http://www.hiiraan.com/news2_rss/2011/F ... _side.aspxSaturday, February 26, 2011
MANCHESTER – The McLaughlin Middle School students accused of bullying and bloodying a 12-year-old girl say she instigated the confrontation, which garnered wide media coverage.
"She came up to me and starting hitting me," said Ali Abdi, 14, of the incident in the school cafeteria on Feb. 15. He admits that he then hit Morgan Graveline. The blow knocked out Graveline's front teeth.
Abdi said that he had been friends with Graveline, but that she started harassing him after he and his friends rebuffed her advances. "She was bullying me and my friends," he said. He said he felt embarrassed for hitting a girl and that he has tried to apologize.
Abdi was suspended from school for at least a week. He said Graveline also was suspended. This was confirmed by a faculty member who was upset over how Ali and another student were portrayed in the media. The faculty member did not want to be identified because of the school's confidentiality policies. Danielle Gauthier, Graveline's mother, denies Morgan was suspended.
District officials and police have refused to comment on the allegations, citing an ongoing investigation and rules concerning juveniles. Manchester School Superintendent Thomas Brennan said he hopes to conclude the district's investigation of the fight and events leading up to it next week. So far police have not filed any charges in the incident.
Abdi's account is in stark contrast to the version of events presented by Gauthier in a blog and in subsequent TV interviews. She said her daughter was picked on over the course of several weeks by two "refugee boys" who were upset that she spurned their affections. Abdi and another student accused in the attack are refugees from Somalia.
Two weeks before the cafeteria incident, Gauthier said, another boy hit Graveline on the bus. The student, Abdi Karim Maalo, insists he hardly knows Morgan, and that he was not involved in the cafeteria fight. He said he hit her on the bus after she started hitting him and wouldn't let him off the bus.
"I asked to move, and she said, 'No, you get in the last row,' " Maalo said.
Maalo said the principal ended up suspending him for three days over the incident.
Gauthier defended her daughter's version of events, insisting that she's a "nice, kind girl" and that she's "not even allowed to have a boyfriend." As for the boys, she said: "They should be careful with what they say because this is being investigated by the police."
But Gauthier stressed that her greatest concern was how school officials handled the treatment of her daughter. She insists she was never informed about the first hitting incident on the bus, and that neither the police nor an ambulance was called to the cafeteria after her daughter was struck. Graveline suffered a concussion and needs to undergo painful medical procedures to get teeth fixed, Gauthier said. Gauthier has retained a lawyer, but she said she's still weighing how to proceed.
Gauthier herself has been accused of engaging in threatening behavior. She was found guilty of two counts of criminal threatening last year for telling a neighbor that she would "slit her throat" as her pit bull allegedly attacked the neighbor's dog. In December, Gauthier filed for bankruptcy, claiming debts totaling $467,094.
Gauthier defended citing the origin of the students in her blog, which begins with the headline: "My 12 year old daughter brutally attacked by refugee boys at school."
"I don't want anyone thinking this is a racist thing," Gauthier said. "The refugees come from a terrible situation. I have advocated for them. But to punch a girl in the face, to knock her teeth out -- maybe these boys are not being taught the right coping skills."
Hassan Baruki, the father of Abdi Karim Maalo, said the events at the school had more to do with kids being kids than the Somali refugee community. "My son is a good boy," he said through a translator. "We come from refugee camps, but we are American now. We love Manchester. People have been very good to us here."
Baruki added, however, that Ali, his son's friend, was "a troublemaker."
Superior Court upholds part of anti-bully suit against Manchester School District By TED SIEFERNew Hampshire Union Leader
MANCHESTER - A Hillsborough County Superior Court judge has upheld part of a lawsuit against the school district brought by the mother of a middle school student who, in a widely publicized incident nearly two years ago, was punched in the face by another student. The suit was brought by Danielle Gauthier, the mother of the girl, Morgan Graveline, against the Manchester School District.
In a ruling earlier this month, the judge found that the principal of McLaughlin Middle School failed in his duty to ensure the safety of Graveline by not telling her mother about bullying incidents that preceded the altercation in the cafeteria. The punch resulted in Graveline's two front teeth being jarred loose.The ruling may mark the first time such a case has been allowed to proceed since the state passed its anti-bullying law in 2010.
The judge did grant the district's motion to dismiss another charge in the case, that the principal did not do enough to prevent the attack in the cafeteria. Gauthier's attorney, BJ Branch, said that prior to the cafeteria incident, Graveline was punched on a school bus by a friend of the person who allegedly attacked her in the cafeteria. The attack was severe enough that the bus driver made a report, in writing, to school leaders. That event was followed by harassing and vulgar Facebook messages from the boys to Graveline.
However, school principal Barry Albert never told Graveline's mother about the incidents, contrary to the district's anti-bullying policy, which required parents of alleged victims and perpetrators of bullying to be informed "within 48 hours" of the incident, said Branch. Manchester passed its policy in response to the state anti-bullying law, which required all districts to enact policies based on a common model. "
The school district took that information (about the bus incident) and never brought it the attention of the parent and left it to a 13-year-old to make the right decision, which is rarely a good move," Branch said. "I think the whole purpose of the statute is to at least make sure the parents are in the loop. The parent could have kept the kid at home until this gets straightened out.
"Manchester Superintendent Thomas Brennan did not return a call for comment. Among the evidence Branch cited in the case was the report from the school bus driver and copies of the Facebook messages. Branch said Gauthier is seeking compensation for dental and medical bills and for her daughter's emotional suffering. The Feb. 15, 2011, incident, in which Graveline was punched in the cafeteria, garnered wide news media attention, with Gauthier and Graveline appearing in television and newspaper interviews.
Graveline's alleged tormentors, who are refugees from Kenya, gave their own interviews with the New Hampshire Union Leader, in which they claimed that they were the victims of harassment on the part of Graveline. Brennan had said in a TV interview at the time that he believed the incident in the cafeteria did not qualify as bullying. He also issued a statement that the district "has taken all necessary steps to prevent bullying in our schools and to ensure that a safe and secure learning environment is being provided to all of our students."
Branch said he was surprised that the district did not agree to settle the matter outside of court, and he said he still hoped officials would be willing to talk following the latest ruling. "I'm confident we could at least narrow the dispute, if not resolve it completely," he said. "My client feels strongly that schools should error on the side of calling parents."A trial is expected to be scheduled beyond the spring of 2013
http://www.unionleader.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... 229596[url][/url]
And I can't find anything after that. You can find video/audio of the 15 minute argument presented to the Supreme Court of NH if you care to.New Hampshire Supreme Court Case Acceptance List
2014-0496 Danielle (Graveline) Gauthier m/n/f Morgan Graveline v. Manchester School District, SAU #37 09/02/2014 Hillsborough County Superior Court North

