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Home»Schools»Lawsuit Filed Against Guilford County School Board After Ex-Teacher Accused of Heinous Child Crimes
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Lawsuit Filed Against Guilford County School Board After Ex-Teacher Accused of Heinous Child Crimes

Nelson RosarioBy Nelson RosarioApril 30, 202604 Mins Read
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The complaint arrived in court in the manner that these cases typically do: quietly, in a pile of documents that most people will never read, but with implications that will soon spread well beyond any one Greensboro courtroom.

The Guilford County Board of Education and other defendants are named in the lawsuit, which alleges that the district failed the very children it was obligated to protect. Mark Johnson Jr., a former assistant basketball coach and teacher at Page High School, is seated in the middle of it, staring down a long list of charges that nearly reads like a clerical error.

DetailInformation
AccusedMark Johnson Jr., former teacher and assistant basketball coach
Former WorkplacePage High School, Greensboro, North Carolina
Hire DateAugust 16, 2022
Resignation DateFebruary 22, 2023
Total Charges16 counts, including first-degree statutory rape and indecent liberties with children
Bond$3.05 million (Guilford County inmate records)
Plaintiff’s CounselMartin A. Ramey, CR Legal Team
DefendantGuilford County Board of Education and others
District Response“It is not our practice to comment on pending litigation.”

It isn’t. Four charges of statutory rape in the first degree. Four statutory sex offense counts. Indecent liberties with children on five counts. A school official was charged with two more counts of indecent liberties. Then, third-degree child sexual exploitation and computer-based child solicitation were piled on top. According to Guilford County inmate records, his bond is $3.05 million, which indicates how seriously prosecutors are taking this case before any words are spoken in court.

The timeline is what makes the case more difficult. On August 16, 2022, Johnson began working at Page. On February 22, 2023, he submitted his resignation. About half a year. less than an entire academic year. And during that time, something went horribly wrong inside a building where parents drop off their children without a second thought, according to the accusations currently making their way through the legal system. Reading those dates side by side gives you a certain kind of chill. Schools keep track of their years. It was only two semesters.

Lawsuit Filed Against Guilford County School
Lawsuit Filed Against Guilford County School

The plaintiff’s CR Legal Team lawyer, Martin A. Ramey, said something that usually sets the tone for the rest of the case. “Schools do not merely educate — they serve as guardians,” he stated. “The law demands it, and the Board of Education’s policies enforce it.” He went farther. Every morning, we send our kids off in an act of deep trust. Abuse by someone paid to protect them is something that we cannot tolerate and that no parent, jury, or policy should ever tolerate. Yes, it’s legalese, but it’s not just legalese. What he’s saying is clear to anyone who has ever waved goodbye at a school drop-off line.

When contacted for comment, Guilford County Schools responded as they typically do in situations like this. “It is not our practice to comment on pending litigation.” It’s the right response in terms of procedure. Whether it’s fair or not, it’s also the one that makes families feel as though they are speaking to a brick wall.

The courts will eventually have to respond to a question that hangs over all of this, and it’s not really about Johnson alone. The criminal case will proceed according to its own course. The civil suit raises more general questions, such as what the district knew, when it knew it, and what, if anything, was done. Recent years have seen lawsuits filed against districts all over the nation on similar grounds, and the trend that tends to emerge is rarely favorable. Warning signs were overlooked. filed and shelved complaints. Instead of being an obligation to conduct an investigation, background checks are viewed as a box to be checked.

It’s really unclear at this point if that’s the story. The document is new. It has not been discovered. However, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that a teacher who started in August resigned in February and is currently being charged with sixteen different offenses. There will be something in that sequence that needs to be explained. Greensboro parents will want one. A jury will eventually do the same.

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Nelson Rosario

    Nelson Rosario is an Editor at worldomep.org and a law school student who has found, somewhere in the intersection of legal theory and human development, a cause worth building a career around: ensuring that every child has access to quality education and the healthcare they need to thrive. Nelson approaches child advocacy with the analytical precision of a person who has been taught to analyze systems, spot flaws, and make the case for change. His knowledge of how policies are made, where they fall short, and what it would take to hold institutions accountable for the children they are meant to serve has improved as a result of his legal education. His support, however, goes beyond academics. It stems from a sincere belief that early childhood health and education are not being adequately addressed by the legal and social frameworks in many places. Nelson adds a legal and policy perspective to discussions about child welfare through his contributions to worldomep.org, asking not only what ought to be done but also what can be required, safeguarded, and upheld.

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