At Least 135 Educators Charged with Child Sex Crimes in 2022 Alone

man in handcuffs
by Eric Lendrum

 

In less than five months, at least 135 teachers, teachers’ aides, and other school employees across the country have been arrested and charged with various child sex crimes.

As reported by Fox News, the total of 135 does not account for arrests that haven’t been publicized, meaning the final total for the year 2022 thus far may be even higher. The 135 arrests have taken place across 41 states between January 1st and May 13th, averaging to about one arrest per day. Most of the suspects are men.

At least 102 of the charges involved, 76 percent overall, involved crimes against students. Of the 135 suspects, 117 were teachers, 11 were aides, and 7 were substitute teachers.

The issue of teachers committing sex crimes against students is not being taken as seriously by the federal government as it should be, according to Erika Sanzi, Director of Outreach for the education watchdog group Parents Defending Education. Sanzi pointed to the fact that the last federally-commissioned report on the matter was in 2004, with a report by the Department of Education claiming that up to 9.6% of students are the victims of sexual misconduct by educators at some point during their schooling.

“Educator sexual abuse is a major problem that largely gets ignored because it’s so uncomfortable to talk about,” said Sanzi. “While a very small fraction of educators and school employees prey on the children in their care, one bad actor can do damage to many students.”

“We need to get much more honest about the problem, study it again and ensure that we have policies and laws in place that protect children,” Sanzi continued. “It is currently legal in Massachusetts and Rhode Island for teachers and other adults in positions of authority to have sexual relationships with students once they turn 14.”

Christopher Rufo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and an expert on far-left indoctrination in education such as Critical Race Theory, said that “the public school system has a serious child sex abuse problem.” Rufo similarly pointed out that there has not been a major federal investigation or study on child sex abuse by educators since 2004.

“This is a travesty,” Rufo added. “Parents deserve to know exactly what’s happening in the public school system and deserve to have tools for protecting their children from abuse. Congress should immediately fund a $25 million research program into child sexual abuse in public schools and provide complete transparency for parents. The first duty of public schools is to keep kids safe—and, tragically, that’s not happening in far too many cases.”

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Eric Lendrum reports for American Greatness. 

 

 

 


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