After 22 Beatings Last Year, Paradise Elementary Put My Son Back With the Same Bully in Class and on the Bus—Slapped Again, Police Investigating, Youth Coach Shocked!
Elementary school should be a safe place to learn, make friends, and grow.
December 19, 2026
This article was last updated by Alisha Shrestha on December 19, 2026
Brittney LaShae Carter alleges that her son, Easton, was bullied and hit 22 times at Paradise Elementary last year in March, yet he was kept with the same bully again.
Easton was slapped again on Tuesday, and he doesn’t want to go to school anymore.
School has become a place of fear for some students because of bullying and physical fighting. It makes them feel alone, scared, and sad.
Likewise, it makes students not want to go to school, hurts their grades, and damages their feelings of self-worth for a long time.
Bullying is wrong, and it is never about just kids being kids. School can be a better and safer place for every child by talking about it, showing kindness, and acting together.
Also, see:
Repeated Bullying at Paradise Elementary Sparks Outrage and Police Investigation
Brittney LaShae Carter’s Facebook post has spotlighted a persistent and dangerous failure to protect her son from a known bully at Paradise Elementary School.
She alleges her son, Easton, was physically assaulted 22 times by another student in March of last year. Despite this history, she says the school placed both children in the same class and on the bus this year.
The situation came to a head this week when Easton was allegedly slapped by the same child, whose name starts with S, on Tuesday.
According to Brittney, the elementary placed them in the same class, stuck them on the bus together, and didn’t let Easton call her.
The school’s initial response was to deflect blame and suggest that Easton was partly at fault for talking crap back. Youth Football Coach was shocked and shared the incident on his Facebook.
Brittney’s post details a frantic cycle.
Easton feels unsafe, misses school, returns, and is targeted again. She claims the bully’s parents do not hold their child accountable.
We agreed to let him stay home on Wednesday, and just in the half day he went today, they got to him twice. He can’t keep missing school, but they aren’t doing anything to help him, and he doesn’t feel safe going.
The elementary school completed an investigation and confirmed the slapping incident, leading to the other child’s suspension.
However, the assistant principal reportedly stated that she could not find anyone at fault for bullying overall because all the kids talk crap to each other. She hopes things will get better after the break.
Like what?? This is the same kid over and over…and she says she’s hoping after the break things will be better (as if a break will fix things).
Brittney’s post gained wide attention, and many supporting parents are frustrated with the situation. The local police have opened an investigation into the matter.
Her story has ignited a conversation among parents, with many urging her to escalate the issue to the school board, local media, and legal counsel.
LA anti-bullying law §416.13, call an attorney’s office and have them write a demand letter to the school informing them to take immediate action to resolve the bully issue, or you will be filing suit against them.
People also viewed:
- Check other Articles on
Ashish Maharjan, author at Players Bio, has been covering news with a keen eye for detail and a knack for storytelling. A writer with a passion for capturing the essence of athletic competition.
Related articles
May 8, 2026
May 7, 2026
May 6, 2026
May 5, 2026
Comments
LEAVE A REPLY
Comment: Please enter your comment! Name:* Please enter your name here Email:* You have entered an incorrect email address! Please enter your email address here
Δ
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam.
Share article
- May 11, 2026 A video circulating on Facebook has sparked a heated debate among Bell Gardens residents after police were called on a group of kids riding...
- May 11, 2026 Mortimer Jordan High School athlete Aiden Doss has passed away. Aiden Doss was a baseball player from Morris, Alabama, who attended Mortimer Jordan High School....
- May 8, 2026 What was supposed to be a normal Saturday of youth football quickly became something no parent, coach, or child should ever have to witness....
- May 7, 2026 Jordan Haas a student athlete at Chatham University, passed away on Monday. He majored in psychology and was a member of the men's volleyball...
- May 7, 2026 A routine shopping trip at the Adairsville Cracker Barrel turned into a deeply disturbing scene recently when a local woman witnessed what she described...