The 9-year-old Louisiana student was suspended and now a teacher said a gun was found in her bedroom during a virtual class after her school records violated the weapons.
what happened: Fourth grader Ka Ka Maury Harrison was taking a rollover test in her bedroom on Sept. 11, the day before she fell ill at school, Cherysi Kusimano, a lawyer representing the Harrison family, told CNN on Friday.
While Harrison was taking the exam, Ka Mauri’s brother – with whom he shares a room – stepped on the BB gun he had received as a gift to Ka Mauri or left. Casimono said Ka Mauri picked up the gun and was not out of sight for a moment before placing the BB gun next to him on his chair.
Ka Mauri – who silenced that virtual class so he could focus on his test – will continue to work before he realizes the teacher is trying to get his attention. According to Kusima, the teacher was screaming and kicking Ka from the virtual classroom.
After the event: The behavioral interlocutor told Ka Mauri’s family that, according to the teacher, Ka Mauri was not in sight for a few seconds, it looked like the rifle he had placed in front of his chair, according to Kusima. The family was told that Ka Mauri would not be able to go to school again.
At the September 22 hearing, it was determined that Ka Mauri was guilty of displaying a terrorist weapon while receiving a virtual education. Kusimano said the hearing officer determined it was a BB gun.
The school amended the recommendation to expel the school for six days for school suspension and social work assessment. Ka Mauri returned to school on Thursday, September 24th.
Feedback: Kusimano told CNN. Said the school’s parishioners “took a policy of weapons on campus and unilaterally decided that they would study it with their students as if it were on campus and not consider any action as it is their own privacy.
Kusiman argues that schools should consider things that take place in a private home when policies are implemented in a virtual learning environment.
“Now he has federal gun possession marks on his academic record for the rest of his career until he goes to college.”
The Kusimano and Harrison family want the charge cleared from Ka Mauri’s record. Parish’s legal counsel argued that Ka Mauri had no right to appeal because it was only a suspension, according to Kusima.
In a statement to CNN, the school parish told CNN: “We do not comment on individual student records. Regarding discipline, it is our policy that teachers and administrators can take appropriate disciplinary and corrective action to maintain order.”
Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry announced Friday that his office fee is investigating the incident, saying it is “the voice of government condemned by the school system.”
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