A Special-Needs Student Is Brutally Assaulted in a Newport High School Locker Room While Players Stand By and Watch
Superintendent Colleen Burns Jermain says the video is even worse than initial reports suggested.
November 24, 2026
This article was last updated by aditibhatta on November 23, 2026
A horrifying incident inside the boys’ locker room at Rogers High School in Newport, Rhode Island, has sparked outrage across the community after a special-needs student was brutally assaulted while several football players stood by and did nothing.
The violent attack, captured on video, shows a 16-year-old student repeatedly whipping and beating the vulnerable boy on his body and face.
Newport Superintendent Colleen Burns Jermain confirmed that the circulated footage is even more disturbing than early reports suggested.
“The video shows other players not intervening or bringing this matter to an adult,” she in a letter to families, calling the behavior “entirely unacceptable” and stating that there is “no grey area” when it comes to cruelty of this magnitude.
Newport police arrested the 16-year-old attacker and charged him with two counts of assault on persons with severe impairments.
Authorities say the assault occurred during a pre-game period when some football players engaged in what the school described as a “roughhousing” tradition.
This time, one student took it to an “extreme level,” turning a locker-room ritual into a targeted act of violence.
The incident has ignited intense community anger. Many residents say the bystanders who watched the assault unfold without stepping in should also face consequences.
Online commenters expressed frustration that an entire room full of teammates allowed a vulnerable student to be brutalized without taking action, their silence “cowardly,” “heartless,” and “just as guilty.”
As the video spread and outrage grew, Superintendent Jermain immediately canceled the remainder of Rogers High School’s football season.
The Thanksgiving JV scrimmage was also called off. She emphasized that today’s students must understand that “locker-room roughhousing” is no longer acceptable and that athletes are expected to act as leaders and representatives of their community.
“All students involved will face appropriate disciplinary action according to district policies,” Jermain wrote.
Rebecca Bolan, vice chair of the Newport School Committee, said the footage reflects a larger problem that cannot be ignored.
“I expected a lot more out of our students,” Bolan said.
“The fact that so many young people stood around watching and did not react shows that something has to change.”
Bolan now plans to introduce new training programs that teach students how to respond when they witness violence or bullying—whether by stepping in, getting help, or simply telling an aggressor to stop.
“Just someone saying, ‘Hey, not appropriate,’ could have changed the situation,” she said.
Meanwhile, hundreds of parents, educators, and community members have voiced fears about the culture that allowed the attack to occur.
Many blame a lack of supervision, a breakdown of discipline, and a failing moral environment among young athletes.
Others say the behavior reflects a deeper societal issue—one where empathy is fading and cruelty is increasingly normalized.
Comments flooding social media show widespread grief and anger.
Parents say they are heartbroken for the victim and terrified for their own children.
Many argue that the bystanders should face charges for aiding and abetting, while others call for the attacker to be tried as an adult because of the brutality involved.
“This is beyond bullying,” one commenter wrote. “This is cruelty — and it demands real consequences.”
Another community member, who works with special-needs children, said the incident made her “sick to her stomach,” stressing that students must be taught to speak up when they witness harm.
Newport police say the investigation remains active. More disciplinary actions could follow as officials determine whether additional students participated, encouraged the assault, or knowingly failed to help the victim.
As the district, police, and school committee continue to address the fallout, the community remains united in one sentiment: the special-needs student who was attacked deserves justice, protection, and support as he recovers from the traumatic ordeal.
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