Tail_Gunner
CRJ & ERJ A&P Mech.
Update
My daughter is now safe at her older brother's house in Nashville. I talked to and she talked to a high level administrator for student affairs at the college and this is what is going to happen there:
1. A college "restraining order" is being placed against the two girls known to have beaten my daughter. If investigation shows additional girls participated in the assault, it will be extended to cover them also. Any contact, or harassment the attackers have with my daughter or vandalism of her car, etc will result in immediate expulsion from the college.
2. My daughter is getting a room in a different dorm. Currently, one of her attackers, lives in the next room. It will likely be a room to herself since she is not a freshman and is just a couple of months away from being considered a junior. The dorms have new security systems where you have to be a resident to get in.
3. I found out today that members of the football team were there also, and watched the beating, doing nothing to stop it. So in addition to the girls b-ball team, the football team will have a group meeting with school administrators. They will stress that the assault of other students will not be tolerated and dealt with severly. Even the witnessing of such acts and doing nothing to aid the student being attacked will be dealt with harshly.
4. After my daughter was removed to another room for her safety,
the other girls got evicted from the hotel in a hasty manner, hotell management deemed the room was trashed and assesed a $700 cleaning/repair fee to those remaining girls.
Tx_Atty's idea of suing for civil battery is a good idea. I think I will keep that in my back pocket in case parents of the other students comes after us seeking $$$ for the cleaning fee or airline tickets home or whatever. Which does bring up a question. Is there any sort of civil court charge that can be made for people who could have acted to stop or prevent the assault, but didn't? Some sort of negligence thing or ???
So far, I think I am fairly pleased with the amount of aggressiveness the college is handling this situation. The lesson I've learned is, future fall or spring breaks, my daughter is coming home or going to visit her brother or something. No more Florida trips.
I'm not going to pound home the "under-aged" drinking thing anymore than I already have. After all, there is a certain amount of "practice what you preach" here. I think many of the under 40 crowd around here will appreciate that. When I was under "21", the drinking age was 18. It didn't get raised to 21 until I was older than that anyhow. But it's a different story with momma.
Thanks for all the comments & suggestions.
My daughter is now safe at her older brother's house in Nashville. I talked to and she talked to a high level administrator for student affairs at the college and this is what is going to happen there:
1. A college "restraining order" is being placed against the two girls known to have beaten my daughter. If investigation shows additional girls participated in the assault, it will be extended to cover them also. Any contact, or harassment the attackers have with my daughter or vandalism of her car, etc will result in immediate expulsion from the college.
2. My daughter is getting a room in a different dorm. Currently, one of her attackers, lives in the next room. It will likely be a room to herself since she is not a freshman and is just a couple of months away from being considered a junior. The dorms have new security systems where you have to be a resident to get in.
3. I found out today that members of the football team were there also, and watched the beating, doing nothing to stop it. So in addition to the girls b-ball team, the football team will have a group meeting with school administrators. They will stress that the assault of other students will not be tolerated and dealt with severly. Even the witnessing of such acts and doing nothing to aid the student being attacked will be dealt with harshly.
4. After my daughter was removed to another room for her safety,
the other girls got evicted from the hotel in a hasty manner, hotell management deemed the room was trashed and assesed a $700 cleaning/repair fee to those remaining girls.
Tx_Atty's idea of suing for civil battery is a good idea. I think I will keep that in my back pocket in case parents of the other students comes after us seeking $$$ for the cleaning fee or airline tickets home or whatever. Which does bring up a question. Is there any sort of civil court charge that can be made for people who could have acted to stop or prevent the assault, but didn't? Some sort of negligence thing or ???
So far, I think I am fairly pleased with the amount of aggressiveness the college is handling this situation. The lesson I've learned is, future fall or spring breaks, my daughter is coming home or going to visit her brother or something. No more Florida trips.
I'm not going to pound home the "under-aged" drinking thing anymore than I already have. After all, there is a certain amount of "practice what you preach" here. I think many of the under 40 crowd around here will appreciate that. When I was under "21", the drinking age was 18. It didn't get raised to 21 until I was older than that anyhow. But it's a different story with momma.
Thanks for all the comments & suggestions.