A Effin' FELONY Though?

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Florida Teen Girl Charged With Felony After Science Experiment Goes Bad
By Kyle Munzenrieder Fri., Apr. 26 2013 at 11:59 AM


View media item 393049
Kiera Wilmot got good grades and had a perfect behavior record. She wasn't the kind of kid you'd expect to find hauled away in handcuffs and expelled from school, but that's exactly what happened after an attempt at a science project went horribly wrong.

On 7 a.m. on Monday, the 16 year-old mixed some common household chemicals in a small 8 oz water bottle on the grounds of Bartow High School in Bartow, Florida. The reaction caused a small explosion that caused the top to pop up and produced some smoke. No one was hurt and no damage was caused.

According to WTSP, Wilmot told police that she was merely conducting a science experiment. Though her teachers knew nothing of the specific project, her principal seems to agree.

"She made a bad choice. Honestly, I don't think she meant to ever hurt anyone," principal Ron Pritchard told the station. "She wanted to see what would happen [when the chemicals mixed] and was shocked by what it did. Her mother is shocked, too."

After the explosion Wilmot was taken into custody by a school resources officer and charged with possession/discharge of a weapon on school grounds and discharging a destructive device. She will be tried as an adult.

She was then taken to a juvenile assessment center. She was also expelled from school and will be forced to complete her diploma through an expulsion program.

Polk County School released the following statement:

"Anytime a student makes a bad choice it is disappointing to us. Unfortunately, the incident that occurred at Bartow High School yesterday was a serious breach of conduct. In order to maintain a safe and orderly learning environment, we simply must uphold our code of conduct rules. We urge our parents to join us in conveying the message that there are consequences to actions. We will not compromise the safety and security of our students and staff."
So, sorry kids. Don't try any extracurricular science projects on school grounds, especially if they could result in anything resembling an explosion.



http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/riptide/2013/05/florida_school_responds_to_cri.php

Florida School Responds to Criticism for Expelling Student Over Science Project: "There Are Consequences to Actions"
By Tim Elfrink Wed., May 1 2013 at 1:07 PM 341 Comments
Categories: News



By all accounts, Kiera Wilmot's science experiment gone wrong triggered just a tiny pop and a small amount of smoke at Bartow High School last week -- but her tale is certifiably blowing up the Internet today. Thanks to Reddit and Reason, thousands of people have commented on Wilmot's story, many asking the same question: How could an otherwise model student be expelled and charged with a felony over an experiment that didn't hurt anyone?

Riptide decided to call the Polk County School District to find out. The answer: The letter of the law demanded the punishment, and school administrators believe kids should learn "there are consequences to their actions."

We've also obtained a police report that indicates Wilmot mixed toilet bowl cleaner and aluminum foil -- a combination that has inspired hundreds of YouTube videos and generally produces a fairly unimpressive explosion.

"Unfortunately, what she did falls into our code of conduct," Leah Lauderdale, a spokeswoman for the district, tells Riptide. "It's grounds for immediate expulsion."

More specifically, Wilmot's mini-explosion -- which came after she mixed "common household chemicals" in a plastic bottle -- violates Section 7.05 of the school's conduct code, Lauderdale says, which mandates expulsion for any "student in possession of a bomb (or) explosive device... while at a school (or) a school-sponsored activity... unless the material or device is being used as part of a legitimate school-related activity or science project conducted under the supervision of an instructor."

So even though Wilmot's principal acknowledges that the 16-year-old wasn't trying to hurt anyone and simply made a "bad choice," the school's rules said she had to be expelled.

Police, meanwhile, have charged her with possession/discharge of a weapon on school grounds and discharging a destructive device.

The other most common question about her story is what kind of chemicals she was mixing. Lauderdale says she doesn't know.


In the meantime, Lauderdale says Wilmot can challenge her expulsion, but says she's unable to discuss whether or not the teen has done so because of student privacy rights.

The spokeswoman says the school district stands by its rules. "We urge our parents to convey to their kids that there are consequences to their actions," she says.

Update: Bartow police have sent the incident report from Wilmot's arrest that makes it clear she was mixing toilet cleaner and aluminum foil for her experiment. According to an officer, an assistant principal heard an explosion near a gazebo on the school grounds and found Wilmot near a plastic bottle.

Wilmot told him a friend had told her to mix the two substances, but that she "thought it would just cause some smoke." She told the school official she wasn't trying to hurt anyone or disrupt school, but was simply "conducting a science fair experiment."

The assistant principal called police after talking to Wilmot's science teacher and determining he didn't know about the experiment.

View media item 393056
 
I mean granted she shouldn't have been using those chemicals to see what would happen, but a felony. IDK
 
Disgusting. She's a minor so hopefully her record will be sealed.

There's no need for arrest or expulsion. Suspension, I could agree with.
 
Can kids even do baking soda and vinegar volcanoes anymore? srs
 
Yikes. I have heard of much worse getting almost no punishment. It's sad that agendas are pushed onto otherwise innocent kids.

In one state, a kid can push a teacher down a flight of stairs and get detention. In other states, it's attempted murder.

Sadly, it seems like its all a big roll of dice on what DA's want to pursue or go after that specific week.
 
she aint google it before she tried it?

i dunno though, a felony does seem a little too harsh, especially with a clean record
 
Disgusting. She's a minor so hopefully her record will be sealed.

There's no need for arrest or expulsion. Suspension, I could agree with.

I agree with this.

Although I can see the reason of expulsion, I'd think her good track record would weigh into giving her maybe a suspension instead.

