TYB
>>17917244
50 shell-shocked teachers, staff flee chaotic Florida school district
December 9, 2022
Violent and disrespectful classroom behavior has led to a staggering 50 teachers and bus drivers to quit a Florida school district in the last two years.
Brevard County School District, the state’s 10th-largest, held a heated meeting Thursday that offered an unvarnished and often disturbing glimpse into the state of its classrooms.
“On an everyday basis I am deflecting being attacked, scratched, headbutted, pushed, hit,” teacher Alicia Kelderhouse said as her voice choked with emotion. “I’ve had my hair pulled, and pulled down to the ground. I’ve had my throat gone for on multiple occasions. It’s on an everyday basis right now.”
Kelderhouse said staffers often commiserate in the morning to muster the courage to face the day — and that frightened kids are grappling with the same fears.
“I have students who are afraid every day in the classroom,” she said. “It’s just not fair to them. That’s what hurts my heart the most.”
The head of the district’s beleaguered teachers union, Anthony Collucci, recounted recent incidents reported by staffers to school administrators.
One student began masturbating inside a classroom, an act that was recorded by a classmate and posted to a group chat.
Another teacher was hit in the face with a tape dispenser, while a colleague suffered a bite mark the “size of an orange” after a student munched on her arm.
Another educator frequently had to remove all furniture from her class because kids were routinely chucking it around the room or at each other.
vey said classrooms have descended into chaos because kids no longer fear consequences.
“As a result, we are losing teachers en masse,” he said, calling disruptive students “clowns” who are impeding the education of their classmates.
Several speakers criticized Ivey at Thursday’s meeting, and highlighted that suspensions are meted out in disproportionately high numbers to black students.
“Our children are not clowns,” said a local NAACP member. “They are not snot-nosed.” He accused Ivey of using “scare tactics” and “bullying” in pushing for disciplinary clampdowns.
Sauce/more: https://nypost.com/2022/12/09/staff-quit-school-district-over-violent-and-unruly-kids/
>>17917260
Why is it only beached whales that get naked in public?
WHY?
Seriously tho, Y?
>Musk paid $44B. There's gotta be some money to claw back and stupid people to bankrupt.
Sadly anon, it's WE the people who paid for all of it and continue to pay and it's buried in here somewhere.
https://www.usaspending.gov/search/?hash=3a4930aef17d6992f8ab41084b8006dc
https://www.usaspending.gov/recipient/76a0b97f-c061-39cf-2f9c-7f3e7604b86a-C/latest
https://www.usaspending.gov/recipient/b34cb2e3-60c2-69e0-9288-a94226437041-C/latest
Great song (in the Disco Duck era)
does dayz of fake licenses
Immediately pre Urban Cowboy era, when we wuz cowboys and line dancers…
>https://www.scribd.com/document/613430170/Election-Contest-Kari-Lake#from_embed
Lawfag statements reflected in the document. The FIRST paragraph is an editorial, not a complaint or allegation.
Not good. Not even a law clerk or student would think that's a proper thing to put as the lead in an important lawsuit. This appears written to be tossed.
and then campaigned on?
https://qresear.ch/?q=Perkins Coie
Anon is not a lawfag but wrote 3 suits Suit to Set Aside Fraudulent Conveyance/Suit to Quiet Title/Suit to Foreclose and it took a year, all the same case, all submitted together. What anon recalls from that "experience" was: Everything alleged in the document had to be supported by another document, a "sauce or GTFO" situation. Anon learned early on there was no way anon wanted to be a lawfag, not enough money in the world.. anon's job rarely entered into Plenary Proceeding territory, wasn't necessary except in major FUBAR situations that required all that paperwork.
Billionaire Robert F. Smith got ‘James Bond’ birthday bash, sources say
December 9, 2022
(and searched his guests who couldn't enter his house and were given portapotties KEK)
Billionaire Robert F. Smith hosted a “James Bond”-themed party at his Florida mansion last weekend — but some guests ended up more shaken than stirred by the lavish proceedings at the beachside bash, sources told On The Money.
The head of Vista Equity Partners — who with a net worth of $8 billion is the nation’s richest African-American — got surprised by his wife and family with a Dec. 2 shindig at his waterfront estate in Palm Beach to celebrate his 60th birthday, according to sources close to the situation.
Nevertheless, some of the party’s roughly 60 guests found the “Double-0 Six-0” celebration a bit awkward and unsettling.
Smith’s wife Hope Dworaczyk — Playboy’s 2010 “Playmate of the Year” who spent months planning the event — imposed what one surprised partygoer called “massive security” at the party, with guests forced to hand over their phones as they entered.
Attendees weren’t encouraged to enter the $48 million house— a 25,000-square-foot spread formerly owned by Tiger Woods’ ex-wife Elin Nordegren whose amenities include a putting green and 15 bathrooms.
Instead, guests were pointed toward a row of port-a-pottys outside. Adding insult to injury, “They frisked you when you came out of the bathroom” in a relentless sweep for hidden cameras and other high-tech spying devices, a guest griped.
It had been an awkward week for Smith to say the least.Six days earlier, Smith’s former lawyer, Carlos Kepke, had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on the eve of his own trial for allegedly helping Smith hide $225 million from the IRS, according to reports.
