#Loudoun county
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A TIM sexually assaulted a girl and a teacher who told a grand jury the truth about another incident of sexual assault was fired. At least someone in the school was more concerned about the truth then perverts or maintaining a woke image.
LOUDOUN COUNTY, Va. — A jury of six women and one man on Friday found ex-Loudoun County Public Schools Superintendent Scott Ziegler guilty of using his position to retaliate against a teacher for cooperating with a grand jury investigating how the district handled sexual assault.
After a four-day trial plus a day of deliberations, the jury found that Ziegler wrongfully fired a teacher who had disclosed to Virginia investigators about mishandling of sexual assault in her classroom. Ziegler was convicted of using his official position to retaliate against someone for exercising their rights, and acquitted of punishing someone for testifying to a jury, both misdemeanors.
Ziegler could face up to 12 months in jail, a $2,500 fine, or both. Sentencing in the trial will occur on January 4, 2024, Judge Douglas Fleming Jr. said. Ziegler’s victim, former special education teacher Erin Brooks, clasped her hands in front of her mouth in emotion after the verdict was read.
Prosecutors appointed by Attorney General Jason Miyares, a Republican, said that after they began investigating the school district’s coverup of a bathroom rape, they spoke with Brooks, who disclosed an unrelated instance of mishandling of sexual assault by school administrators. Brooks was then fired by Ziegler for cooperating with the special grand jury.
Out of all of LCPS’ 15,000 teachers, Brooks was singled out for firing by Ziegler at a school board meeting in June 2022, prosecutors said. Ziegler told board members he fired Brooks for giving private information to a conservative activist, and for giving private information to the grand jury, school board member John Beatty testified.
Ziegler’s alleged claim that Brooks had given information to a conservative activist turned out to be false, and it would be illegal to punish her for telling the truth to a jury she’d been subpoenaed by, prosecutors argued.
At trial, school board member Brenda Sheridan, a Democrat who was chair during the gender-fluid rape coverup, was asked under oath about Ziegler’s closed-door statements that amounted to a confession. She did not deny Beatty’s version, but instead refused to answer, saying that because division attorney Robert Falconi was in the room during the discussion, she believed she could invoke attorney-client privilege.
Ziegler, who was wearing earrings and nail polish, did not testify at trial.
Falconi convinced the board to drop their questions about Brooks that June night by falsely saying she could simply appeal.
LCPS, often through its then-attorney Falconi, repeatedly attacked, tried to shut down, and obfuscated to the special grand jury, which Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin promised to convene following the Daily Wire’s October 2021 expose of a “genderfluid” rape coverup.
The grand jury previously said it would have indicted Falconi for witness tampering because of his central role in the rape coverup, but were hamstrung by the fact that Virginia doesn’t have a witness tampering law.
Though Ziegler’s defense attorney Erin Harrigan said in opening arguments that she would show that Ziegler fired Brooks for invading the privacy of her student assailant, she failed to produce evidence that private information was shared or that a policy was violated. None of the witnesses could point to a policy that Brooks violated.
Prosecutors laid out a devastating timeline of retaliation against Brooks, who was trying to get administrators to do something about the fact that a student with intellectual disabilities was grabbing the genitals of her and her teaching assistant Laurie Vandermeulen dozens of times a day, while making crude motions with his tongue. Administrators offered the educators a piece of cardboard called “no-no hands,” and told them to hold it in front of their groins. They also offered to buy them dog groomer aprons to wear to “slow down penetration,” they said.
At a loss for what to do, Vandermeulen asked a frequent speaker at school board meetings, Ian Prior, to read a letter to the school board expressing that there were two teachers who were being sexually assaulted in class and needed help.
Vandermeulen also sent a record of the assaults she was facing to her personal gmail after fearing a coverup was afoot, which Ziegler’s attorney initially tried to portray as “smuggling” private information, but ultimately failed to show that Vandermeulen violated any policy.
On March 22, 2022, principal Diane Mackey gave Brooks a glowing evaluation. That night, Prior made the speech, which contained no identifying information about the student, the teachers, or even the name of the school. Prior didn’t know any details about the student and Vandermeulen asked him not to use any names. He only said that teachers had filed a Title IX complaint on a certain date that he hoped the school board would look into.
