• NYC black teacher fired after texting student 28K times, sex allegation

    From Piggy Soowee@21:1/5 to All on Tue May 14 18:41:06 2024
    XPost: alt.education, nyc.politics, alt.politics.liberalism
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns

    A defiant French teacher is still in the classroom after being fired by
    the Department of Education — crowing that the city “can’t touch me”
    despite the sexually-charged accusations that got her sacked, including
    making nearly 30,000 late-night texts to a schoolgirl.

    Dulaina Almonte, 33, lost her job at Harry S. Truman High School in The
    Bronx in 2020 after the Special Commissioner of Investigation
    substantiated claims of her creepy behavior with teens.

    “I can’t be guilty if I’m still a teacher,” Almonte — who now teaches at a Bronx charter school — boasted to The Post this week.

    https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/05/www-facebook-com- purpleh3artz-photos-81643886.jpg?resize=720,480&quality=75&strip=all

    Dulaina Almonte, a French teacher at Harry S. Truman HS in the Bronx, sent
    a student a staggering 28,075 late-night texts over 14 months as kids
    gossiped that she was giving the boy oral sex.

    https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/05/www-tiktok-com- mijea121-81557971.jpg?resize=581,709&quality=75&strip=all

    “I can’t be guilty if I’m still a teacher,” Almonte — who now teaches at a Bronx charter school — boasted to The Post this week.
    tiktok @mijea121

    “It’s not a crime, but still got fired, which is honestly why the DOE can
    suck a big pr–k,” she continued.

    “Still a teacher! Can’t touch me!” she bragged.

    “Still a teacher working elsewhere. Like, you really can’t f–king touch
    me.”

    Her audacity comes despite a damning 2022 SCI report which found her
    “excessive contact and behavior with the students demonstrates that she
    has no place in the New York City Schools.”

    Phone records showed Almonte sent a 17-year-old female student a
    staggering 28,075 late-night texts over 14 months — 66 messages a day —
    and traded nearly 1,900 texts with a male 12th-grader.

    The NYPD also investigated a Truman HS student’s claim that she and a
    former pupil were “involved in a sex act” in a classroom, according to a
    police report.

    Almonte denied the accusation — which according to SCI included the
    allegation that she and a student had “made out and had oral sex all the
    time in school” — and no arrest was made.

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    A damning 2022 SCI report found Almonte “excessive contact and behavior
    with the students demonstrates that she has no place in the New York City Schools.”
    tiktok @mijea121
    But the incident led to a lengthy SCI probe documenting her thousands of late-night and weekend chats with students, along with encrypted WhatsApp
    and Snapchat calls, and the teens’ multiple visits to her Bronx home.

    The report, the result of a year-long investigation, “was completely
    false,” Almonte insisted.

    Almonte is now teaching Spanish at the publicly-funded, privately-run AECI
    2: NYC Charter High School for Engineering and Innovation, where teachers
    on average earn about $74,000, according to Indeed.com. Her pay in 2019
    from the DOE was $71,963.

    Brazen New York City public school teachers like Almonte are flouting Department of Education rules forbidding sexual and other “inappropriate” contact with their students — because even if they’re caught, their
    predatory behavior almost always remains hidden within the DOE, critics
    say.

    And they’re reaping the benefit of a cumbersome city and state discipline process that allows many educational predators to keep on working with
    kids and teens, even after SCI investigators have substantiated sexual offenses.

    While some states maintain public databases exposing proven cases of
    educator sexual misconduct — in an effort to end so-called “pass the
    trash” policies that shield problem teachers — New York is not among them, experts told The Post.

    “No paper trail follows teachers state to state unless they’re convicted
    and it shows up in a [criminal] background check,” said Billie-Jo Grant, a researcher and consultant for SESAME, a group which targets educator
    sexual abuse.

    However, fewer than 5% of school administrators nationwide report sexual misconduct to law enforcement, Grant has found. “There’s a lot of
    motivation to not have it on the front page of the paper,” Grant said.

