CdwJava
Senior Member
concernedinlv, you continue to miss the point. What WE might think of the situation will do nothing to help you. Let us say that we were all to agree with you that this was a harmless prank. great. Then what? You would STILL have to go through the process set out in school and district rules to appeal a suspension or any other discipline.
The point is, legally, there is no magic pill whether we agree with your belief this was not "hazing" as defined by the school. I have worked (and continue to do so) as an educator s well as a police officer having spent a few years working juvenile crimes. While this would arguably not be a criminal act, it IS what most every school would consider hazing and, thus, be improper.
As was mentioned previously the school cannot condone this behavior because doing so would only encourage such horseplay and might one day result in someone's actual injury or a complaint, and then the school might find themselves in the position of defending themselves against a suit that alleges they permitted and condone such abusive behavior.
There appears to be ample mitigating circumstances to prevent a huge penalty. But, there also appears to be sufficient cause to believe a violation of that rule occurred. Whether your son played a part in the violation is an issue that the school will have to show in its presentation.
The point is, legally, there is no magic pill whether we agree with your belief this was not "hazing" as defined by the school. I have worked (and continue to do so) as an educator s well as a police officer having spent a few years working juvenile crimes. While this would arguably not be a criminal act, it IS what most every school would consider hazing and, thus, be improper.
As was mentioned previously the school cannot condone this behavior because doing so would only encourage such horseplay and might one day result in someone's actual injury or a complaint, and then the school might find themselves in the position of defending themselves against a suit that alleges they permitted and condone such abusive behavior.
There appears to be ample mitigating circumstances to prevent a huge penalty. But, there also appears to be sufficient cause to believe a violation of that rule occurred. Whether your son played a part in the violation is an issue that the school will have to show in its presentation.