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Mom jailed for enrolling kids in wrong school district

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bman94

Member
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/01/26/mom-jailed-for-enrolling-kids-in-wrong-school-district/

An Ohio mother is in jail after being convicted of tampering with records to enroll her children in a better school district.

Kelley Williams-Bolar, 40, of Akron, illegally registered her two daughters at her father’s address in suburban Copley Township to get them into the Copley-Fairlawn school district rather than the urban Akron district, a jury decided.

The Akron City school district met only four of 26 standards on the latest Ohio Department of Education Report Card and had a 76% graduation rate. Copley-Fairlawn City Schools met 26 of 26 standards and had a 97.5% graduation rate.

Summit County Common Pleas Judge Patricia Cosgrove sentenced Williams-Bolar last week to five years in prison, but suspended all but 10 days. Williams-Bolar also must serve 80 hours of community service and will be on probation for three years.

The Rev. Lorenzo Glenn of Macedonia Baptist Church had asked the judge for leniency, saying he had known Williams-Bolar for more than 20 years, the Akron Beacon Journal newspaper reported.

”This is a serious matter,” Glenn said, according to the paper, “but by all means, it was done to help her children.”

Williams-Bolar told CNN affiliate WEWS-TV that she and her children considered her father’s house one of their homes.

“My primary residence was both places. I stayed at both places,” she said in an interview at the Summit County Jail.

Williams-Bolar’s father, Edward Williams, told CNN affiliate WJW-TV that the children did live with him, so he believed the family was within the law.

He said his daughter’s Akron neighborhood — where she lives in government-subsidized housing — isn’t safe.

“She had 12 police reports that her house had been broken in, so what am I supposed to do? Just leave them there?” Williams said to WJW-TV. “I mean, I can protect them better if they was with me.”

Williams-Bolar, a single mother, works as a teacher’s aide at a high school in Akron and is just 12 credits away from earning a teaching degree at the University of Akron, according to the Beacon Journal.

Her felony conviction will bar her from being licensed to teach in Ohio.

Copley-Fairlawn Superintendent Brian Poe told WJW-TV the case cost the district $30,000 in two years of lost tuition and $6,000 it spent on the investigation.

He denied that Williams-Bolar was singled out because she is black and the Copley-Fairlawn district is 75% white.

The district almost always resolves residency cases without involving the courts, he told WJW-TV, but couldn’t work out a resolution with Williams-Bolar.

“The way I look at it is, the bottom line, you need to follow the law,” he said. “If you choose to step outside of the law, what’s going to happen at that point is you are going to have to face the consequences for that.”

Williams-Bolar told WEWS she intends to appeal her conviction.

Grand theft charges against her father resulted in a hung jury. No new trial date has been set.

t1larg.jailed.mother.wews.jpg


Really sad story. She potentially won't be able to get into the career she was working years on to get into, her children may be stuck in a bad neighborhood with questionable choices for school education and she's getting jail time on top of that. Nobody wins.

Most recent update to said story:
http://www.ebony.com/news-views/mom-jailed-for-enrolling-kids-in-school-tells-her-story-in-new-book-film-405#axzz4JEyh4Ci4

