Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The defense is trying to pin the responsibility on “Mrs. Kovak”. She’s a reading specialist who held down “JT” after he shot the teacher.
How in the world is the reading specialist at fault?
Basically, they’re saying that because she did not search his backpack when she had the opportunity to do so. They asked if she was intimidated by a six-year-old, so mocking her abilities. They also questioned her in her lack of urgency at the playground when they suspected he took “something” out of his bag.
They don’t have much of a defense so I guess they have to reach for something, but the idea that the reading specialist is responsible instead of the school administrator who was warned no less than 4 times that this kid might be armed is laughable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The defense is trying to pin the responsibility on “Mrs. Kovak”. She’s a reading specialist who held down “JT” after he shot the teacher.
How in the world is the reading specialist at fault?
Basically, they’re saying that because she did not search his backpack when she had the opportunity to do so. They asked if she was intimidated by a six-year-old, so mocking her abilities. They also questioned her in her lack of urgency at the playground when they suspected he took “something” out of his bag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The defense is trying to pin the responsibility on “Mrs. Kovak”. She’s a reading specialist who held down “JT” after he shot the teacher.
How in the world is the reading specialist at fault?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The defense is trying to pin the responsibility on “Mrs. Kovak”. She’s a reading specialist who held down “JT” after he shot the teacher.
How in the world is the reading specialist at fault?
I think the argument that they are trying to use it that the teachers should have ensured their own safety and not have concerned themselves with the assistant principal.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a civil case, not a criminal one. I was guessing that the AP is covered by the school’s insurance policy, which may not have limits high enough for this.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a civil case, not a criminal one. I was guessing that the AP is covered by the school’s insurance policy, which may not have limits high enough for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Payment of a judgment may be unlikely but according to AI a person is still affected:
The debt does not disappear: Being judgment proof does not erase the debt. The judgment remains on the public record for an extended period, accruing interest and negatively affecting the debtor's credit score.
Credit impacts: The judgment will appear on the person's credit report, making it difficult to obtain loans, credit cards, or even rent a home. In some cases, it may also impact eligibility for employment.
For many reasons the life of that AP is ruined. Even if she is not found liable. The debt is icing on the cake. So many lives ruined by that gun.
Let’s be clear, this AP should not just get to go back to life as it was. She ignored numerous reports that this child may be armed and did absolutely nothing. I’m sure someone at the trial will say the quiet part out loud, but she thought the young white teacher was overreacting to this “spirited” Black child and ignored her, which ended up with the teacher nearly being killed.
I mean maybe, but some admin just suck and are toxic. They had multiple teachers and students say something that day. The school Counselor who said something was Black. I mean teachers have gone on and on since COVID about the concerning student behavior and the admin gaslighting about it. I see how it looks that way, but I think she was just lazy and didn’t care more than anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Payment of a judgment may be unlikely but according to AI a person is still affected:
The debt does not disappear: Being judgment proof does not erase the debt. The judgment remains on the public record for an extended period, accruing interest and negatively affecting the debtor's credit score.
Credit impacts: The judgment will appear on the person's credit report, making it difficult to obtain loans, credit cards, or even rent a home. In some cases, it may also impact eligibility for employment.
For many reasons the life of that AP is ruined. Even if she is not found liable. The debt is icing on the cake. So many lives ruined by that gun.
Let’s be clear, this AP should not just get to go back to life as it was. She ignored numerous reports that this child may be armed and did absolutely nothing. I’m sure someone at the trial will say the quiet part out loud, but she thought the young white teacher was overreacting to this “spirited” Black child and ignored her, which ended up with the teacher nearly being killed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Payment of a judgment may be unlikely but according to AI a person is still affected:
The debt does not disappear: Being judgment proof does not erase the debt. The judgment remains on the public record for an extended period, accruing interest and negatively affecting the debtor's credit score.
Credit impacts: The judgment will appear on the person's credit report, making it difficult to obtain loans, credit cards, or even rent a home. In some cases, it may also impact eligibility for employment.
For many reasons the life of that AP is ruined. Even if she is not found liable. The debt is icing on the cake. So many lives ruined by that gun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The defense is trying to pin the responsibility on “Mrs. Kovak”. She’s a reading specialist who held down “JT” after he shot the teacher.
How in the world is the reading specialist at fault?
I think the argument that they are trying to use it that the teachers should have ensured their own safety and not have concerned themselves with the assistant principal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Payment of a judgment may be unlikely but according to AI a person is still affected:
The debt does not disappear: Being judgment proof does not erase the debt. The judgment remains on the public record for an extended period, accruing interest and negatively affecting the debtor's credit score.
Credit impacts: The judgment will appear on the person's credit report, making it difficult to obtain loans, credit cards, or even rent a home. In some cases, it may also impact eligibility for employment.
For many reasons the life of that AP is ruined. Even if she is not found liable. The debt is icing on the cake. So many lives ruined by that gun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The defense is trying to pin the responsibility on “Mrs. Kovak”. She’s a reading specialist who held down “JT” after he shot the teacher.
How in the world is the reading specialist at fault?
Anonymous wrote:The defense is trying to pin the responsibility on “Mrs. Kovak”. She’s a reading specialist who held down “JT” after he shot the teacher.
Anonymous wrote:
Payment of a judgment may be unlikely but according to AI a person is still affected:
The debt does not disappear: Being judgment proof does not erase the debt. The judgment remains on the public record for an extended period, accruing interest and negatively affecting the debtor's credit score.
Credit impacts: The judgment will appear on the person's credit report, making it difficult to obtain loans, credit cards, or even rent a home. In some cases, it may also impact eligibility for employment.