She should have called.
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I've known sex offenders who have done less time in jail and received less probation.
Unless she slipped and fell at the school, I don't think a personal injury lawyer would have helped.
That's sad. I get that she broke the law, but it's a shame that she won't be able to finish her degree. Seems like she was a hard working single mother.Williams-Bolar, a single mother, works as a teaching assistant with children with special needs at Buchtel High School. At the trial, she testified that she wanted to become a teacher and is a senior at the University of Akron, only a few credit hours short of a teaching degree.
That won't happen now, Cosgrove said.
''Because of the felony conviction, you will not be allowed to get your teaching degree under Ohio law as it stands today,'' the judge said. ''The court's taking into consideration that is also a punishment that you will have to serve.''
What you need is a grandmother who lives on the west side so that you can attend tafola.
"she won't be able to finish her degree"
Not only that, a state felony conviction means she's excluded from most jobs for life.
and in related news, ohio still sucks!
wow she prob. got caught cause she's in subsidised housing
someone faked a birth certificate but received no sentence/probation at all... just exhibits the absence of justice imho
Sorry, how about......................
So many people do this. You have to wonder why they really targeted this one person. A school went so far as to hire a private investigator who took videotape of this! Actually, if the dad lives in the district and therefore pays property tax (either through ownership or his rent) then it does not seem like that awful of a deal to the school district for his kids to attend school there.
"really targeted this one person"
She is a uppity black, trying to get good education for her kids, and too poor to hire enough lawyering to get a "settlement" like rich criminals and corporations do.
TX has 7000 state felony statues. It's how TX since Emancipation has kept the blacks and browns "in their place".
That's the part that really bothers me, too. Fine, a few days in jail because she got caught, but a felony conviction? I can personally attest to how difficult it is to go back to school when you have kids and have to work. It would be devastating to be told your degree is basically worthless.
It seems odd, I agree.
So, we must educate children of illegal immigrants, but seeking a better education for our own is a felony?
And to take away her means to better her family is outrageous.
This is stupid. I know so many people who went to my school simply for sports...and they never even lived in the city. Parents simply rented them an apartment during the school year.
Not to mention, why did they go after this lady, when they had dozens of similar cases in the same district the last couple years.
Williams-Bolar addressed Cosgrove briefly before being sentenced, saying ''there was no intention at all'' to deceive school officials.I would agree that a felony charge seems severe, but it's hard to feel to sorry for a liar that knows what they are doing wrong to begin with.....and then was given a chance to stop.After the sentencing, Brian Poe, Copley-Fairlawn school superintendent, said the prosecution of Williams-Bolar and her father ''obviously is a very difficult and uncomfortable case.''
According to court testimony, there were 30 to 40 similar residency cases involving other families from August 2006 to June 2008, when Williams-Bolar's children were enrolled in Copley schools.
Williams-Bolar was the only parent prosecuted, according to testimony.
Poe said an effort was made to avoid criminal charges.
''We were able to resolve 99.9 percent of our residency disputes with the folks we called in for residency hearings,'' he said. ''In this case, we were not able to resolve that.
''So, therefore, with the information that we were able to uncover, we felt it necessary to provide that information to the prosecutor's office.''
EDIT: forget it. im outta this thread.
Exactly.
In L.A. (and I'm sure most other cities), I know that it's pretty common even for the schools to pay for apartments for athletes that they want to have residency in their area. They do it on the downlow, but everyone knows that it's happening.
How do we know what they told her. Obviously, they could have simply not allowed the kids to attend and that would have been the end of it. Their claim is that she owed them money for it, but so would everyone else. Did the other people pay them off?
39 out of 40 is not 99.9%.''We were able to resolve 99.9 percent of our residency disputes with the folks we called in for residency hearings,'' he said. ''In this case, we were not able to resolve that.
if that is true, sounds like a principal looking for alternative means of funding.
This could have been handled without her getting a felony charge.
97.5% is damn close....but who's counting?
I think she got what she deserved. 10 days is a nice warning shot and it is a felony. Hopefully she doesn't pull this kind of stunt again. I wouldn't want her working for me knowing she has no problem tampering with records.
We don't know anything other than what this article tells us.
If it was as simple as not allowing the kids to attend, then there would be no need for residency hearings.
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