Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Things like this never happened to me in school...



You know, first there was this whole fad of young hot teachers banging their students. Women, fresh outta college with a degree in teaching, fucking their students brains out. These things never occurred while I was in school. And I'm very upset about that cause there were a few teachers that would've got the bizness. Now it appears that drug trafficking is the new craze for teachers and students. Right here in good ole Maryland, Montgomery County actually, a teacher has been accused with selling coke to her students. Wow. The students referred to her as "the coolest teacher ever". I feel them. I don't get down with the whole coke thing, it's just not that sexy to me. But can you imagine if my teacher was selling weed? How sweet would that have been?



Krizz

Montgomery Teacher Is Accused of Giving Students Cocaine

By Katherine Shaver and Sarah MarstonWashington Post Staff Writers Tuesday, August 26, 2008; 7:06 PM
The students who put together the 2007 yearbook at Thomas S. Wootton High School in Rockville dubbed Theresa C. Duarte "the coolest woman alive." But Montgomery County police say the former English teacher and yearbook advisor's relationship with two students turned criminal in June, when she gave them cocaine -- one of them on two separate occasions -- in her Rockville home.
Duarte, 44, of the 1000 block of Brice Road, was arrested Monday on a warrant charging her with two counts of distributing narcotics and two counts of contributing to delinquent conditions of a child. Police said in a news release that "additional students" may have received drugs from Duarte.
Duarte resigned from Wootton in mid-June, at the end of last school year, for personal reasons, principal Michael Doran said. Doran said school officials are cooperating with police but don't believe Duarte provided any drugs on the Wootton campus. The investigation did not begin until after her resignation, police said.
"I'm shocked," Doran said of Duarte's arrest. "It came out of the blue. I'm disappointed if any adult takes advantage of his or her position as a teacher and role model. . . . She was popular, and she produced a good yearbook. She seemed like a regular teacher."
Doran said he didn't know the two students' names. He added that he was discouraged the news of the arrest today marred an otherwise successful start to a new school year for the campus of 2,500 students.
In a charging document, Detective Karen Carvajal wrote that a current Wootton student, identified only as "Student A," reported receiving cocaine from Duarte twice in June. Another student, identified as "Student B," received cocaine from Duarte just before school ended in June, when Duarte was still a teacher, Carvajal wrote.
In an Aug. 20 interview with police, Carvajal wrote, Duarte said she kept cocaine in her bathroom and acknowledged giving some to two students.
"Duarte stated she could not remember when she gave student A cocaine," the detective wrote. "However, she believes it was approximately one week after she gave cocaine to student B."
Carvajal wrote that she found a straw, a folded paper and a small amount of white powder, believed to be cocaine, while searching Duarte's home.
Duarte was released from the Montgomery County Detention Center today after posting $150,000 bail. Court records do not list an attorney for Duarte, and her home phone had a busy signal today.
Police said they began investigating Duarte on Aug. 19, after officials from the county's Child Protective Services said they had received information Duarte was providing illegal drugs to Wootton students. Police said they did not know why the two students were at Duarte's home and are not releasing their ages to protect their identities.

No comments: