n LOUDOUN
4 | n LEESBURG
VOL. 8, NO. 44
8 | n EDUCATION
10 | n PUBLIC SAFETY
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14| n LEGAL NOTICES
27
SEPTEMBER 21, 2023
Schools Sexual Assault Cases Independent Report Released BY ALEXIS GUSTIN
agustin@loudounnow.com
A Loudoun County Circuit Court judge Sept. 14 ordered the release of a redacted version of an independent investigation into two sexual assaults committed by a student at two schools in 2021, which the School Board has kept from the public since it was given to them in January 2022. The report concluded that the school division should not have delayed its Title IX investigation after the first incident at Stone Bridge High School—even though the report stated the Loudoun County Sheriff ’s Office threatened to arrest school staff if they investigated during the agency’s own investigation. The Sheriff ’s
Office has since denied any such threats took place. And the report noted there was a possible third victim who refused to report the assault, according to text messages with the first victim. The report also addressed misinformation circulated around the time the assaults were revealed that the assailant, who assaulted one victim in a girls bathroom at school, identified as female, tying the sexual assault scandal to the district’s discussions on protections for transgender students. The report stated the perpetrators mother said he “feeds off any attention … negative and positive” and teachers said the way he dressed seemed to reflect that, according to the report. The report stated
it found no evidence that he identified as a female or that he wore a skirt or kilt to get into the girls’ bathrooms. Instead, it found teachers said he preferred and requested male pronouns. His mother also stated he identified as male. During the Sept. 14 hearing on pretrial motions for the misdemeanor criminal charges filed against fired superintendent Scott Ziegler, for which both Ziegler and his attorney were not present, Judge James E. Plowman ruled in favor of special prosecutor Theo Stamos’ Aug. 10 motion to release the commonwealth’s proposed redacted version of the report. The report had been prepared by the law firm Blankingship & Keith at the request of then-school division counsel Robert Falconi.
The School Board had fought to keep the document from the public’s view claiming it was protected under attorney client privilege. School Board Chair Ian Serotkin (Blue Ridge), who had been very vocal about keeping it from the public, said releasing it on their own could have led to bigger issues, like the division possibly being compelled to release other information including conversations with division counsel about the subject or details about the sexual assault. Despite this, Serotkin encouraged everyone to read the report for themselves and said he felt it was a far more unbiased ASSAULT REPORT continues on page 36
Vote on Paving Gravel Roads Deferred Amid Protest BY RENSS GREENE
rgreene@loudounnow.com
Supervisors have punted to next term a vote on plans to pave several gravel roads across the county amid protests from people who live along or use those roads. But they have already voted to take one road, Canby Road, off that list. GRAVEL ROADS continues on page 37
Hanna Pampaloni/Loudoun Now
A view of Old Wheatland Road, one of the roads under consideration by the Board of Supervisors for paving.
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