Girl Writes About Pot in Her Diary, School Reads It and Suspends Her All Year

Henriette BrowneAdministrators at a Dallas
County, Missouri, school read a teenage girl’s diary, discovered a
reference to marijuana within its pages, and suspended the girl for
the rest of 2014.

The punishment was imposed last May, but the girl’s father just
went public with the situation. According to
The Springfield News-Leader
:

Tom Grayhorse said his daughter, Krystal, had never been in
trouble before she was called into the office and suspended May 9.
Originally, she was ousted for 10 days, but it was quickly extended
through the end of the 2014 calendar year.

Unable to finish her junior year, her grades plummeted and she
lost out on credits needed for graduation. Grayhorse hoped the
district would reconsider, allowing her to return last month so she
had a chance of graduating with her class in May.

“I was really frustrated,” he said last week. “I thought when
school started, they’d wake up.”

Grayhorse said his daughter left her journal at school, where it
was discovered by school administrators. In the diary, Krystal
wrote about experimenting with marijuana and considered bringing it
to school. But no marijuana was found in Krystal’s possession, nor
was she given a drug test. Grayhorse said the diary entry may
have been a fictional story rather than a concrete plan of
action—he can’t say for sure, since the school never gave the diary
back.

The official cause of suspension listed on the disciplinary
papers was “possession of a controlled substance,” which Grayhorse
said is absurd given that she didn’t possess any drugs:

“Her ‘possession’ constitutes writing something?” he asked.
“That is the alleged possession?”

Grayhorse said the notebook passages, which he was told about
but never saw for himself, were cause for concern, but the
punishment — not being allowed to return to school for seven months
— was too drastic. 

District officials maintain that Grayhorse has not revealed the
full story, but they can’t elaborate, due to privacy laws.

This would not be the first time a student was disciplined for
actions that stemmed
from a fictional story taken too seriously
by tone-deaf school
administrators. But even if Krystal’s conduct was worse than
Grayhorse admits, only under the absurdity of “zero tolerance”
could a full-year suspension be justified.

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