Numerous high schools are directing students to email their names, physical and email addresses, and phone numbers to an alleged “serial sexual predator who convinces unwitting young women into sending nude images" -- even after I alerted them of it.
Philip Sobash is a disgraced doctor who was referred to the FBI and lost his medical license after being sued 3x by young women--mostly aspiring medical professionals--who said he struck up online relationships with them, convinced them to send nudes, then ruined their lives.
Now, he has created a "scholarship" for high school students who want to be "future medical doctors," along with "mentorship" program where he will "give his best to groom" them. The deadline to apply is tomorrow! All HS seniors have to do is get in touch with him directly.
Sobash alleged sent his victims small amounts of money, like $2,000 over Venmo, during the periods he groomed them into unwilling commercial porn actors.
Now his "scholarship" is for $1,000, and goes to only a single student.
Many high schools listed the scholarship for their seniors anyway, even though Sobash's background was easily discoverable on Google at the time they posted it.
Three high schools for whom I flagged the listing, and his background, before publication are STILL listing it.
For example, Savannah-Chatham County (Georgia) Public Schools officials did not respond to an email sent days ago with the subject “Urgent... school website directing students to contact alleged pornographer.” The ad is still up.
Additionally, White River medical center in Arkansas still lists Sobash on its website as a resident, even though he surrendered his medical license. When it highlighted him on its instagram page months ago, multiple women replied that he had targeted them, one while underage.
When I called the hospital to ask if Sobash was still employed, I instead got a call back from someone who said he was a paralegal representing him, but who was calling from a number registered to a convicted fraudster who promise to remove bad info from the internet.
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What happened to all those unaccompanied minors under a bridge? No one knows and the statistics are massively wrong.
DOJ has a "juvenile file" purporting to show all underage illegal border-crossers, but comparing it to a court docket that hears similar cases, 90% are missing.
Some names on the juvenile list, meanwhile, are actually listed as being over 18. DOJ indicated that it doesn't use outside sources to verify age, and didn't explain the discrepancy.
Supt. Scott Ziegler notoriously said there had been zero bathroom assaults
He then apologized for his "misleading" statement by saying he thought the question referred *only to transgender and gender-fluid students*.
But if this isn't gender-fluid, then what is?
He didn't say, 'oh, there was one kid that was wearing all-girls clothes 20 days ago, but his mom says he identifies as male.' He smugly lectured parents, citing Time Magazine to say that what they were concerned about "doesn't exist."
The teachers union that claims there's a "school to prison pipeline" and wants to dismantle discipline in schools wants to flush away the life of a teenager who a jury of his peers conclusively determined was guilty of no crime.
Reminder: Rittenhouse was a child like the 60 million others in the public school system, and the top teacher in the country wanted him to send him to prison even after a jury painstakingly reviewed all evidence and concluded he committed no crime.
BIG: Terry McAuliffe's former law firm and the National School Boards Association are pushing (through a case they want to take to the Supreme Court) for an interpretation of Title IX that is less favorable to victims and more favorable to administrators
Loudoun County blamed Title IX for its rape coverup, saying it would lobby Washington to make the law more favorable to victims. But Terry McAuliffe's former law firm and the NSBA (which likened parents to domestic terrorists) are actually pushing for the opposite.
On one side is the NSBA, Fairfax County Public Schools, and its attorney Hunton Andrews (where McAuliffe worked until his campaign).
On the other side is a public interest law firm and 23 women's and civil rights groups.
Hunton lost, but wants to take it to the Supreme Court.
NEW ON LOUDOUN: Over a period of years, Loudoun repeatedly failed to disclose sex assault incidents to the state and public despite law. A state database shows "0" during multiple time periods where highly-public incidents happened.
NEW ON LOUDOUN: Three weeks after bathroom rape, the superintendent claimed "to my knowledge, we don’t have any record of assaults occurring in our restrooms" -- but state law requires principals to report all sex assaults to the superintendent.
As Loudoun schools sought to pass a controversial transgender policy in June, it concealed that a 9th-grade girl was allegedly raped by a "gender fluid" student in a school bathroom just 3 weeks prior, The Daily Wire has learned.
In June, LCPS lectured the public for worrying about a "red herring," saying the district had 0 bathroom assaults on record. It quietly transferred the boy charged in the May 28 assault to a new school.
October 6, he was arrested for a new sex assault inside a classroom there.
The father of the victim is a man you've seen: The bald man being dragged by the police.
The county's top elected prosecutor personally tried to put him in jail. He was issued a no-trespassing order keeping him from telling his story at the meeting where the trans policy passed.