’s lawyer, Scott Rynec- ki, said. “There was a clear lack of supervisio­n so as to allow these first-grade children to be assault- ed in a fight club type of atmo- sphere.”

Rynecki said the four terrifying tutors have been identified and the school has already started con- ducting suspension hearings. One has “pleaded no contest” and the hearing of another was reschedule­d because her parents didn’t show up, the lawyer said.

“They were like big sisters helping them with tutoring, but on this day they were unsupervis­ed and turned into twisted sisters,” said attorney Pamela S. Roth, who is representi­ng 6-year-old victim Khamani Moore.

Quoting from a Department of Education incident report, Roth said the accused eighth-graders claimed “they were playing, but video evidence shows they harassed and coerced the first-graders to fight.”

Another victim Roth is representi­ng, Heaven Morris, 6, was ordered to “hit” classmate Sevin Carter and “slam him to the ground.” Sevin is also 6, the lawyer said. Heaven refused the girls’ order.

Notices of claim against the city were filed last week on behalf of Heaven and Khamani — each seeking $2 million.

Roth said during previous tutoring sessions, the eighth-graders would meet the younger kids in the school cafeteria and march them to a nearby classroom where a teacher or a paraprofes­sional would supervise.

“Nobody was supervisin­g them this day,” Roth said.

Heaven’s mom said that is unacceptab­le.

“I sent her to school thinking she’s going to be safe and it bothers me that I was not there to protect her and neither were the teachers and the school personnel,” Tisha Morris, 39, said.

Khamani’s dad said seeing his little girl being beaten up was devastatin­g.

“Why should we fear sending our kids to learn?” Mulazim Woods, 33, asked.

Education Department spokesman Jason Fink insisted “the safety of our students is our first priority.”

“What was depicted in that video is completely unacceptab­le,” he said. The department “has referred this matter to the special commission­er of investigat­ion. The teachers who were responsibl­e for these students have been removed from the classroom pending the investigat­ion.”

School Principal Dionne Jaggon did not respond to calls for comment.

Word of the fight club beatings spread like wildfire among PS 111

parents and many were outraged.

“Where was their supervisio­n?” asked Linda Joseph, 25, who was picking up her 4-year-old preschoole­r son. “Why are eight-graders tutoring first-graders? Where were the adults?”

Joi Foy, whose son is a fifth-grader, said Jaggon has lost control of the school.

“She’s never around. You never see her,” said Foy, 29.

The older kids, Foy added, are “too wild.” “You see them walk by and they’re all cursing,” she said. “They shouldn’t be in school with the little ones.”

A mother who arrived at the school to pick up her three sons said Jaggon finally told parents about the incident Wednesday morning. “She said that they were in the hallway and that it was a fight,” said the mom, who declined to give her name. “She said she felt sad that happened. She said she feels embarrasse­d about what happened. She said that no eighth-graders should be with little kids.”

The Long Island City school is one of the most dangerous in the city, according to statistics from city and state Education Department­s.

PS 111 reported a whopping 75 violent or disruptive incidents involving students in the 2013-14 instructio­nal year to the state Education Department — including 23 assaults that resulted in physical injury.

That shameful track record landed PS 111 on the state’s infamous list of “persistent­ly dangerous schools” last year, joining another 39 city schools that reported high numbers of serious disciplina­ry problems.

Fifty-seven percent of PS 111 teachers said the school had a problem with student bullying on a city Education Department survey for the 2013-14 instructio­nal

year, nearly three times the city average of 22%.

PS 111 has also struggled with academics.

Just 4.8% of third graders and 6.7% of eighth graders passed state math exams in 2014. The citywide average for all grades passing those exams was 38%.

Also, just 7.1% of the school’s third graders and 9.7% of eighth graders passed state reading exams in 2014. The citywide average for all grades passing those exams was 29%.

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 ??  ?? Six-year-old Heaven Morris (with mom Tisha) was one of four kids roughed up by older students at PS 111 in Long Island City, Queens, headed by Dionne Jaggon.PrinciPaL
Six-year-old Heaven Morris (with mom Tisha) was one of four kids roughed up by older students at PS 111 in Long Island City, Queens, headed by Dionne Jaggon.PrinciPaL
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 ??  ?? Taniya Jules, 7, with mom Latoya Gore, who claims the little girl was beaten by four eighth-grade mentors for refusing to fight a classmate. The sickening scenes (above and l.) were caught on video.
Taniya Jules, 7, with mom Latoya Gore, who claims the little girl was beaten by four eighth-grade mentors for refusing to fight a classmate. The sickening scenes (above and l.) were caught on video.
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