[CTRL] Fwd: Home schooling mom considered Major criminal and jailed

1999-09-07 Thread Sean McDougal

 -Caveat Lector-

Original Message Follows
From: "Robert Kemp" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Fwd: Home schooling mom considered Major criminal and jailed
Date: Tue, 07 Sep 1999 16:39:35 EDT




Original Message Follows
From: Mark Graffis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject: Home schooling mom considered Major criminal and jailed
Date: Sun, 5 Sep 1999 19:32:38 -0500 (CDT)

From: "Bill and Jo Kuhlmeyer" [EMAIL PROTECTED]

  From a friend who is a home-school mom..
VERMONT HOMESCHOOLING MOM JAILED

(From a wide variety of Vermont newspapers and forwarded personal papers)

The story begins so typically. Seventh-grader Trevor Maple was bored at
school, displayed a short attention span, and read at a second grade
level. Academic problems escalated into social problems. He even went
to live with his grandparents to give another school system a try, but
to no avail.

While discussing Trevor's problems with his school's vice-principal, he
advised Trevor's mom that homeschooling could be a perfect alternative.
Considering her options, schedule, and abilities, just two and a half
months into the school year, Karen Maples decided to become a
homeschooling mom.

Vermont's homeschooling requirements are neither easy nor difficult:
submit a portfolio to the Board of Education or provide a Stanford
Achievement Test score. Karen submitted a portfolio the first year, but
for efficiency she switched to the standardized test the next year, and
the year after. Trevor's score improved markedly, as did his
self-confidence when he was in a learning environment that didn't call
him "learning disabled." School officials deemed the test results
suspect.

Then one day, eighteen months after homeschooling began, the school
called to ask if Trevor was absent because of illness. Karen thought
this strange, but was assured it was a clerical mistake. This was
before the school sent a letter to the state's attorney claiming that
Trevor was a child in need of supervision.

Enter several court appearances over two years, always with a public
defender, always denied the ability to submit SAT scores into evidence.
The state, in its all-powerful wisdom, decided Trevor needed a tutor.

But the tutor quit after one lesson. Allegedly, the tutor told Karen
she was asked to lie about the condition of Karen's home - and
wouldn't. Because he had been labeled "learning disabled," the school
demanded to evaluate Trevor's education. Karen refused.

A social service employee followed Karen around the grocery store.

Social service employees have been found banging on Karen's front door
as she arrived home. The children now run upstairs to hide when
strangers approach the house.

To date Karen has had three public defenders, as has Trevor. She has
seen three judges, one of whom, Judge Kupersmith, must hold a grudge.

When Judge Cashman filled in for Kupersmith once this summer and read
Karen's case, he said the entire matter should have been thrown out.

While Judge Cashman had heard cases all day, Judge Kupersmith walked in
to take care of Karen. Even though she had a "real" lawyer who was
given 30 hours to prepare, Karen was arrested at this appearance, found
in contempt of court for failure to bring Trevor to a juvenile court
hearing on August 13. (Karen had informed the judge they wouldn't
appear, at which time Kupersmith told her Trevor would be placed in
permanent custory of Vermont Social and Rehabilitative Services. With
this threat, Karen and family went into hiding until she appeared in
court on September 1, 1999 - without Trevor.) Karen is such a horrid
criminal bail is being denied, as is a breast pump for this nursing
mother. Diane Wheeler, Franklin County deputy state's attorney acting
as prosecutor, states, "Essentially, Ms. Maple holds the key to the
cell door," meaning they don't intend to release her until she offers
up custody of Trevor as her bail.

A sorely needed defense fund has been established. Donations may be
sent to Karen Maple Defense Fund, c/o Richard Gadbois, Esq., RFD,
Franklin, VT 05447; 802-933-4514.

Additionally, phone calls are requested to:
Senator James Jeffords (R) 1-800-835-5500 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
30 Main St. Suite 350 Burlington, VT 05401 (802) 658-6001
58 State St. Montpelier, VT (802) 223-5273
2 South Main St. Rutland, VT 05701 (802) 773-3875
OR
Senator Patrick Leahy (D) 199 Main St. Burlington, VT 05401 1-800-642-3193
433 Russell Senate Office Building United States Senate Washington, DC
20510 (202)
224-4242 senator [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Or Karen's state senators:
Senator George T. Costes (R) (802) 524-4814
OR
Senator Sara B. Kittell (D) (802) 827-3274
The following also need to hear from you in defense of Karen's
constitutional rights:
Tennyson Doane, Chair of the Bakersfield Elementary School Board
(802)827-6168
Kathleen Cushing, Social Rehabilitative Services, (802)527-7741
James Hughes, State's Attorney, (802)524-7920 / fax: (802)524-7964
Natalie Casco, 

