City of Boston v. Bureau of Special Education Appeals

16 Mass. L. Rptr. 82
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 2002
DocketNo. 013705H
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Mass. L. Rptr. 82 (City of Boston v. Bureau of Special Education Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Boston v. Bureau of Special Education Appeals, 16 Mass. L. Rptr. 82 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Giles, J.

Introduction

This matter involves a dispute over disciplinary action taken by the Boston Public Schools (“Boston Public”) in response to a threat made by Juan P., a special education student at Brighton High School (“Brighton H.S.”). After hearings on the matter, Boston Public temporarily suspended the student and decided to exclude him from attending the high school’s prom and graduation ceremony. The student’s mother requested an expedited hearing with the Bureau of Special Education Appeals (the “Bureau”) for the limited purpose of determining whether her son had the right to attend the school’s graduation ceremony. As a result of that hearing, the Bureau determined that he did; and it ordered Boston Public to allow Juan P. to attend the ceremony. The graduation ceremony occurred without incident.

The City of Boston (“plaintiff’) has appealed the matter to this court pursuant to G.L.c. 30A, and the parties now seek judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Mass.RCiv.P. 12(c) and Superior Court Modified Standing Order 1-96(4). After a well-argued hearing on this matter and review of the submissions of counsel, this court ALLOWS judgment in favor of the plaintiff and VACATES the Bureau’s decision.

Background

A. Factual History

The administrative record reveals the following relevant facts. Juan P. was a high school student who attended school within the Boston public school system. He had transferred between English High School and Hyde Park High School on “safety transfers,” because the schools had concerns over whether they could provide for his safely after his reported involvement in some racial issues. In September of 2000, Juan P. began attending Brighton H.S.

While at Brighton H.S., Juan P. was found to have specific learning disabilities in reading comprehension and math computation. On January 18, 2001, Leon J. Monnin, Ph.D. (“Dr. Monnin”), performed a psychological assessment of Juan P. as part of the development process for an Individualized Education Plan (“IEP”) for him. Dr. Monnin’s report stated that Juan P. identified a history of behavioral problems and academic deficiencies. He noted that Juan P. reported feeling that he was “the most hated kid” in the building and that black and Hispanic students alienated him because of his German and Native American ancestry. Dr. Monnin concluded that Juan P. had significant emotional vulnerabilities and explained that

[h]e had difficulty in perceiving things the same as others might see them. He appeared very reactive to affective stimulation and tended to distort under stress. He misrepresented events in his life and described himself as being hated by his peers. He was at high risk of alienating others in his environment and felt that his peers were out to harm him.

As a result of a January 31, 2001 ‘Team”1 meeting, Juan P. began receiving special education services under his IEP. The IEP called for a “small group setting with 1:1 instruction/assistance, practice repetition, frequent oral direction, cooperative learning, positive reenforcement, preferential seating and detailed task analysis with a multi-sensory approach to address a specific mild learning disability.” The IEP also focused on developing Juan P.’s social and emotional skills. [83]*83There is no dispute as to the boy’s entitlement to those services.

Dr. Monnin’s report also recommended that Juan P. receive counseling. His mother agreed but requested that his IEP not include the counseling recommendation. Beginning in February of 2001, counselors from Brighton Allston clinical services counseled Juan P. weekly at Brighton H.S.

On May 11, 2001, the school police responded to a call from Brighton H.S. Headmaster Charles Skidmore (“Headmaster Skidmore”). The call reported that, between May 9 and 10, 2001, a female student told a Brighton H.S. teacher that Juan P. made several statements regarding his intent (1) to disrupt the senior prom by putting laxatives in the punch and (2) to “pay back” students who have harassed and mocked him at the graduation ceremony’s conclusion (collectively, the “First Threat”). Additionally, Special Education Program Director Margaret Judges (“Director Judges”) indicated that a teacher and another student overheard Juan P. talking about a “list” of people whom he wanted to “pay back.”

The school police spoke with Headmaster Skidmore and then escorted Juan P. to the special education office, where school staff and the Boston police questioned him. Juan P. insisted that his comments were meant as a joke. When the staff asked whether he had put a “list” in writing, he responded that “he didn’t need to, that he had it in his mind.” He also disclosed the existence of a “book” he had written and shown to other students at Brighton H.S. Juan P. was read his Miranda rights and then asked to produce the “book.” He removed from his backpack five chapters of a violent story, comprising approximately 100 pages of print. He consented to the copying of his “book.”

At this point, the Brighton H.S. pupil services coordinator called Allston Brighton Mental Health clinician David Drucker (“Drucker”) and asked that he evaluate Juan P.’s dangerousness. Drucker found that the boy did not intend to harm anyone. He reported that Juan P. “appear[s] to harbor anger toward some students and possesses very prejudiced views” and he “may be expressing anger through stories of violence which [Juan P.] maintains are fictional.” Brighton H.S. staff members restricted Juan P. to the school’s study center for the remainder of the day and instructed him to return with his mother on May 14, 2001.

On May 14th, Brighton H.S. staff members, Juan P., and his mother met and discussed the inappropriate nature of his comments. They then reviewed the academic requirements the student needed to satisfy in order to graduate. The staff members concluded that Juan P. had a clear understanding of the gravity of his statements and decided not to take disciplinary action in response to this First Threat. Despite the school’s decision, the Boston Police filed criminal charges against Juan P. in the Brighton District Court.

Two days later, on May 16, 2001, a Brighton H.S. teacher read a student’s memory book, which contained a note written by Juan P. stating, in relevant part, “I still plan to get my pay back and blow up the school” (the “Second Threat”). Brighton H.S. staff members questioned Juan P., at which time he admitted to writing the note. He claimed that he had written the note in April of2001 but had not given the memory book back to its owner until May 14, 2001. He also claimed that he meant the note as a joke. The school police obtained a copy of the note, and the officers and staff members questioned him further. Juan P. again stated that he meant the note as a joke and that he wrote it before he had returned the memory book to the student.

Juan P. submitted to another mental health evaluation by a Brighton Allston Mental Health clinician. That clinician determined that an intervention was not warranted. Juan P. remained in the learning center for the balance of that day. A suspension hearing was held the following day.

B. Procedural History

On May 17, 2001, the school police, Dr. Beckford (the head of student support services), Headmaster Skidmore, Director Judges, Juan P., and his mother attended the suspension hearing. At the meeting, Brighton H.S.

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16 Mass. L. Rptr. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-boston-v-bureau-of-special-education-appeals-masssuperct-2002.