> On Aug 23, 2022, at 8:52 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> If you have something business critical, let alone anything that affects 
> child safety, pick up a phone and call, or send an officer over to the school.

100%.  Belt and suspender approach.  If between 2020 and 2022 any child was 
actually harmed by the guy, their parents are going to have a good lawsuit 
(which sucks, because it would be much better to have no harmed child, of 
course, but in my _academic_ opinion (i.e. this is not legal advice) the PD was 
really, *really* negligent here, especially as it's *known* that email is not a 
reliable method of communication, and if you aren't requiring an 
acknowledgement that's on *you*).

--
Anne P. Mitchell, Attorney at Law
CEO Institute for Social Internet Public Policy
Author: Section 6 of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law)
Author: The Email Deliverability Handbook
Board of Directors, Denver Internet Exchange
Dean Emeritus, Cyberlaw & Cybersecurity, Lincoln Law School
Prof. Emeritus, Lincoln Law School
Chair Emeritus, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop
Counsel Emeritus, eMail Abuse Prevention System (MAPS)

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