Mackey saw the school board speech and the student was moved out of Brooks’ classroom the next day, but Brooks became the target of ruthless animus from school administrators.
Soon after, Brooks asked Mackey for a day off to testify to the grand jury, and Mackey demanded to see the subpoena. Ziegler asked HR whether Brooks was a probationary employee, meaning she would be easy to fire. Mackey spoke to Ziegler about Brooks, then falsely testified to the grand jury that she had not, she acknowledged this week, chalking it up to a memory error. Mackey also spoke about Brooks to Falconi, the attorney who prosecutors said was Ziegler’s “right-hand man.”
In May, Mackey wrote a negative evaluation and letter to Ziegler recommending that she be fired. Ziegler used the letter the same day to have her fired, suggesting he was waiting on it.
Prosecutors said the year-end evaluation of Brooks showed that school officials had “fabricated” the allegations retroactively to justify Ziegler’s desire to fire her, given that she had a stellar record and had been named Special Ed Teacher of the Year the prior year.
The evaluation focused squarely on the student who was the subject of the trial, saying she had failed to manage his behavior and failed to implement “plans” like the cardboard. It, and Ziegler’s attorney, suggested that Brooks had caused the student to sexually assault her by making him frustrated by refusing to give him an iPad.
The year-end evaluation posed a major timeline problem for the defense: The student never set foot in Brooks’ classroom in between her glowing March evaluation and negative May one. Yet the May one was full of allegations involving her handling of the student that were absent from, or outright contradicted by, the earlier evaluation.
“She made it up after the fact. Isn’t it brazen how she did this?” prosecutor Brandon Wrobleski asked. “‘We can’t have more sexual assaults coming out. Anyone who brings sexual assaults to public attention is gone.’ That’s what happened here,” he said. “Look a how well the Family works together when a dissident speaks out. She goes from Teacher of the Year to fired,” he said.
Ziegler’s attorney Harrigan explained the discrepancy in closing arguments by saying that in between the two evaluations, Mackey had seen that the student supposedly did not assault his new teacher, leading to a conclusion that Brooks and Vendermeulen must have been to blame for their own assaults.
Prosecutor Theo Stamos said the defense had offered no “motive” why Brooks and Vandermeulen would voluntarily cause themselves to be sexually assaulted or deprive him of an iPad communication device–Brooks was actually such a proponent of the communication aid for disabled students that she led a training on it.
The defense’s evidence that she had caused the assaults by failing to implement administrators’ “plans” or not provided him an iPad was based on fleeting observations from a handful of administrators who had stopped in Brooks’ class for a few minutes, and whose testimony at trial suggested that the defense had overstated or misrepresented their observations.
Harrigan emphasized in closing arguments that the law about an employer punishing someone for jury testimony talks about punishing them for being absent. Ziegler was found not guilty of that charge, perhaps because jurors believed he was retaliating against Brooks for what she said to the grand jury, not for taking a day off work to do it.
A month after his January 4 sentencing, Ziegler will face a separate trial on a final misdemeanor charge that was at the core of The Daily Wire’s 2021 story: His false statement at a school board meeting that there had been no sexual assaults in LCPS restrooms–part of a screed denigrating parents who were concerned about a transgender policy being discussed–when in fact he knew that a skirt-wearing boy had anally raped a ninth grader in the girls bathroom just weeks prior.
Harrigan said she plans to file a “somewhat legally complex” “motion to set aside the jury’s verdict.”
