My son had a $300 iPod confiscated by a teacher during class at an Indiana public school. The iPod was allowed during this class to listen to music. He had music videos playing as his music source. The teacher incorrectly assumed that he was watching videos instead, took the iPod. We received a call from the dean and was told that it would not be returned to him and that we had to pick it up. This is because my son had a previous incident with using a cell phone when he shouldn't.
Due to our work hours, a couple months passed before I could make it in. The iPod was missing. I gave them time to locate it. I nicely inquired again, with no luck. I asked the dean if she asked everyone who had access. She said it was in a locked drawer, and that drawer is only accessed to issue items back to parents or students. I suggested the possibility that it was mistakenly given to another person, maybe claiming it was theirs. I asked if there was a log to track who picked up what. I now receive no response.
My next step is to go the schools system administration, unless suggested otherwise. But after that, can I sue? Also what should I ask for in compensation...replacement value of a new model or an identical refurbished model, etc.? Owning this expensive iPod is unique for us, and we cannot replace it.
I know these types of cases have had no success, but for me having the iPod in school was not forbidden, and the school did not take reasonable care of valuable items through a simple log.
Due to our work hours, a couple months passed before I could make it in. The iPod was missing. I gave them time to locate it. I nicely inquired again, with no luck. I asked the dean if she asked everyone who had access. She said it was in a locked drawer, and that drawer is only accessed to issue items back to parents or students. I suggested the possibility that it was mistakenly given to another person, maybe claiming it was theirs. I asked if there was a log to track who picked up what. I now receive no response.
My next step is to go the schools system administration, unless suggested otherwise. But after that, can I sue? Also what should I ask for in compensation...replacement value of a new model or an identical refurbished model, etc.? Owning this expensive iPod is unique for us, and we cannot replace it.
I know these types of cases have had no success, but for me having the iPod in school was not forbidden, and the school did not take reasonable care of valuable items through a simple log.