With knocking on her door, Kelley Williams-Bolar will be marking 2014 as the year that her story is finally told in summation.
In 2011, Williams-Bolar was jailed for sending her two daughters to school in a predominately White school district in which her father lived. This year, audiences will be able to get a more in-depth look behind-the-scenes when her story is brought to life with her upcoming book, The Kelly Williams-Bolar Story set for an April 1 release and a movie, directed by Stephen Stix Josey and starring Garrett Morris and A Different World’s Charnele Brown, who will portray Williams-Bolar.
RELATED: STILL SEPARATE, STILL UNEQUAL
The family had lived in an Akron, Ohio housing project neighborhood where lacking schooling options spurred her to ask her father if she could she use his address to enroll her children in a school in his Copley Township school district in Ohio. Her children were enrolled for two years until the school district filed criminal charges against her for enrolling her children in a school district where she was not a legal resident. Williams-Bolar, like many of her supporters, to this day, asserts that the charges were racially motivated.
“There weren’t that many minorities out there,” Williams-Bolar says. “This was their way to narrow down our enrollment. I didn’t hear them say that, but at the same time there were only a sprinkle [of non-White students].”
Williams-Bolar’s father, Edward L. Williams, was charged with a fourth-degree felony of grand theft, in which he and his daughter were charged with defrauding the school system for two years of educational services for their girls despite the fact that Edward Williams was a legal resident of the neighborhood. The court ruled that sending their children to the school was worth $30,500 in tuition, which Williams-Bolar was responsible for repaying. She asserts that although she became singled out, she was not the only parent at the school who had made the same decision.
“I knew the other people who were doing the same thing, one woman in particular. [When my story made the news] I knew she was scared to death, I knew she thought I was going to say something. She kind of distanced herself,” she says.
When Ohio governor John Kasich made the decision to reduce her sentence of ten days of jail time and changed felony charges to misdemeanors when swayed by the national outrage, Williams-Bolar’s luck appeared to have gotten better. More than 100,000 signatures were collected by Change.org and ColorofChange.org in support of her. According to Colorlines, Kasich went on to use Williams-Bolar’s case to highlight the need for more school choice options, like school vouchers, that allow students to leave the public school system.
However, although the news whirlwind died down slightly upon her release, hardship still circled Williams-Bolar and her family. Her father was still being held on charges relating to the investigation fueled by Williams-Bolar’s case, and he wound up losing his home and later dying while in prison in 2012.
His death and her notoriety took its toll on her well-being. “I went into a deep depression,” Williams-Bolar remembers. “I could barely make it to work and talk. There were some serious trials there.”
Two years after his death, Williams-Bolar has been able to find and maintain work in her field of education while enrolling one of her daughters in private school. However, she is currently struggling to pay the tuition.
“My daughter is in a private school. After my case made the news, a gentleman paid for her school for the first year but he hasn’t paid for this year, so I’m busting my butt trying to get her to be able to stay there,” Williams-Bolar admits. She resolves that having her daughter in private school right now is the safest and best choice given her alternatives.
“Hopefully public schools don’t become obsolete,” Williams-Bolar says. “But, you have to know what is going on in the school and with your child. If you know that the state school is not working, you have to find out what your options are. Some parents are choosing to enroll in private schools or home-school. Home-schooling is not always possible because most parents have to work. You find what options are. ‘Keep them safe and educated’, should be every parents quote.”
Williams-Bolar created the website ChildsReign.org to offer pre-orders of her book and document news about her case and her subsequent work as an education advocate. Hoping that her new book and movie deal will shed light on her story while offering her opportunity for more speaking engagements so she can earn money for her daughter’s private school, Williams-Bolar is focused, yet realistic.
“Time heals,” she says, “but I will never be the person I was prior to everything that happened.”
 

smurfx

get some go again
isn't this an incredibly old story?

edit: its from 2011. wonder what the outcome was for this woman.
 

Vargas

Member
Damn that is messed up, I remember tons of families doing this back in high school here in NYC, never thought it would be a crime.
 
Rapist get chances to expunge their conviction so as to not ruin their lives. Black mother trying to do right for her kids will have a record that prevents her from getting a teaching job she's training for... what a joke.
 

Tuck

Member
isn't this an incredibly old story?

edit: its from 2011. wonder what the outcome was for this woman.

Yeah I recall reading about this a long time ago.

Still fucked up. Some parents did that in my elementary school when I was little, and they got away with it just fine. Granted, they were white and this is Canada.
 

IvanJ

Banned
What she did was certainly illegal.
But Americans seem to have a fetish on throwing everybody in jail, which I disagree with in cases like these.
A fine and a suspended sentence, and the kids moved to where they should be would have the same results.
 

ColdPizza

Banned
A school district caught my boss's brother in law for trying this with his kid. They claimed my boss's residence as the child's primary residence and they got found out when a private investigator parked out front this wasn't the case. Schools take this stuff very seriously.
 

Jarmel

Banned
Has there been an update on this?