#usa#virginia#Loudoun County#Superintendent Scott Zeigler#Why doesn't Virginia have laws concerning witness tampering?#Victim blaming
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Yesterday’s activities, aka where I’m at mentally today
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Election Results in Virginia: Challenges for Democrats
Election Results in Virginia: A Troubling Signal for Democrats As the election results began to pour in on the evening of November 5, Virginia presented an early and troubling sign for the Democratic Party. While Vice President Kamala Harris was expected to secure a strong foothold in the affluent and diverse suburbs of Northern Virginia, the outcomes showed a different narrative. Although she…
#Democratic Party#education debates#Kamala Harris#Loudoun County#pandemic school closures#suburban voters#Trump supporters#Virginia election results
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Residential Gutter Replacement Services in Virginia
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#Gutterman Services#Residential Gutter Replacement Services#Sterling#Virginia#Loudoun County#Gutter Contractors#Home Improvement
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Mount Vernon, Virginia's George Washington arrested in Loudoun County
Donnie Gray Lee, 36, of Mount Vernon, Fairfax County, Virginia, United States has legally changed his name to George Washington. He was recently arrested in Loudoun County, Virginia. “8 long years without a phone call,” Washington wrote on Facebook on June 14, 2023. “It’s been rough but getting better each and everyday making a new life in Virginia.” On Facebook, Washington still uses his birth…
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Transitional Dining Room in DC Metro Inspiration for a large transitional dark wood floor, brown floor and wall paneling enclosed dining room remodel with gray walls and no fireplace
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Policy 8040 was what allowed a TIM to access a girls restroom and sexually assault a classmate. But sure start with a quote from a male student uncomfortable with girls walking in while showering
LOUDOUN COUNTY, Va. (7News) — On Wednesday, students at Woodgrove High School walked out of school in protest of the Loudoun County School Board’s policy that allows nonbinary, gender fluid and transgender students to use the school bathrooms and locker rooms of their choice.
“In the locker rooms in the morning it's an invasion of privacy, as I said because when men and natural-born males are in our locker rooms and they are showering in the morning, natural-born females can walk in there as they please,” one male high school student told 7News. “And that is not OK. And it goes against what we believe in.”
In 2021, the Loudoun County School Board voted 7 to 2 to adopt the district-wide policy known as Policy 8040.
But some students have had enough and want the policy reversed.
“I would like to be able when I get off football practice and go put my pads away and change not feel uncomfortable with other genders in there watching me,” another male student told 7News. “I feel that girls feel the same way about the situation. How would you feel if you were a female changing with a male?”
7News spoke to a female student who said she stopped using the bathroom at school because of Policy 8040.
“It's a massive safety risk, and they [LCPS] don't do anything about it,” the female student told 7News. “And we express these concerns and they ignore us and write us off as right-wing crazies. We're not crazy. We just don't want to be in danger on a daily basis in this building. I think it's people finally stepping up and just being sick of it. We're sick of being here and just being completely ignored. I stopped using them [the bathrooms] because I don't know what's going to happen to me in there. And people can be like, 'Oh, well, that's paranoid'. I'm telling you right now half the women in this building feel the same way. We don't use the bathrooms. We hold our pee until we can't. I mean, there are girls in PE [Physical Education class] who still get changed in the bathroom stalls in there because they're afraid of who might waltz in.”
Students at Woodgrove High School walked out of school in protest of the Loudoun County School Board’s bathroom policy. (7News)
Across the street during the students' rally, a smaller group of counter-protestors waived pride flags.
“I’m here to support all of the children,” one of the counter-protestors told 7News. “No matter who they are. Yours, mine, all of them.”
Students at Woodgrove High School walked out of school in protest of the Loudoun County School Board’s bathroom policy. (7News)
About 50-100 students walked out of Woodgrove High School asking the school board to restore girls-only and boys-only locker rooms, showers and bathrooms in schools.
“It should be the entire school [walking out],” one student said.
“But there are a lot of people who are scared to speak out against it so they stayed inside because they don't want to see the backlash,” another student continued.
7News asked LCPS if the superintendent is going to reverse Policy 8040.
“The Loudoun County School Board is continuing to follow its established process in its review of the latest Model Policies issued by the Virginia Department of Education. Policy 8040 is in review along with the new Model Policies, by the Student Services Committee,” LCPS said in a statement.
7News has heard from students at Woodgrove High School who wanted to participate in the student walkout Wednesday morning to restore girls-only and boys-only bathrooms and locker rooms, but the students were discouraged by their teachers.