    Over the last five years, SCI has substantiated 254 allegations of sexual
    or “inappropriate” misconduct by DOE employees and vendors — but only four
    of those cases, less than 2%, resulted in criminal charges, according to a
    Post review of the watchdog’s annual reports.

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    The NYPD also investigated a Truman HS student’s claim that she and a
    former pupil were “involved in a sex act” in a classroom, according to a
    police report.
    KEVIN C DOWNS

    A criminal conviction on sex abuse charges means instant revocation of an educator’s state license. But in the vast majority of sexual misconduct
    cases, the UFT’s contractual rules require at least two arbitration
    hearings before a teacher’s state license can be yanked.

    Short of that, the DOE shares no incriminating information on a fired
    teacher with other districts or private, religious or charter schools —
    and if an offender resigns before he or she can be axed, no trace of the investigation is easily visible to employers outside the city school
    system.

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    Almonte is now teaching Spanish at the publicly-funded, privately-run AECI
    2: NYC Charter High School for Engineering and Innovation.
    J.C. Rice

    In Almonte’s case, SCI findings were sent to the state Education
    Department, which can revoke a license if the person is convicted of a
    crime or found to be of immoral character. But there is no record of any disciplinary hearing, according to a state website.

    Almonte’s state teaching license expired in August 2019, according to the
    state Education Department.

    The educator was terminated by the DOE, according to spokesman Nathaniel
    Styer, who declined to give more details.

    “I’m not going to get into personnel items beyond she was terminated. If
    others come to us for background checks, we respond,” he said.

    Styer didn’t say whether AECI reached out about Almonte.

    It’s unclear what kind of background check AECI 2 did before hiring
    Almonte in 2022.

    Derick Spaulding, the CEO of AECI 2, said the school conducts background
    checks and employees have to pass a “fingerprint authorization.”

    “All employees have to get fingerprinted. If there was something in a
    person’s background that was worthy” of not hiring them, “that would show
    up” there, he said, claiming, “That’s the state’s way of stating this
    person’s allowed to work” with children.

    Spaulding said he wasn’t familiar with the details of Almonte’s hiring and declined to answer further questions about the teacher’s expired license,
    the school’s background checks, or whether the school reached out to DOE
    before hiring Almonte.

    The accusations substantiated by SCI would not have been revealed with a fingerprint check because there were no criminal charges.

    Daniel Schiels began working as a special education teacher in Stamford,
    Conn. public schools while SCI was probing him for allegedly grooming a
    female student over three years, starting from age 15.
    YouTube Dan Schiels
    Some disgraced DOE teachers move out of state.

    Daniel Schiels began working as a special education teacher in Stamford,
    Conn. public schools while SCI was probing him for allegedly grooming a
    female student over three years, starting from age 15.

    Investigators documented Schiels’ suggestive Instagram messages to the
    girl years after she left his classroom, asking “how big her boobs were
    now” and “Do you have piercings?”

    Schiels, through his attorney, refused to cooperate with the
    investigation, the report stated. Schiels wasn’t reachable and his mother- in-law hung up on a reporter. Cloonan Middle School in Stamford, Conn.,
    where Schiels said in a January social media post he taught a sixth grade special education class, didn’t respond to a request for comment. Nor did
    the Stamford Public School System.

    Others, like Almonte, stay in NYC but leave the DOE system.

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    Melanie Roth, a former DOE social worker, took a job counseling kids at
    the New York City Children Center in November, according to her LinkedIn account.

    The NYCCC referred questions to the state Office of Mental Health, which
    didn’t return a message.

    Roth left after the SCI found evidence she hit on an 18-year-old male
    student with text messages like “I love you” and “I miss you,” and even completed the boy’s tests and assignments for him.

    Gilbert Bayonne, Roth’s attorney, said she denied the SCI findings.

    “She was never informed of the allegations, nor was she given a chance to defend herself in a hearing,” he said.

    Roth is suing the DOE and the state Education Department to regain her
    school social worker credentials.

    With additional reporting provided by Tina Moore and Susan Edelman

    https://nypost.com/2024/05/11/us-news/nyc-female-public-school-teacher- allegedly-performed-oral-sex-on-a-student-still-teaches/

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