Originally Posted by :
A 28-year-old Lake Charles-area woman faces a bevy of charges after Louisiana police said she repeatedly had sex with a 13-year-old boy who she met at the Bible camp where she was a teacher/aide.
According to the Sulphur Daily News, Heather Daughdrill initiated the relationship in June and it continued until a complaint was filed in October. After her arrest on November 29, police told the paper that Daughdrill would pick her victim up from school without his parents' knowledge and subject him to sexual encounters. Louisiana cops also reportedly found sexually explicit texts between Daughdrill and her victim.
Originally Posted by Cochise:
Not really. People with special needs are often victimized because the predator thinks that they won't tell or that no one will believe them.
Students identified eligible for special education services are largely of the SLD label (specific learning disability). By definition their IQ should fall in the average range, but they have some sort of cognitive processing issue usually.
True pedophile behavior often preys on the weak, however it is difficult to tell if that was the case in this incident. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Hydrae:
You poor man. You were obviously victimized by someone in a position of authority. She should be jailed for this horrendous crime!
She would be nowadays.
Off Topic: did anyone see the story of the mom who left her kid in the car for 5 minutes get arrested? Crazy time we are living in. [Reply]
Originally Posted by kstater:
You're not serious are you?
Originally Posted by :
"I took a deep breath. I looked at the clock. For the next four or five seconds, I did what it sometimes seems I've been doing every minute of every day since having children, a constant, never-ending risk-benefit analysis. I noted that it was a mild, overcast, 50-degree day. I noted how close the parking spot was to the front door, and that there were a few other cars nearby. I visualized how quickly, unencumbered by a tantrumming 4-year-old, I would be, running into the store, grabbing a pair of child headphones. And then I did something I'd never done before. I left him. I told him I'd be right back. I cracked the windows and child-locked the doors and double-clicked my keys so that the car alarm was set. And then I left him in the car for about five minutes."