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View Full Version : Judge: Florida Teacher Who Soaked Autistic Kid's Crayons in Hot Sauce Should Get Job Back



Teh One Who Knocks
08-21-2012, 06:11 PM
By ALYSSA NEWCOMB | Good Morning America


A Florida judge sided with a special needs teacher who allegedly used hot sauce to stop an autistic student from eating art supplies and recommended the school district reinstate the woman's job.

Lillian Gomez was fired from her job at Sunrise Elementary School in Kissimmee, Fla., in February after school officials found out that Gomez had allegedly put jumbo-sized Crayons in a cup and soaked them for days in hot sauce before moving them to a bag that was labeled with the student's name.

The school spent more than $50,000 in attorney's fees litigating the case, according to ABC News' Orlando affiliate WFTV.

Gomez will not receive back pay and the ultimate decision of whether she will get her job back rests in the hands of the school board.

Todd Cinetti, a parent of a student at the school, said he was astounded the judge recommended Gomez return to the classroom.

"That's ridiculous," he said. " Maybe she shouldn't work with children. Maybe she should find another career."

The former teacher's attorney, Thomas Egan, said his client was only trying to help her student.

"I think she made a bad judgment in the way she went about it," he said. "But her purpose was good."

Gomez' case is not the first in hot sauce punishment.

An Alaska mother of six was found guilty of child abuse for forcing her son to drink hot sauce and take cold showers on a taped segment of the "Dr. Phil" show.

The woman, Jessica Beagley, was convicted of misdemeanor child abuse.

In 2009, a Miami teacher was convicted of abuse after she allowed a special needs student to drink a soda laced with hot sauce.

Shady
08-21-2012, 06:37 PM
Gotta agree with the judge on this one. Using hot sauce to deter someone from eating something that isn't edible is legit. She didn't force hit to eat the crayons, she was trying to prevent him from doing it. You can tell a kid some many times that a pan is hot but until they decide to touch it and burn themselves they'll never know.

Hugh_Janus
08-21-2012, 07:04 PM
Gotta agree with the judge on this one. Using hot sauce to deter someone from eating something that isn't edible is legit. She didn't force hit to eat the crayons, she was trying to prevent him from doing it. You can tell a kid some many times that a pan is hot but until they decide to touch it and burn themselves they'll never know.

yup.... but after reading the title, I was all "is this judge for real?" :lol:

redred
08-21-2012, 09:08 PM
blue ones taste better with hot sauce on it :tup:

Hugh_Janus
08-21-2012, 09:21 PM
we're not talking about those blue things :facepalm:

redred
08-21-2012, 09:22 PM
smurf's?

Goofy
08-21-2012, 10:37 PM
Mmmm, spicy crayons :homer: Do they come with fries? :face:

minz
08-21-2012, 10:40 PM
Look, if an autistic child wants to eat crayons he/she will eat crayons regardless of what you soak them in...... just ask Hal.

Hal-9000
08-21-2012, 10:57 PM
ahem....:roll:

I've had some experience with special needs children and I disagree completely with what the teacher did in this story. I admire the creative aspect but from what little I've learned, there's always a better way to demonstrate something to a child. Hot sauce may seem like a discomfort at most to us, but to the child it could have resulted in more severe physical reaction.

deebakes
08-21-2012, 11:30 PM
:dance:

Muddy
08-21-2012, 11:56 PM
Gotta agree with the judge on this one. Using hot sauce to deter someone from eating something that isn't edible is legit. She didn't force hit to eat the crayons, she was trying to prevent him from doing it. You can tell a kid some many times that a pan is hot but until they decide to touch it and burn themselves they'll never know.

I'm with you.. It's a legitimate try...