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5 Comments

  1. This is a phenomenal piece of journalism and kudos to former firefighter Walsh who continues to try to shine the light on corruption and dangerous situations that are allowed to go on in our area

  2. While this is an impressive investigation, it ultimately seems like the guy didn’t actually do anything beyond tickling. If that’s truly the case, then I don’t see why he should be charged with anything.

    I’m also really bothered by how these parents are emphasizing his gender. We need men to feel more comfortable being nurturing in spaces with children. If my husband were being put through this over something platonic and consensual, I’d be livid.

    1. Tickling kids who do not want to be tickled, or whose parents have said their child should not be tickled, is not okay. The behavior was very clearly not consensual.

      Of any gender, an adult continuing to have unwanted physical contact with children after being warned multiple times, at multiple schools, also seems problematic and worth a closer look.

      1. If the child truly did not consent to the contact (which is unfortunately in question, given the DCF investigation finding that the mother’s claims about her suffering harm or trauma were not accurate), then he absolutely deserves to lose his job. I still wouldn’t think jail time or being added to a registry is appropriate, those should be reserved for genuine abusers as is the case in every other developed country (where abuse rates are far lower than here).

        Elementary schools are one of the only spaces where men truly face an awful stigma, and a lot of the behavior by the parents in this article, including unsubstantiated (and later debunked) claims of trauma, the treatment of contradictory evidence as a cover-up, the encouragement of speculative charges and the refusal to accept that their discomfort with this man’s behavior does not automatically translate to the results they want, reeks of an ugly bias on their part.

        If the police find something substantial, let the law deal with him. If they don’t, then he should sue his accusers, the school, and the police department for putting him through this.

        1. What is the best way to balance child safety and privacy? Is there one rule or case by case? Is majority rule enough when it comes to matters as important as your child’s well-being, and in what cases should a person get to decide this for others?

          From a journalism point of view: healthy skepticism is always good. Right now, something questionable is happening. The question of who should handle alleged wrongdoing hasn’t been fully answered yet, but we can learn something useful from Marc and Alex’s investigation that may be helpful as things become clearer.

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