This is just completely insane considering she registered the kids under the father's address. This is someone picking her out because she's black.
 

rjinaz

Member
This is just ridiculous. I'm not going to say what the Mother did here was right, but that she was charged with a felony. This legal system sometimes. God I hate it. Why do I feel that if this was some rich White woman or man doing it for their kids, we wouldn't even be hearing about it let alone an arrest.

What are you in for? Oh I lied and said my kids lived in a better area so they could go to a better school...
 
A year later:

In September of last year following an international outcry amplified by multiple groups' online organizing campaigns, Gov. John Kasich, who is a proponent of school choice and voucher schemes, went against the recommendations of the Summit County prosecutors and the Ohio parole board and reduced her convictions from felonies to misdemeanors....

...She still sees her future as an uncertain, but hopeful swath of new possibility. This month the family will celebrate Kayla's high school graduation. Jada, Williams-Bolar's younger daughter, is headed to a private high school next year and will qualify for tuition help from Ohio's voucher program. Williams-Bolar spent months preparing an application to the exclusive Catholic all-girls' school in Akron, and when the acceptance letter arrived she was decidedly happier than her daughter, who wanted to go to a co-ed high school. The tony girls school is tucked away on a verdant campus, and is a top-performing school.
 

Tripon

Member
Wouldn't be surprised if the district is getting their funding by property lines instead of strict attendance. Even then, if the father lives in the district boundaries lines, I can't see what's wrong with the girls attending. That's a legal residence.
 
LeBron, get on this. This sorta stuff should be highlighted and put up on a national spotlight to bring awareness of the kinds of injustices people with lesser means have to suffer even to do the right thing.

Billion dollar corporations get to jump through tax laws with debatably legal offshore accounts and yet this family, who was trying to do the right thing in their minds, get the book thrown at them. What does the justice system expect to get out of this? Does the punishment fit the crime? If it's so bad then just reassign the child to the right school and fee the parents like $50, but don't go ruining people's lives over this.
 
A school district caught my boss's brother in law for trying this with his kid. They claimed my boss's residence as the child's primary residence and they got found out when a private investigator parked out front this wasn't the case. Schools take this stuff very seriously.

Yep. it overloads district classrooms with kids that don't actually live there, straining support services and budgets that aren't that great to begin with.

My high school had a significant problem with this when I was a kid, and still does.

That being said, the penalties for school district fraud are a known thing, and never starts out as jail time. The parent (when found out) will typically be billed for the estimated cost of attendance.

Ignore that, and yeah I can see how it would end up as jail time.

edit: yep, buried in the article

The district almost always resolves residency cases without involving the courts, he told WJW-TV, but couldn't work out a resolution with Williams-Bolar.

This woman could have avoided prison had she worked out a payment arrangement re: the fine.

Edit: the felony wasn't even for sending her kids to the wrong district, it was for felony records tampering. When caught, she intentionally altered records to try to cover it up. This woman is a hot mess.

Double edit: the felony was downgraded to a misdemeanor by Kasich, so it won't affect future employment...much.
 
I knew she was black from the thread title, and I doubly knew when the article said she enrolled them using her father's address. I know several (white) people that have done the damn same.
 

MartyStu

Member
My mother did this for us as well.

Seeing as we literally lived 4 minutes walking distance from the school, it always seemed bullshit to us that we had to go to the school almost a 45 minute busride away.
 
Another win for the judiciary system, who kept the streets safe from dedicated Mothers trying to give their life a good education, a good school environnement and a possible future.

This is fuckin depressing to read.
 

Galang

Banned
Didn't even think this would be illegal, but even if so... a fucking felony? I don't know where to start with how fucked that is... jesus
 

Alienous

Member
I'm glad they sentenced her to jail time. People just aren't safe when there's a mother out there getting ideas about providing the best life opportunities for her children.
 

Palmer_v1

Member
this is a thing in rural areas for sure. The county high school was pretty terrible, so most kids that lived outside the city still used an address of a relative in the city so they could go to the city school.
 

ModBot

Not a mod, just a bot.
While this is certainly awful, it's also more than five years old. We even had a thread on it at the time!
 
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