Is this the face of a criminal? Apparently so, because the Pinellas County, Fla., Sheriff’s Office has charged 16-year-old Allie Scott with stalking after she made an innocuous Facebook post.
Allie’s slide into “stalker territory” started with a simple mistake. She parked her brother’s car in the school parking lot in another girl’s parking spot. She was told to move the car, so that’s what she did at the end of the day. When she went to the car, though, she found that someone had scratched the body with a key.
She didn’t name any person who she thought did it, but she posted this on Facebook: “Oh, so you keyed my car. Your karma is going to be a whole lot worse than that.”
The school’s crack administration sprang into action, summoning this evil young woman to the office. Her mother was called to the school, too, in order to deal with the heinous crime. Then they were sent to the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, where she was charged with the crime of stalking. Allie faces a court hearing next week. She was handed a three-day suspension at school.
This isn’t the face of a stalker, but it is the face of a victim of “zero tolerance” policies run amuck. Some school administrators today are so afraid of exercising any judgement that they’ve developed draconian policies that are applied with one-size-fits-all idiocy, whether the circumstances fit the “crime” or not.
Each experience of beauty and love stands alone, different from the rest
As financial pain piles up, things just might turn ugly in America
Storms can end without warning, bringing hope of blue skies ahead
If your own life is all messed up, lecture others about fixing theirs
NOTEBOOK: Simplistic storytelling on TV news pushing nation to war
Bureaucrats will find a way to punish you, so don’t make ’em mad
Can you spot the change in this video? Most can’t — and most don’t notice the world changing, either
Is ‘majority rule’ moral even when the majority don’t want freedom?
When we sell Jesus like soap, maybe we’re spiritually bankrupt