Re: [CTRL] Fwd: Home schooling mom considered Major criminal and jailed

1999-09-07 Thread piper

 -Caveat Lector-

I am probably one of the few people that
wonder if Breggin is some kind of front man -
even if it only to the extent that his electronic
communications may be monitored.
Because of the following story, and because when
my ex illegally put my my son on Ritalin for a week
about 2 years ago when (my son) was six -
(I did not continue it when my son returned)
I e-mailed Breggin for advice about the abuse
my son had received and the Ritalin.  For a man
with such "high" credentials, he either only has academic
knowledge, works only when money is involved, or
some other esoteric reason.
http://madnation.org/dendrite6_98.htm
http://www.coastlink.com/users/sbryce/rodriguez/
http://www.nationaloutrage.org/
So Breggin and a psychologist here in Waco called
Shinder (Shinder's office sees that court ordered sex offenders)
- just do not seem to have more academic knowledge of
what to do than they have constructive solutions.
Shinder is also the school psychologist.  Interesting guy -
not.  Baylor used to have a web site (about a year or so ago)
that was a advertisement for it's statistical -something or another-
the statistical -something or another- was started in 1984,
and the page gave the current rates.


the following page has three myths of education.  One link was dead.
http://freeweb.digiweb.com/science_fiction/ThePiedPiper/myths.htm
It seems as if some people are not only afraid that parents might
learn how the kids are taught BUT in some cases that the teachers
might learn to make some new connections with in the teachers
own (brain) knowledge bank (triggered).  If they (the teacher) were to
compare actual knowledge acquired by different parents.  Weird what
can happen when things like a text book manufacturer "could"
see competition too.

This next link shows that the education of our current
lawyers is no longer complete.  --
   Help Return The Law To A Learned Profession -
http://www.tncrimlaw.com/civil_bible/burch_speech.html



Sean McDougal wrote:

  -Caveat Lector-

 Original Message Follows
 From: "Robert Kemp" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Fwd: Home schooling mom considered Major criminal and jailed
 Date: Tue, 07 Sep 1999 16:39:35 EDT

 Original Message Follows
 From: Mark Graffis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: undisclosed-recipients:;
 Subject: Home schooling mom considered Major criminal and jailed
 Date: Sun, 5 Sep 1999 19:32:38 -0500 (CDT)

 From: "Bill and Jo Kuhlmeyer" [EMAIL PROTECTED]

   From a friend who is a home-school mom..
 VERMONT HOMESCHOOLING MOM JAILED

 (From a wide variety of Vermont newspapers and forwarded personal papers)

 The story begins so typically. Seventh-grader Trevor Maple was bored at
 school, displayed a short attention span, and read at a second grade
 level. Academic problems escalated into social problems. He even went
 to live with his grandparents to give another school system a try, but
 to no avail.

 While discussing Trevor's problems with his school's vice-principal, he
 advised Trevor's mom that homeschooling could be a perfect alternative.
 Considering her options, schedule, and abilities, just two and a half
 months into the school year, Karen Maples decided to become a
 homeschooling mom.

 Vermont's homeschooling requirements are neither easy nor difficult:
 submit a portfolio to the Board of Education or provide a Stanford
 Achievement Test score. Karen submitted a portfolio the first year, but
 for efficiency she switched to the standardized test the next year, and
 the year after. Trevor's score improved markedly, as did his
 self-confidence when he was in a learning environment that didn't call
 him "learning disabled." School officials deemed the test results
 suspect.

 Then one day, eighteen months after homeschooling began, the school
 called to ask if Trevor was absent because of illness. Karen thought
 this strange, but was assured it was a clerical mistake. This was
 before the school sent a letter to the state's attorney claiming that
 Trevor was a child in need of supervision.

 Enter several court appearances over two years, always with a public
 defender, always denied the ability to submit SAT scores into evidence.
 The state, in its all-powerful wisdom, decided Trevor needed a tutor.

 But the tutor quit after one lesson. Allegedly, the tutor told Karen
 she was asked to lie about the condition of Karen's home - and
 wouldn't. Because he had been labeled "learning disabled," the school
 demanded to evaluate Trevor's education. Karen refused.

 A social service employee followed Karen around the grocery store.

 Social service employees have been found banging on Karen's front door
 as she arrived home. The children now run upstairs to hide when
 strangers approach the house.

 To date Karen has had three public defenders, as has Trevor. She has
 seen three judges, one of whom, Judge Kupersmith, must hold a grudge.

 When Judge Cashman filled in for Kupersmith once this summer