So, a story happened on my local media which I'd like to get your opinion on (no links provided, priorly that all the links I have are in Danish, secondarly 'cuz I'd like an unbiased view on this):
There's this guy T, doing an internship at a preschool in NYC. He's doing well, as far as he reckons.
A co-worker (K) claims that T is molesting the children, and claims that she has video footage of it. When the school asks for said footage, K refuses, and is then terminated as she has a history of attempting to throw coworkers under the bus.
K then goes to the NYPD and accuses T of child abuse, NYPD arrests T. NYPD claim they have video footage (the one that K never released), T doesn't know about the 5th amendment and therefore assumes that the cops are right (="confesses").
T is called out by a big paper (NY Times, methinks, not sure) and labelled a "sex monster". T gets death threats over this while he's detained at Riker.
T eventually gets out of Riker, but is sanctioned to wear a GPS tracker + not be around schools/plagrounds, while not leaving Manhattan. This forces him to move out of his previous apartment, and move into a WAY MORE expensive one (luckily his family clould help him out)
Trial begins, and gets postponed over and over again, since the main witness (K) is on holiday in Greece. Meanwhile, interviews show that none of the children involved think that T acted inapproptiately towards them.
So yesterday, the DA chooses to dismiss the charges since there's no clear evidence.
The endgame is this:
T is suing the DA and the NYPD for unlawful incarceration, also the NY Times for slander, and seeking recompensation for added rental lease.
K is suing the school for unlawful termination since she should be entitled to whistleblower protection.
So, who is right?
There's this guy T, doing an internship at a preschool in NYC. He's doing well, as far as he reckons.
A co-worker (K) claims that T is molesting the children, and claims that she has video footage of it. When the school asks for said footage, K refuses, and is then terminated as she has a history of attempting to throw coworkers under the bus.
K then goes to the NYPD and accuses T of child abuse, NYPD arrests T. NYPD claim they have video footage (the one that K never released), T doesn't know about the 5th amendment and therefore assumes that the cops are right (="confesses").
T is called out by a big paper (NY Times, methinks, not sure) and labelled a "sex monster". T gets death threats over this while he's detained at Riker.
T eventually gets out of Riker, but is sanctioned to wear a GPS tracker + not be around schools/plagrounds, while not leaving Manhattan. This forces him to move out of his previous apartment, and move into a WAY MORE expensive one (luckily his family clould help him out)
Trial begins, and gets postponed over and over again, since the main witness (K) is on holiday in Greece. Meanwhile, interviews show that none of the children involved think that T acted inapproptiately towards them.
So yesterday, the DA chooses to dismiss the charges since there's no clear evidence.
The endgame is this:
T is suing the DA and the NYPD for unlawful incarceration, also the NY Times for slander, and seeking recompensation for added rental lease.
K is suing the school for unlawful termination since she should be entitled to whistleblower protection.
So, who is right?
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