#USA#virginia#loudoun county#Woodgrove High School#Policy 8040#The media didn't even want to mention that there was a real safety concern#At least one student was sexually assaulted by a male in the Women’s restrooms
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Backyard - Porch
Idea for a mid-sized, traditional screened-in back porch with decking and an addition to the roof
#northern virginia addition#outdoor ceiling fan#electric screen porch#great falls#loudoun county#outdoor fireplace#gas ceiling heaters
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Backyard - Porch Inspiration for a mid-sized timeless screened-in back porch remodel with decking and a roof extension
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Homelessness in Loudoun County
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#Dr. Jennifer E. Kaufman Walker#homelessness#Jada Theodore#Loudoun county#Loudoun county Virginia#Mental Health#Mental health resources#Pandemic#Psychotherapy#True North Psychological Services LLC#Virginia
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Residential Gutter Repair Services in Virginia
There are many different problems that can arise within a gutter system, but did you know that some of of them can be repaired? People often assume that regular cleaning and total replacement are the only options with gutters, but that’s simply not the case! At Gutterman Services, our 30 years of experience has taught us a thing or two about repairing gutters. We always advocate for regular cleaning and are experts at total replacement, but we want to see you get as many years as possible out of your gutters first! For that reason, we are happy to repair damage or other issues we think we can mend.
#Gutterman Services#Residential Gutter Repair Services#Gutter Contractors#Sterling#Virginia#Loudoun County
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Sterling, Virginia's Rodney Martin, Miguel Ibarra arrested in Loudoun County
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Traditional Patio in DC Metro Patio kitchen: a medium-sized, traditional brick patio kitchen design for the backyard without a cover
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Backyard Porch DC Metro Here is an illustration of a mid-sized, conventional screened-in back porch with decking and an added roof.
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Absolutely disgusting. The school administrators that allowed this to happen should be fired and replaced by people who care about the safety of all students not just in using allowing trans students to run amok so thay can look inclusive
LEESBURG, Va. - A controversial decision in Loudoun County has led to the release of a former student convicted of sexually assaulting two girls at separate schools.
The decision, handed down by Judge Pamela Brooks on Wednesday, has sparked some community concern.
Hunter Heckel, who was found guilty of sexually assaulting girls at two different high schools in Loudoun County, was ordered to be released from a residential treatment facility. Judge Brooks stated that Heckel is now in compliance with all requirements under his sentence, which included supervised probation.
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LOUDOUN COUNTY, Va. (7News) — 7News has confirmed through Loudoun County and federal officials that 15-year-old Hunter Heckel shown in 2022 on the National Sex Offender Public Website is the 15-year-old who was convicted of sexually assaulting two students in 2021 at two different high schools in Loudoun County, including one in a bathroom.
Heckel is now 18 years old.
Heckel was listed on the public website for a brief time. The website has a partnership with the U.S. Department of Justice. Heckel's name was removed after a judge ruled his name would not be part of any sexual offender list.
7News just learned Heckel was released from a lockdown residential treatment center last November and allowed to go home.
Scott Smiths' daughter was one of Heckel's victims and Smith said not one Loudoun County official, including at the time Loudoun County Commonwealth Attorney Buta Biberaj's Office, warned the victims Heckle was back on the street.
Biberaj was defeated in the last election.
"We were quite outraged when we heard it through the grapevine and had to do our own investigation to find out if this was true. In fact, it was. And then some fear went through our family...," said Smith. "Now what? But we put this behind us and we are moving forward and here we are today."
On Wednesday, a Loudoun County judge held a compliance hearing which Heckler wasn't required to attend. She confirmed he had met all his residential treatment and lifted his supervised probation.
7News reached out to former Loudoun County Commonwealth's Attorney Buta Biberaj for comment, but she did not respond.
Loudoun County officials tell 7News that no state law prohibits Loudoun County officials from warning victims that their attackers are being set free.
#usa#virginia#Loudoun County#Violent trans identified males#Judge Pamela Brooks released a sex offender into the community#Hunter Heckel#Loudoun County Commonwealth Attorney Buta Biberaj's Office didn't inform victims that a sex offender was going to be released#Virginia has no state law concerning the notification of victim when sex offenders are released
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