Texas Girl, 12, Severely Injured by Rope Around Neck on School Trip

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The unidentified 12-year-old suffered a severe neck injury while on an overnight school trip.

Dallas Morning News Video Screenshot

A Texas mother is furious after her 12-year-old daughter returned home from an overnight school trip with a severe rope burn around her neck, the Dallas Morning News reports.

According to the report, the girl, who is black, attends the mostly white Live Oak Classical School, a private institution in Waco, Texas. The unidentified girl and her mother believe the incident that school officials are saying is an accident, was in fact a racially motivated attack, the culmination of months of bullying at the hands of classmates. 

“It looked like somebody had ripped her neck apart and stitched it back together,” Sandy Roguely, the girl’s mother, told the Morning News. Live Oak maintained in a statment that the injury was “caused accidentally,” while the students, eight girls and 14 boys, were playing with a rope swing attached to a tree. The girl was reportedly one of two black students on the trip. 

“The student and some of her classmates were playing with a swing and an attached pull-rope on a field trip. The student received first aid treatment immediately after the accident by a parent chaperone who is also a physician, and she was able to enjoy the remainder of the field trip, which lasted through the next day. Live Oak takes the safety of its students seriously and is saddened that one of its family suffered an unfortunate accident and injury,” Jeremy Counsellor, a member of the board of directors, said in an emailed statement to the Morning News. 

The statement added that the girl’s attorney, Levi McCathern, was looking to “exploit” the 100th anniversary “of the lynching of Jesse Washington in Waco,” by demanding that the school pay out $2.7 million or making the allegations public. 

“The lawyer claimed that the student’s injuries were racially motivated, intentional attack. Live Oak takes this accusation seriously. The school interviewed all student eyewitnesses and teachers who were present and each independently established that the accusation made by the attorney is absolutely false. The injuries were caused accidentally while the students were playing with the swing and attached pull rope. The attorney was advised of the results of the interviews,” the statement continued. 

McCathern countered saying that they only asked for financial compensation after the school requested such a demand in writing. Attorney T.J. Jones added that they factored in living expences, plus private school through the 12th grade, college for the girl, and her plans to pursue a law or medical degree. 

Furthermore, it was noted, chaperones never notified the child’s mother about the injury, and none of the adults were watching the cildren as played on the swing, so the incident was not witnessed. One parent on the trip, a doctor, reportedly examined her neck, before covering it with Vaseline and giving the girl ibuprofen, the girl said. 

“For Live Oak to bury their head in the sand and chalk this incident up to ‘kids being kids’ is irresponsible but, unfortunately, all too common,” McCathern told the Morning News. “Their tone-deaf approach reflects an attitude that our client’s injury was not worth investigating or even informing her mother about.”

“I don’t know how you can look at her neck, at the pictures and think this was anything but intentional,” Jones added. 

According to the girl, she was helping swing the other kids before stopping to watch. The next thing she felt was the rope going around her neck from behind, before it pulled against her neck. The girl said she fell to the ground and was tugged backward. None of the students helped her, the girl added, and so she removed the rope only to find small pieces embedded in her neck. 

When she looked back, the girl said she saw three boys, all of them white, who she claimed had been bullying her before. 

“Guys, did you do that on purpose?” the girl said she asked the trio.

“No. Why would we do that on purpose?” she said one of the boys answered.

But the girl said she doesn’t understand how the accident occurred as preivoulsy when the kids let go of the rope it just fell to the ground. 

“That’s why I think it was on purpose,” she told the Morning News. “I think someone tried to tie it around my neck.”

Read more at the Dallas Morning News. 

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