Amid Virus Cases, W.Va. High School Goes To Remote Learning

A high school in West Virginia’s largest county will switch to remote learning for the remainder of the week, education officials announced Tuesday, as coronavirus cases continue to surge statewide.

Kanawha County school officials told parents that Capital High School students will undergo remote learning through Friday, with staff reporting to school as usual, news outlets reported. Extracurricular activities have been canceled for the rest of the week. The plan is for students to return to school on Monday.

The school district said the decision was made in consultation with the county health department. According to the county schools website, Capital has 36 active virus cases.

Kanawha County required mask wearing in all grade levels starting last week.

Statewide, active coronavirus cases have increased fourfold this month to nearly 11,000 while hospitalizations have tripled to at least 491, according to health data.

Ex-Teacher Gets Probation for Contributing to Delinquency

A former Spanish teacher at Capital High School in Charleston has been sentenced to two years on probation for contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

Media outlets report that 31-year-old Michelle Elaine Ball of St. Albans was sentenced Tuesday in Kanawha County Circuit Court. She pleaded guilty in October.

Prosecutors say that in 2013, Ball began smoking marijuana with an underage male student and would take him to the movies and on trips.

Plea Withdrawn in Capital High Sexual Assault Case

A former Capital High School student accused of raping a 15-year-old girl inside the school earlier this year was allowed to withdraw his guilty plea.

Kanawha Circuit Judge Jennifer Bailey approved a motion filed by the 17-year-old boy’s attorney to allow him to back out of the plea deal. Bailey says when King entered the agreement, he may not have known he would have to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life. The boy pleaded guilty to first-degree sexual abuse last month as part of a deal for giving up his juvenile status to be tried as an adult.

The boy was arrested in January after officials say he pulled the girl to the ground before dragging her underneath a stairwell at the school.. He faces a charge for second-degree sexual assault.

Student Who Pleaded Guilty of Sexual Assault Arrested

A student who pleaded guilty to forcing a 15-year-old female to have sex with him has been arrested after his bond was revoked.

Kanawha County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Sgt. Bryan Humphreys says the 17-year-old male student at Capital High School was arrested Friday night.

Prosecutors asked a circuit judge to revoke the bond. The reason was unclear because the motion is sealed.

The male was awaiting sentencing for his March 17 guilty plea to first-degree sexual abuse in the Jan. 26 incident.

Since that hearing, the male has hired a new attorney and wants to withdraw the plea.

The Associated Press generally does not identify juvenile suspects.

Capital Principal Clinton Giles retired after he was charged with failing to report the assault. The charge was later dismissed.

Charges Against Former Capital Principal Dismissed

  A misdemeanor charge against former Capital High School principal Clinton Giles has been dismissed.

Giles had been charged with failing to immediately report a sexual assault at the school.

Kanawha County Circuit Court Judge Carrie Webster granted a defense request to dismiss the charge on Wednesday.

Webster said the prosecution of Giles wasn’t supported by state law.

After the hearing, Giles said in a statement that he was wrongfully prosecuted and subjected to character assassination.

Giles retired after he was charged on Feb. 3. He was accused of taking no action on the day a counselor reported the assault to him.

A 17-year-old male student pleaded guilty on Tuesday to forcing a 15-year-old girl to have sex with him at the school on Jan. 26.

House Seeks to Strengthen Sexual Assault Laws at Schools

Members of the House Judiciary Committee are revisiting the state’s mandatory reporting law after an incident at Capital High School in Charleston. The school’s principal, Clinton Giles, resigned from his post after reports that he failed to notify law enforcement of a sexual assault on the high school’s campus. Giles was reportedly notified of the January 26th incident by a counselor, and he now faces misdemeanor charges in Kanawha County Circuit Court. The incident now has lawmakers looking to update a forty year old law dealing with sexual assaults. But first, the committee considered a bill that aims to reign in the receptions lawmakers are invited to while in Charleston for legislative meetings.

House Bill 2022 prohibits certain political fundraising activities for members of the Legislature during certain periods of time before, during, and after the Legislature is in session. It also provides that existing misdemeanor penalties would apply if the law were broken.

Delegate Patrick Lane of Kanawha County is the sponsor of the bill. He says this bill addresses a long standing tradition during annual legislative sessions.  That tradition of nightly receptions serving free food and drinks to lawmakers. 

“I think the perception is a negative perception, that if we have a fundraising reception for a campaign on Tuesday and then there’s a bill that affects that, some particular industry on Thursday that we vote on, it’s unseemly,” Lane noted, “And I think, in an effort to make sure that there’s trust between the public and the elected officials, I think it’s a pretty simple fix to that, to just say that we as members of the legislature are gonna hold ourselves to a higher standard, and we’re gonna say we are not going to fundraise or accept money from campaign contributions, while we are here making decisions on legislation.”

No action was taken on House Bill 2022 during Thursday morning’s meeting.

The second bill on the agenda was House Bill 2939, relating to requirements for mandatory reporting of sexual offenses on school premises involving students.

“To better explain this, I’m going try and start with a little bit of background; explain what current law is, and then I’ll go into explaining a little bit what the original bill is, and then the reason behind the committee substitute. Since at least 1977, there’s been a reporting requirement for teachers or, in general, reporting of abuse, neglect matters for children; if they’ve been abused or neglect, and that’s defined in chapter 49. The requirements do extend to teachers and school personnel. In particular, the law states that a person over the age of 18, who receives a disclosure from a credible witness or who observes any sexual abuse, or sexual assault of a child, shall immediately, and not more than 48 hours, report that to the police and or to DHHR, Child Protective Services. That’s been the existing law for quite some time. The difficulty is, is when you get into the definitions of sexual abuse or sexual assault. Under existing law, sexual abuse is limited to abuse by parent, guardian, or custodian, so if you connect the dots here, the only reporting requirement that exists for a student that may or may not have been sexually abused on school is if that occurs by the parent, guardian, or custodian. Hence, there’s a little bit of a loophole in the law with respect to reporting requirements. So, taking current scenario under existing law, if you have a situation where an individual who is, a report comes to a teacher that their friend has been sexually assaulted on campus, and it was done say, by another student. Under existing law, there’s no requirement for that teacher to report that incident.” -Marty Wright, Counsel to House Judiciary

Marty Wright, counsel to House Judiciary, explained the bill and the reason the law needed some updating.

The bill brought some major discussion among the delegates, from what counted as inappropriate touching between two high school aged children, to how much a teacher would be held accountable in regard to various situations, or to how far the definition of what counted as school premises reached.

By the end of the meeting, three amendments were proposed that addressed these situations, and the bill was passed unanimously in committee.

House Bill 2939 now goes to the floor for its consideration.

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