DrkHelmet wrote:
K, will do. Now, back to the subject at hand:
This isn't like leaving your door unlocked. It's like locking the doors and then mailing duplicate keys to every person in town. Did they break the law when they went in? Yes, but you were still stupid as hell for sending keys to everyone.
I submit that, yes, the law was broken. I also submit that there is a better solution than felony charges against a bunch of students.
Not an accurate analogy.
A more suiting situation would be that the door was locked, and the spare keys were kept in a place that wouldn't take long for someone to find. Someone found it and made copies of keys to send to their friends.
So what? The fact that underage kids signed something that says they can be legally prosecuted doesn't mean that the district should always prosecute for any of the listed offenses.
I disagree, the fact that the kids signed the said agreement means that the district should always prosecute for any of the listed offenses. Otherwise the agreement that the kids signed was weak and negotiable to begin with.
They most certainly did not, and even if they had, so what? Nobody said that you have to keep escalating punishment for minor offences if the current ones aren't a deterrant. You don't throw someone in jail for jaywalking no matter how many times he's done it.
Seeing how that law is there for YOUR safety. Its you're choice, if you wanna keep on jay walking and risk getting run over by a car and dieing. Then maybe charging you with a felony is the only way that you'll understand that jaywalking is dangerous and thus a good punishment for people who enjoy jaywalking.
Which BTW, these kids are 13 years old? And isn't the law for nude pictures and such, requiring that they be of 21 years old? Add on to that, that it was on school computers. Those kids deserve any and all punishment that they receive in reponse to this issue.