13:59 “YO! How does a woman, twice married, widowed once, and then divorced, after being born and raised in Pennsylvania, getting forced into learning from a private school where she was raised a Quaker, grow up to be a Principal, a mover, and a shaker?”
The parents should've just sued instead of threatening a child for chasing their son when he was cheating at bingo ps it's only a crime if he knew about their sons allergy
Schools and employers could punish without needing a criminal conviction. If it were contested in court they'd only need the preponderence of evidence on their side, not proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
I don't dispute that. I only dispute the "it's only a crime if" part. Punishing a student for behavior that falls short of breaking criminal law is definitely part of the school's authority. That will be hard to dispute. But sending a fellow student to investigate and chase their son and bring him in for questioning is going to be difficult for the school to justify. The safety patrol is not a legitimate police department, and giving that much authority to a middle schooler is begging to be sued. That's part of the fantasy of the show, because in reality it would open the school up to lawsuits.
@@BradyPostma I see what you mean now sorry, so the could've been sued when that council member was allowed to authorize another student to break into someone elses locker
@@michaeldillon8217 Probably, yeah. Giving adult authority to children begs for lawsuits. That said, schools give janitors orders to open lockers kind of regularly. In some states they need probable cause, a reason to suspect wrongdoing. In other states, there's no legal basis to expect lockers to be private from school authorities. But that's adult janitors, not kids on the safety patrol.
@@damianprock1650 Middle school kids can get phone records because cops in every cop show can get phone records and this show is imitating those shows. I guess it's technically more of a trope than a pop culture reference.