But being charged with two felonies and being tried as an adult is ridiculous regardless imo

she ****** up for sure, but not to the point shes getting hit with that kind of consequences
 
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Let another student bring a gun to school and start shooting and I bet they'll only get detention.

I'm done trying to understand things in life. This is one big trolling dream that we live in.
 
I'm white and its blatantly obvious that if the girl was white at worst she would've gotten a minor slap on the wrist.
 
I'm just gonna assume you're being a troll :{

No, that's just my opinion.

Some people think it's racist, I think it's justified.

My dude I respect your opinion and all...

...but **** that.





Would a White Girl Be Prosecuted for a Botched Science Experiment?
Posted: 05/02/2013 6:18 am
Read more
Black Students , Criminal Justice , Kiera Wilmot , Mass Incarceration , Minority Students , School Expulsion , School Prison Pipeline , Zero Tolerance , Crime News
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By now you've probably heard about Kiera Wilmot, the 16-year-old Florida girl who botched a science experiment with a plastic bottle and toilet cleaner. The bottle ended up exploding, and though no one was hurt and no property damaged, Kiera was expelled from high school and is now being prosecuted as an adult for discharging a weapon on school grounds. She had an exemplary behavioral record up until that point.

Kiera is, as one might expect, black. The notion of a white girl getting hauled off to jail for a harmless expression of intellectual curiosity is dubious, to say the least. And though the rise of "zero tolerance" policies in American schools should theoretically be race-neutral, that's not the reality. According to the Dignity in Schools campaign, "students of color... are more likely to be suspended and expelled than their peers for the same behavior" and "African American students [are] 3.5 times as likely to be expelled" as whites. What happened to Kiera Wilmot is part of a broader story about racial disparities in our criminal justice system.

Yet we don't have to go macro to get the whiff of racial bias in this case. The prosecutor who decided to throw the book at Kiera is one Tammy Glotfelty, an assistant state attorney in Florida. The officer who arrested Kiera named Glotfelty in his police report:

I THEN CONTACTED ASSISTANT STATE ATTORNEY TAMMY GLOTFELTY VIA TELEPHONE. I ADVISED [HER] OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE AND SHE ADVISED THIS OFFICER TO FILE THE CHARGES OF, POSSESSING OR DISCHARGING WEAPONS OR FIREARMS AT A SCHOOL SPONSORED EVENT OR ON SCHOOL PROPERTY F.S.S. 790.115 (1) AND MAKING, POSSESSING, THROWING, PROJECTING, PLACING, OR DISCHARGING ANY DESTRUCTIVE DEVICE F.S.S. 790.161 (A).

Sounds absurdly harsh, right? And there has been no reversal of this decision since then. But Glotfelty isn't always so heartless. Just last week, she decided not to prosecute a teenager named Taylor Richardson who accidentally shot and killed his younger brother with a BB gun. Glotfelty declared the case "a tragic accident." I don't doubt that it was. The Richardson kid will probably have nightmares about this incident for the rest of his life. But I do wonder how to make sense of a prosecutor who one week shows understandable compassion for a kid who made a terrible mistake and the next week insists on giving a teenager the harshest possible sanction for something that didn't harm anyone.

The first Tammy Glotfelty has a normal-sized heart in her chest. The second one has a hole there.

There is one fact, however, that may help us figure out the discrepancy between Glotfelty #1 and Glotfelty #2: The Richardson family is white.

Am I accusing Glotfelty of conscious racial bias? Nope. Self-awareness isn't the issue here. And maybe she has good reasons for treating these two cases differently. Hey, Taylor was 13 instead of 16; perhaps that makes all the difference in her eyes. But I can't shake the feeling that these two stories would have unfolded quite differently if the races of the children had been reversed. Somehow the white Kiera Wilmot would have had her story end with an adult touching her shoulder saying "I'm just glad you're alright." And the black Taylor Richardson would have heard platitudes about "taking responsibility" while being led away in handcuffs.

The school-to-prison pipeline has become a very real phenomenon in this country, at least in communities of color. Suspending and expelling students for minor misbehavior has become routine despite there being no evidence that these steps improve school safety and strong evidence that they are linked to increased odds of behavior problems later. Moreover, prosecuting children as adults can destroy their chances of becoming productive members of society later in life. If prosecutors like Tammy Glotfelty really want to get serious about public safety, they'll work to transform our racially disparate justice system and refuse to put harmless black students behind bars.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jesse-lava/would-a-white-girl-be-pro_b_3199289.html
 
^Exactly. Blacks are judged to the full extent of the law, to the letter. Whites are typically punished based on the severity of the action. Just like Iverson's maiming by mob fiasco for a brawl.
 
Yikes. I have heard of much worse getting almost no punishment. It's sad that agendas are pushed onto otherwise innocent kids.
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pretty much.
two felonies and an expulsion? I could see that if someone would've gotten hurt. just seems too harsh.
 
When I was in middle school (80s baby here) I set of an M80 after school in the grass. I don't even remember seeing a teacher. Probably because I ran. lol. This was in the Bronx.
 
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She knew what she was doing and got what she deserved IMO
im gonna have to disagree with u. Kids will be kids, she was just trying to conduct an innocent experiment. As a result of that she caused a loud explosion. lets look at the facts nobody was hurt not even school property was damaged. so why should she get a felony on a record? shes still a child. i could understand if she threw acid in a students face. but i think it was the janitor or teacher that didnt supervise the students actions. I think somethings wrong with you. the most she should have gotten was a suspension. i think if she would of been white they would of applauded her for trying to do something positive
 
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