
street. Louis County, Mo. – St. Louis County police investigates after a student at the Rockood South South school student attacked another student on Friday. The video of the attack was put on the ground online.
“As a mother, I was just destroyed. He’s gone through this turmoil over the past five years,” said Andrea Maybery, the victim’s mother.
The turmoil reached its peak on Friday when his daughter was violently attacked in front of her school.
“The drugs surrounded, beating him, he was hit from the back,” he said.
Maybery said he should not have reached this point. He showed an email Fox 2 that he sent his school in October this year, which he spoke for years to speak, talk, big and talk, and said his daughter was thinking about suicide.
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In a November email email, the school said the staff would help monitor the places where the two students could cross the roads and even try to block the vision between them.
Continuous exchanges with school officials show that the Mayberz family has thought of moving their daughter to a different school in the district, but that the district does not provide transfer.
Other parents in the district are worried that it is not enough and that talking about bad words and violence has been a constant problem for several students at the school.
On Monday, the school area rejected an interview but sent a statement to Fox 2, saying, “The videos depicted in the videos are unacceptable and cannot be tolerated. We are working closely with the law to investigate what happened.
“We have checked with the victim’s family to provide support, and we have school advisors for any student or employee who is affected by this incident,” the statement said.
But Maybery says more should be done.
Secondary school student admitted to hospital after attacking Rokood South South
Police confirms they are investigating the case. Rokood’s school area said students would be disciplined according to the handwriting of their students. The policy argues that an attack on another student could lead to an 180-day suspension or expulsion.
Megan Mayer’s Foundation is a specialist in speaking badly and preventing suicide, saying families should do any talk of oppression and introduce themselves to school policy.
“They can’t tell you what disciplinary they have done or they haven’t done with another student, so what we have to do is really note that “how keep my child safe at school,” said CEO Tina Mayer.
He says parents should monitor their childhood signs.
“They don’t want to go to school anymore. They really struggle with the grades. Parents start seeing their behavior. It’s really time to start talking to your child,” he said.
You can find a list of sources at Megan Mayern.
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