Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with getting an attorney. Unfortunately “It wasn’t his knife, he didn’t know it was there” is unlikely to carry much weight because if it did, lots of parents would say that to get their kid out of trouble when they got caught with something they shouldn’t have.
I agree. Thanks. In my state they do consider intent. If he had an altercation with a student or a school record, it would be a done deal. He's a kid that played football all week, got his butt kicked on Friday night and then would limp into his job on Saturday and Sunday to work 16 hours. People criticized me for making him work but if he wants money, he's working for it. His work loves him. his teachers are shocked saying he is one of the politest kids they know and he has tons of friends.
Vape and marijuana is way more prevalent than parents are aware of. Not making excuses. He is guilty and will get up at his hearing and admit FULL responsibility for his actions. No excuses. The one thing the officer said is that he did not lie, deny and told them exactly where it was. He was polite and cooperative.
Kills me. I have a quote in his room that I put there a few years ago saying., "you are always free to choose but you are never free from the consequences of your actions". He'll be facing severe consequences real soon. Obviously, won't be going away to college next year will be a big one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You hire the best lawyer you can and get him off and get him into drug treatment with regular testing - if you get him into a program and show you are taking it seriously that will help. That drug charge will carry with him for the rest of his life. You need to pay more attention to what your child is doing.
He will be charged outside of school. Probation includes drug testing. He is being drug tested at home as well. Good idea about the drug treatment program.
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:You hire the best lawyer you can and get him off and get him into drug treatment with regular testing - if you get him into a program and show you are taking it seriously that will help. That drug charge will carry with him for the rest of his life. You need to pay more attention to what your child is doing.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with getting an attorney. Unfortunately “It wasn’t his knife, he didn’t know it was there” is unlikely to carry much weight because if it did, lots of parents would say that to get their kid out of trouble when they got caught with something they shouldn’t have.
Anonymous wrote:Get a good attorney and make it clear that the knife was yours/Dad's and it is a family truck, not his. He screwed up big time. Clearly you were ignoring the drug issues.
Anonymous wrote:Get a good attorney and make it clear that the knife was yours/Dad's and it is a family truck, not his. He screwed up big time. Clearly you were ignoring the drug issues.