Student Suspended Following Lockdown of Mingo School

Police say a student has been suspended after reports of a gun prompted the lockdown of a Mingo County school.

Mingo County Sheriff James Smith tells media outlets that no weapon was found.

Smith says Mingo County Central High School was placed on lockdown on Monday after the student told another student that he had a gun in his shoe.

The sheriff says the school was placed on lockdown again on Tuesday morning as a precaution. The lockdown has been lifted.

Information about the incident will be forwarded to the Mingo County prosecutor’s office, which will determine whether any charges will be filed.

Mingo, Fayette Counties Get New Superintendents

When the state takes over a county, they appoint a new superintendent, but, like many in the education field, those superintendents are drawing closer and closer to retirement.

Both Mingo and Fayette counties are losing their superintendents in the next few months and at their meeting Wednesday the state Board of Education took action to replace them.

In Mingo County, board members appointed Robert Bobbera, the county’s current assistant superintendent to take the head position.

Bobbera has worked under current Superintendent Randy Keathley for four years, but has been in Mingo County working as a teacher, counselor and administrator for more than 30.

Mingo County was taken over in 2005, but Bobbera said it is making progress and in his time as superintendent, he plans to keep that momentum going.

“Our schools are just phenomenal, our folks are phenomenal and I just want to keep that moving forward,” he said after the board’s unanimous approval.

In Fayette County, Serena Starcher will soon move from the position of associate superintendent of administration to interim county superintendent for six months.

Starcher began as a teacher in Putnam County, worked for the state Department of Education and then moved into her associate superintendent position seven years ago.

Over her short term, Stacher said she wants to focus on amending the county’s facilities plan, a crucial part of regaining local control.

“Fayette County and the citizens there and the staff, we long for a return of local control,” she said Wednesday, “so over the next six months I just hope to further our vision of returning [that] control.”

Both Bobbera and Starcher will take their new positions as county superintendents before the start of the next school year.

 

Mingo Co. School Administrators Removed After Students Charged with Sexual Assault

West Virginia’s attorney general says some school administrators have been reassigned after a lawsuit claimed they brushed aside allegations that two boys at a middle school sexually abused female classmates.
 
Patrick Morrisey says Burch Middle School in Mingo County will have an outside professional serve as an administrator until the school year ends June 12.

Morrisey says in a news release that a Mingo County judge signed a preliminary order Wednesday prohibiting all defendants in the lawsuit from having contact with the alleged victims and their families.
 
 Morrisey filed a lawsuit earlier this month alleging the abuse and that school officials interfered with a state police investigation. The lawsuit says school administrators retaliated against the girls for reporting allegations.
 
 The boys also face criminal charges filed by Mingo County’s prosecutor.

W. Va. Attorney General Files Lawsuit Against School Officials in Mingo County

The West Virginia attorney general has filed a lawsuit against Mingo County school officials claiming they brushed aside allegations that two male students sexually abused female classmates.
 
The lawsuit also claims school officials interfered with a state police investigation of the incidents.
 
The lawsuit says administrators at Burch Middle School retaliated against the girls for reporting the allegations.

 
Defendants named in the 32-page complaint are Burch Middle School Principal Melissa Webb, Burch Middle School Vice Principal Deanna Maynard, guidance counselor Hester Keatley, teacher and athletic coach Melvin Cunningham, Mingo County Schools Superintendent Randy Keathley, the Mingo County Board of Education, two un-named juveniles
and their parents.
 
The lawsuit alleged the abuses occurred on a school bus, at the school and on a field trip.
 
School officials and a state police spokesman did not immediately return telephone messages Thursday.
 

The lawsuit filed Wednesday asks Mingo County Circuit Court to prevent further abuse and retaliation, and to bar defendants from interfering with the police investigation.

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