Originally posted by Unregistered
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Needham Girls HS Hazing
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Unregistered
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Unregistered
If they win the injunction and the substitute coach plays those girls and subsequently they lose and the suspensions are upheld, they would have to forfeit their games. This will hurt the other members of the team who could play without them and win or it would hurt the team they play and beat who perhaps could have continued in the tournament. Lots of impacts here for them to be running to court.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCommonwealth of Massachusetts: Anti-Hazing Law
Chapter 269: Section 17. Hazing; organizing or participating; hazing defined
Whoever is a principal organizer or participant in the crime of hazing, as defined herein, shall be punished by a fine of not more than three thousand dollars or by imprisonment in a house of correction for not more than one year, or both such fine and imprisonment.
The term “hazing” as used in this section and in sections eighteen and nineteen, shall mean any conduct or method of initiation into any student organization, whether on public or private property, which willfully or recklessly endangers the physical or mental health of any student or other person. Such conduct shall include whipping, beating, branding, forced calisthenics, exposure to the weather, forced consumption of any food, liquor,
beverage, drug or other substance, or any other brutal treatment or forced physical activity which is likely to adversely affect the physical health or safety of any such student or other person, or which subjects such student or other person to extreme mental stress, including extended deprivation of sleep or rest or extended isolation.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section to the contrary, consent shall not be available as a defense to any prosecution under this action.
Chapter 269: Section 18. Failure to report hazing
Whoever knows that another person is the victim of hazing as defined in section seventeen and is at the scene of such crime shall, to the extent that such person can do so without danger or peril to himself or others, report such crime to an appropriate law enforcement official as soon as reasonably practicable. Whoever fails to report such
crime shall be punished by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars.
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Unregistered
You know, I hate to break it to you people, but if your daughter plans to go on to play soccer in college, they arre going to experience some sort of hazing as a freshman. It is not condoned by the schools or the coach, but it does happen. I had 3 kids go to 3 different colleges (D1-D3) and they all experienced it. Nothing was done to harm them, though they did do some humiliating things - but my kids laughed about it. If the freshman does not want to participate, they are not forced to, but the ones who do are more accepted by the upper classmen. I'm not saying it's right - I'm saying it happens.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI can't believe the parents are taking this to court. The only reason I would think that you would is if you know that your kid is not guilty and regardless of the "innocent until proven guilty" I think if you have freshman saying X, Y, and Z dragged us around the field on a dog leash and then smashed pies in our faces" you probably have enough evidence to presume guilt. It doesn't have to be proven in a court of law to suspend a kid for bad behavior in school. These parents do their kids no favor by not letting them take their medicine. This is exactly why our country is as screwed up as they are. We have parents that don't teach their kids that they are responsible for their acts and on the other hand we have school systems where lawsuits are brought at the drop of a hat.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou know, I hate to break it to you people, but if your daughter plans to go on to play soccer in college, they arre going to experience some sort of hazing as a freshman. It is not condoned by the schools or the coach, but it does happen. I had 3 kids go to 3 different colleges (D1-D3) and they all experienced it. Nothing was done to harm them, though they did do some humiliating things - but my kids laughed about it. If the freshman does not want to participate, they are not forced to, but the ones who do are more accepted by the upper classmen. I'm not saying it's right - I'm saying it happens.
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Unregistered
Isn't team chemistry an essential component of a successful girls team (more so than for a boys team)? Wouldn't hazing be counterproductive to winning?
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Unregistered
Good point. The coach needs to go---he was aware of it and did nothing. If there is one thing I learned during my child's high school sports experience is that there are far too many coaches who simply are terrible role models. When they be standing up and doing the right thing for the kids, they never do. This is a chance to send the right message by prosecuting the coach for failure to report and giving the alleged offenders the best lesson of their young lives by prosecuting them as well.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhat if the kids who reportedly were hazed have no issue with what occurred as they do not feel it was a bullying or hazing behavior. What if the parents and school have blown this whole thing way out of proportion with the hysteria surrounding bullying and their knee jerk reaction. What if the girls involved actually support the elimination of these suspensions. Maybe the bullying going on here is all this misinformation and crucification of this team before the facts are clear, and is really now becoming more the WBZ and school doing a hatchet job on these kids, the team and the coach without knowing what really happened?
What ever happened to taking responsibility for ones actions? What about good parenting and not "excuse parenting?
What if a coach is too connected with his own ego to see/do the right thing?
What if?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou know, I hate to break it to you people, but if your daughter plans to go on to play soccer in college, they arre going to experience some sort of hazing as a freshman. It is not condoned by the schools or the coach, but it does happen. I had 3 kids go to 3 different colleges (D1-D3) and they all experienced it. Nothing was done to harm them, though they did do some humiliating things - but my kids laughed about it. If the freshman does not want to participate, they are not forced to, but the ones who do are more accepted by the upper classmen. I'm not saying it's right - I'm saying it happens.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhat if the kids who reportedly were hazed have no issue with what occurred as they do not feel it was a bullying or hazing behavior. What if the parents and school have blown this whole thing way out of proportion with the hysteria surrounding bullying and their knee jerk reaction. What if the girls involved actually support the elimination of these suspensions. Maybe the bullying going on here is all this misinformation and crucification of this team before the facts are clear, and is really now becoming more the WBZ and school doing a hatchet job on these kids, the team and the coach without knowing what really happened?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYour point is well taken and brings about the part of law that has to consider the danger of the alleged wrong-doer to society.
The weapon used in your example suggests that the person is potentially a danger to society. The alleged hazing in Needham (dog-leashes) is not of the same 'calibre'.....although I suspect you might argue about not really knowing what a person is truly capable of....
They have no legal recourse as far as the playoffs go. The school sets the rules and the school obviously feels confident that they broke them.
These girls (& their coach) have much more to worry about than the playoffs. This was a highly visible incident with many witnesses and what they are accused of doing is illegal. They'd better hope the victims parent's don't head towards that court house as well to press changes.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou know, I hate to break it to you people, but if your daughter plans to go on to play soccer in college, they arre going to experience some sort of hazing as a freshman. It is not condoned by the schools or the coach, but it does happen. I had 3 kids go to 3 different colleges (D1-D3) and they all experienced it. Nothing was done to harm them, though they did do some humiliating things - but my kids laughed about it. If the freshman does not want to participate, they are not forced to, but the ones who do are more accepted by the upper classmen. I'm not saying it's right - I'm saying it happens.
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