A couple of examples. Back when I was in high school (and yes, this actually happened in Melbourne, Australia), one of my classmates was stabbed in the back. While it was "only" with a mini box cutter keyring, it was done with malicious intent and done on school grounds. Let me give everybody one guess as to how many relevant hits I got when I searched for the keywords of my school's name plus either "stabbing" or the victim's name? For those that guessed a big fat ZERO, you would be correct.Patrick Degan wrote:This case goes way beyond the parent's negligence in letting his 11 year old have access to a firearm and right to the apparent negligence in upbringing which would produce a kid more than willing to snuff out a human life with no more consideration that he'd give to stepping on a bug if this was not accidental. If so, this kid is already a sociopath and you have to wonder how nobody was watching his development along that path in the first place.
Here's something that's not directly related, but... One of my friend was a student of what is considered one of the top high schools in my state. During an conversation a few years back, he brought up the fact that there was a huge mess in his school, as it was discovered that members of the treasury (of that school's student council) had been skimming funds. He knew about a good deal about the details because he was involved with the student council, but both back then and now when I look up to see if there's anything related to the incident, I either find absolutely nothing, or thousands of unrelated links (depending on how much I narrow search definitions).
My point? From my experience and what I've found out from others, if they can get away with it, many schools will cover up any sort of incidents that they think will make them look bad. So I rather suspect that it's not a case of nobody was watching, but rather, a lot of people turning a blind eye (or dismissing as "boys will be boys") to previous incidents.