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Wednesday, October 24, 2007

HUGE AP series on school sexual misconduct

The Associated Press used scores of public records in its massive, national investigation of sexual crime in America's schools. Here is one of many, many stories running across the country this week.

A total of 2,570 educators nationwide were punished for sexual misconduct from 2001-05, representing about a quarter of all educator misconduct cases in that time period. The total number of times an action was taken against a teacher's license for sexual misconduct was 2,625 (more than 50 teachers lost licenses in more than one state).

Licenses were revoked in 1,636 of the cases; surrendered in 440 cases; suspended in 376
cases; and denied in 108 cases. Other punishments were handed out in the remainder of the cases. Students were clearly identified as victims in at least 1,467 of the sexual misconduct cases. The victim was a young person, a category including students, unidentified youths, family members and neighbors, in at least 1,801 of the cases. Educators made physical contact in at least 1,297, or 72 percent, of the cases in which the victims were youths. The remainder
were cases that did not involve physical contact, including verbal sexual harassment and other offenses.

Among the findings:

-- There were criminal convictions in at least 1,390, or 53 percent, of the cases.

-- Nearly nine out of 10 of the educators punished for sexual misconduct were male.

-- At least 446 of the cases that the AP found involved educators who had multiple victims.

The seven-month investigation found 2,570 educators whose teaching credentials were
revoked, denied, voluntarily surrendered or limited from 2001 through 2005 following allegations of sexual misconduct.

Young people were the victims in at least 1,801 of the cases, and more than 80 percent of those were students. More than half the educators who were punished by their states also were convicted of crimes related to the misconduct.
Much, much more here.

1 comment:

The Geezer said...

Nine of 10 punished were male?

Not here in the FU-WA (feminist utopia of WA).

Here it about 50-50, and when I read national articles on the subject, save for this one, I still see the 50-50, even though I betcha the pu**y pass gets women perps less attention.

The Geezer
www.thesponmeister.blogspot.com