Kepke’s lawyers had planned to question Smith, who had asked the judge to seal evidence in the case.In October 2020, Smith signed a non-prosecution agreement with the feds over the tax allegations against him.
In turn,Smith had agreed to testify against his ex-business partner, Robert Brockman, who died in August before a trialover charges that he orchestrated the largest individual tax-fraud case in US history.
Smith’s party started around 5 p.m. and R&B Singer Usher performed around 10 p.m. A live, Bond-like, “high-impact action sequence” had been slated for around sunset that involved a James Bond-like character descending on the grounds from a helicopter, sources said, but the spectacle got canceled because of weather conditions.
“They had something planned but it was too windy,” the partygoer said. “The ‘Bond’ theme was a non-event. It wasn’t a great party.”
Smith — who is chairman of Carnegie Hall and who famously spent $34 million to pay off the student debt of Morehouse College’s entire graduating class of 2019 — also made headlines earlier this year with a failed bid to buy the Denver Broncos.
Sauce: https://nypost.com/2022/12/09/billionaire-robert-f-smith-threw-james-bond-themed-birthday-bash/
Connecticut man who vanished in 2013 found dead in NY with new name
December 9, 2022
(On the morning of July 28, 2013, security footage at a Mobil gas station in Newtown, Connecticut, United States, captured Robert Hoagland (1963 – December 5, 2022), a local chef and property appraiser, buying a map along with fuel for his wife's car. He was last seen by anyone who knew him later that morning, when his son bid goodbye as Robert was mowing the lawn of the family home, a conversation also witnessed by a neighbor. Hoagland failed to show up for work the next morning or pick up his wife when she returned home from an overseas trip that afternoon. He was reported missing.(
(Sandyhook Elementary 12-14-2002)
A man who disappeared from Connecticut nearly a decade ago has been found dead in upstate New York, where he had apparently been living under a new name, authorities said.
Robert Hoagland, 59 — whose disappearance was featured in an episode of the Investigation Discovery series “Disappeared” — had not been seen since the morning of July 28, 2013, at a gas station in Newtown, Connecticut.
He was reported missing the following day when he failed to pick up his wife from the airport, and did not show up for work.
Although Hoagland’s wallet, medication, cellphone and family vehicles were all accounted for at his residence, the trail quickly went cold.
Now, nearly 10 years later, investigators believe that Hoagland had been living in Sullivan County since around November 2013, where he assumed the name Richard King.
Deputies responded to the “untimely death” of a man in Rock Hill earlier this week, police said in a statement. They found papers bearing the name Robert Hoagland at the scene.
Newtown detectives met with Sullivan County sheriff’s officials on Tuesday to confirm Hoagland’s identity.
Police said there are no signs of foul play in his death.
Newtown police confirmed Wednesday there was “no criminal aspect” to Hoagland’s disappearance, and that no further information would be released out of respect to his family.
“It’s pretty confusing,” Hoagland’s son, Christopher Hoagland, told NBC News of the devastating discovery.
Christopher, who lives in Minnesota, said he is traveling to Connecticut or New York to be with his family. He admitted that they do not know what motivated his father to leave.
“We’re trying to handle it right now, to be honest. Haven’t really figured out any details,” he said.
Sauce: https://nypost.com/2022/12/09/robert-hoagland-missing-since-2013-found-dead-with-new-name/
Thinking is now harassment. The local Masonic Order and their brethren the Loyal Order of Donuts commands anons to knock that shit off. Capiche?
Cops who can't crack Idaho murder case now threaten internet sleuths with 'criminal charges' for engaging in 'harassment' fueled by spread of 'misinformation'
Moscow Police Chief James Fry condemned the high volume of speculations and rumors surrounding the murder of four University of Idaho students.
December 9, 2022
The police have now threatened criminal charges against those who harass others due to the spread of misinformation
Fry instead called on the public to rely on police and official agencies for information regarding the grizzly stabbings
However, it's the few details and contradictions from police that has led to widespread theories spreading across the internet over the murders
The local police have been widely criticized for bungling the investigation
The Moscow Police Department, who have yet to make much headway investigating the murder of four University of Idaho students, have said they will now crack down on internet sleuths.
As last month's brutal stabbings captured the nation's attention, sleuths on the internet began posting popular theories about the murders to fill the void from the Idaho police, who have been criticized for sharing little and repeatedly contradicting themselves.
Speaking on Friday, Moscow Police Chief James Fry condemned the high volume of speculations and rumors surrounding the case, saying police have the sole authority to discuss the facts of the case.
'We want people to pay attention to what we're putting out there because that is accurate information, and anything that comes from other sources is either rumor or speculation,' Fry said.
Following his statement, the police department said: 'Anyone engaging in threats or harassment whether in person, online or otherwise needs to understand that they could be subjecting themselves to criminal charges.
'Moscow Police Department cautions the public not to rely on rumors and remains committed to keeping the public informed. We urge reliance on official channels for accurate information.'
Sauce/more: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11523405/Cops-crack-Idaho-murder-case-threaten-internet-sleuths-criminal-charges.html