New Jersey Teacher Busted Abusing Autistic Child


CHERRY HILL, N.J. — School employees heard shouting and “inappropriately addressing” students when a father sent his 10-year-old autistic son to school with a hidden digital tape recorder are no longer with the district, an official said Tuesday.

Stuart Chaifetz on Monday released excerpts of the recording from his son’s classroom at Horace Mann Elementary School. He contends the recording depicts a teacher and an aide bullying his son to the point of tears, as well as discussing such inappropriate topics as one staffer’s hangover.

“I want to assure our parents that the individuals who are heard on the recording raising their voices and inappropriately addressing children no longer work in the district and have not since shortly after we received the copy of the recording,” Superintendent Maureen Reussert said in a prepared statement. She gave no specifics about the workers’ departure.

In a YouTube video that summarized the recording, Chaifetz said the classroom aide was fired after he provided the tape to district administrators, but that the teacher and another aide were transferred. Reussert’s statement was the first indication that multiple people had left the district over the incident.

Reussert did not identify the workers or how they left the district. “This is a personnel matter and there are specifics that I cannot legally address publicly,” her statement said.

Chaifetz said he wanted more information. “They need to say who it is,” he said, asserting the teacher is still a district employee.

Chaifetz’s video had drawn more than 380,000 views by 11 p.m. Tuesday. Chaifetz said he was swamped throughout the day by emails and phones calls from the media and parents with similar concerns.

“There are people asking me, ‘How do I wire my kid?’” he said in an interview.

Chaifetz said he concealed a recording device in his son’s clothing before sending the boy to school on Feb. 17. The father said he became concerned after school officials reported behavioral problems for his son that he considered uncharacteristic.

Chaifetz has said he wants an apology from the staffers and legislation that would remove any legal barriers to the dismissal of teachers and other school employees who bully.

Earlier Tuesday, three South Jersey legislators called for the dismissal of any school employees found to have verbally abused Akian.

The elected officials — state Sen. James Beach and Assembly members Louis Greenwald and Pamela Lampitt — did not address Chaifetz’s desire for legislation in their statement. But they called his allegations “disturbing” and said the school district “should immediately undertake a thorough and rigorous investigation.

“If it is found that any teacher, aide or other adult staff member engaged in this deplorable abuse, they should be fired immediately,” the legislators said. Beach and Greenwald are Democrats from Voorhees, while Lampitt is a Democrat from Cherry Hill.

“We strongly believe that the district acted swiftly, appropriately and judiciously,” said school board president Seth Klukoff. He said the district’s actions “were informed first and foremost by compassion for the students.”

Source:http://www.hnva.net/teacherbully

Tupac Hologram Performance Coachella 2012 | 2pac ALive

Exclusive: Tupac Coachella Hologram Creator Tells How He Resurrected Rapper

‘It was [Dr.] Dre’s vision to bring this back to life,’ says Nick Smith president of the company that created the Tupac hologram at Coachella.

The Coachella festival is a place where minds routinely get blown, usually due to an awesome set or a killer reunion from one of your favorite bands. But on Sunday night it was thanks to the ghostly re-appearance of West Coast rap legend Tupac Shakur. He materialized on stage alongside his old friend Snoop Dogg during a crowd-pleasing set by the Doggfather and Dr. Dre, which also featured appearances from Eminem, 50 Cent, Wiz Khalifa and Warren G.

The resurrection of ‘Pac, who was murdered in 1996, would have been a face-melting surprise had word about the stunt not leaked out just a few days before the set. But the 100,000 or so fans who were on hand still couldn’t believe it when Tupac materialized on stage to rip off “2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted.”

“What up, Coachella?” the shirtless, pants sagging MC asked the crowd before bouncing into the classic single “Hail Mary.”

“We worked with Dr. Dre on this and it was Dre’s vision to bring this back to life,” said Nick Smith, president of AV Concepts, the San Diego company that projected and staged the hologram. “It was his idea from the very beginning and we worked with him and his camp to utilize the technology to make it come to life.”

According to a spokesperson for Dre, the lifelike image of Shakur was created by Hollywood effects house Digital Domain, the Oscar-winning CG factory that made CG images of Brad Pitt in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” Jeff Bridges in “TRON: Legacy,” Kevin Bacon in “X-Men: First Class” and Rooney Mara in “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.” The virutal ‘Pac was the vision of Dre, who worked with his longtime partner Philip Atwell of Geronimo Productions and Dylan Brown of The Yard.

Smith said he wasn’t allowed to talk about the creative aspects of the production — including how the hologram was able to seemingly perform the set in synch with Snoop and whether all the vocals were ‘Pac’s — but he did say that his company has the ability to recreate long-dead figures and visually recreate them in the studio. “You can take their likenesses and voice and … take people that haven’t done concerts before or perform music they haven’t sung and digitally recreate it,” he said.

The hologram was the latest visual magic pulled off by AV, which is also behind the 2006 Grammys performance featuring Madonna and the holographic members of the Gorillaz, as well as holograms used in concert by Celine Dion and the Black Eyed Peas.

The Tupac hologram was several months in the planning and took nearly four months to create in a studio and though Smith was not able to reveal the exact price tag for the illusion, he said a comparable one could cost anywhere from $100,000 to more than $400,000 to pull off. “I can’t say how much that event cost, but I can say it’s affordable in the sense that if we had to bring entertainers around world and create concerts across the country, we could put [artists] in every venue in the country,” he said.

The life-size Tupac was amazingly realistic, down to the late rapper’s signature tattoos, Timberland boots, jewelry and movements, all of which were also recreated under the direction of Dre and his team.

The hologram, of course, already has a Twitter page and more than 3,300 followers at press time.

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