Honor student jailed for absences

Heisenberg

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Thought I'd post it here for anyone would like to petition this story. Pretty stupid of the judge IMO.

HOUSTON—A judge threw a 17-year-old 11th grade honor student from Willis High School in jail after she missed school again.

Judge Lanny Moriarty said last month Diane Tran was in his Justice of the Peace court for truancy and he warned her then to stop missing school. But she recently missed classes again so Wednesday he issued a summons and had her arrested in open court when she appeared.

Tran said she works a full-time job, a part-time job and takes advanced placement and dual credit college level courses. She said she is often too exhausted to wake up in time for school. Sometimes she misses the entire day, she said. Sometimes she arrives after attendance has been taken.

The judge ordered Tran to spend 24 hours in jail and pay a $100 fine. Judge Moriarty admitted that he wants to make an example of Tran.

“If you let one (truant student) run loose, what are you gonna’ do with the rest of ‘em? Let them go too?” Judge Moriarty asked.

Tran said she is working so hard because she is helping to support an older brother who attends Texas A&M University and a baby sister who lives with relatives in Houston. Tran said her parents divorced “out of the blue” and both moved away, leaving her in Willis. Her mother lives in Georgia, she said.

“I always thought our family was happy,” the teen said tearfully.

Tran lives with the family of one of her employers. They own a wedding venue. She works at the Vineyard of Waverly Manor on weekends and at a dry cleaners full time.

“She goes from job to job, from school she stays up ‘til 7 o’clock in the morning,” said her friend, co-worker and classmate Devin Hill.

Honor student placed in jail for tardiness and truancy at school | khou.com Houston

Petition: Criminal Justice Petition: Honor Student Jailed for Missing School: Ask the judge to cancel her fine and sentencing | Change.org
 

BNB

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Wow.. wtf? That judge is dumb as hell...



I WOULD HAVE GIVEN HER 15 YEARS!
 

Tazer4mvp

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Is this guy the ump for the Sox game today?
 

clonetrooper264

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Yeah...letting an honor student who works multiple jobs run loose...good job judge.

:obama:
 

Crystallas

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Activist judges. :smh:
 

X

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truancy is a touchy issue. You can't let truants get off the hook PROVIDING THEIR GRADES DROP. If she's keeping her grades up w/out attending class, which she obviously is/was...then you have to take this case as unique...

Action should've been taken, but limiting how many hours and how late she works seems like it'd be a better idea than jailing her.
 

Crystallas

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truancy is a touchy issue. You can't let truants get off the hook PROVIDING THEIR GRADES DROP. If she's keeping her grades up w/out attending class, which she obviously is/was...then you have to take this case as unique...

Action should've been taken, but limiting how many hours and how late she works seems like it'd be a better idea than jailing her.

Sorry, but I disagree with you here X.

It's none of the judge's business to dictate her life, when she wasn't hurting anyone, or aiding to harm.

Of course, if you want to make the "protect someone from themselves" argument, that's a fair bystander's opinion, but it doesn't really work.
 

X

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Sorry, but I disagree with you here X.

It's none of the judge's business to dictate her life, when she wasn't hurting anyone, or aiding to harm.

Of course, if you want to make the "protect someone from themselves" argument, that's a fair bystander's opinion, but it doesn't really work.

But at the same time, the judge has a point. He went WAY over the top, but this wasn't the first time the issue had come up, and she had been warned, and it's a law. What she was doing for her family was honorable. What she did w/ her school, regardless of circumstance, was illegal.
 

Captain Iago

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We are not all born equal and not all situations the same. The sooner people learn that the better.
 

clonetrooper264

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But at the same time, the judge has a point. He went WAY over the top, but this wasn't the first time the issue had come up, and she had been warned, and it's a law. What she was doing for her family was honorable. What she did w/ her school, regardless of circumstance, was illegal.

The thing is, she was probably doing better than half the school while missing class anyway.

I'm sure there were kids at my high school who missed waaay more class than her and graduated without so much as a slap on the wrist.
 

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The thing is, she was probably doing better than half the school while missing class anyway.

I'm sure there were kids at my high school who missed waaay more class than her and graduated without so much as a slap on the wrist.

Perhaps...but that's beside the point. She broke the law. A judge ruled (harshly) on it (to make an example out of her). I hate for her that it happened, but she had been warned and continued with the same behavior anyway. She had already gotten off w/ a slap on the wrist by the looks of the original article.
 

Crystallas

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But at the same time, the judge has a point. He went WAY over the top, but this wasn't the first time the issue had come up, and she had been warned, and it's a law. What she was doing for her family was honorable. What she did w/ her school, regardless of circumstance, was illegal.

Right, but that is what judges are for. To fill that gap of common sense between what the legislation can and can't predict.

I'm biased, because I went from being homeless as a kid, to working 70 hours a week as a 14 year old and being a candidate for class-valedictorian within an 1,400 student graduating class. I had real tardy issues and it was against the law as well. I broke the law, no doubt about it, but we didn't starve, nor did we go back to living off the street. Ces't la vi
 

Iwritecode

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My uncle missed 42 days during his Freshman year. Every single one of them was excused.

The principal called him into his office to talk about it, brought up his grades, saw that he was passing everything, and let him go.

The next year they passed a rule that if you miss a certain number of days per semester, you automatically fail.

We unofficially named the rule after him.
 

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