Charge: Vicious Texas School Superintendant Seeks To Bankrupt Family Of Autistic Child For Vengeance, Sport, Message – With Video

October 7th, 2010 (11) Posted By Pat Dollard.

18autism

Fox News Texas:

HOUSTON – Dreams brought legal immigrant Kenneth Chibuogwu to America and in time determination brought many of those aspirations within reach.

“I worked hard. I came to this country with nothing,” says Kenneth.

It is a country this father and husband have deeply embraced, along with its core convictions.

“If you don’t stand up for something, you’ll fall for anything,” he says.

And what could be more worthy of battle than his first born son, Chapuka, “Chuka” for short a child who will spend each and every day of his life challenged with autism?

“This child was a gift from God,” insists Kenneth.

Guaranteed by federal law a “free and appropriate education” for their son, Kenneth and wife Neka hoped the Alief School District would prove an able partner in helping Chukka reach his potential.

It didn’t happen.

“When I went there I saw things no mother would want to see,” says Neka her visits to Chuka’s middle school.

“My wife went to observe, found him squashed in the corner and nobody cared,” says Kenneth.

“There was nothing I could do but cry because I was so shocked that such a thing could go on in this country,” added Neka of the repeated conferences with Alief administrators ending in stalemate.

In Texas when parents and educators can’t agree on whether a school district is giving a disabled student all that the law demands the state offers a procedure called “due process” where a sort of education judge listens to all the evidence and decides the issue.

In May of 2007, using much of their life savings, Chuka’s parents filed their case.

Instead of seeking compromise, Alief launched a full-blown legal counterattack alleging the case was “improper” and that the Chibuogwus “harassed” district employees during meetings.

“Nobody in this household harassed the school district. I feel that they harassed us,” insists Neka.

“These people had been railroaded, these people had been maligned,” says special education advocate Jimmy Kilpatrick who represented Chuka and his parents.

Drained and discouraged, Kenneth and Eka dropped their due process case and Chuka never returned to class.

The conflict could have ended there, but Alief Superintendent Louis Stoerner and then board president Sarah Winkler had other plans.

The District sued the economically distressed parents of a special needs child for every penny of the district’s legal expenses, an amount, at the time approaching $170,000 dollars and now estimated at close to a quarter million.

“What I feel is that they are trying to bully me for asking for a chance for my son’s life,” says Kenneth.

Alief taxpayer and watch dog Bob Hermann sees the lawsuit as senseless and mean spirited.

“I don’t know why we would spend taxpayers money to try and punish somebody who doesn’t have the money and are probably going to win at the end of the day anyway,” says Hermann.

Those who represent special needs families suspect a larger more sinister scheme.

“What they are trying to do is send a chill down parent’s spine about advocating for their children,” says Louis Geigerman, president of the Texas Organization of Parents, Attorneys and Advocates.

“Lets set some examples, lets hang a few of them at high noon right out here in the middle of the town square and show you what we do to people who want to advocate for their children,” adds Kilpatrick.

“If I don’t fight them, you know they are going to do it to other parents,” says Kenneth Chibuogwu.

This past April after three long and expensive years of legal warfare a federal judge here in Houston issued his ruling. Alief I.S.D. was wrong and had no right under the law to collect legal expenses from Chuka’s parents.

Instead of accepting the ruling, superintendent Stoerner and apparently the Alief School board have chosen to risk even more taxpayer dollars and appeal the ruling to the 5th Circuit.

At a board meeting, by phone and by e-mail Fox 26 news has repeatedly asked the Alief decision makers “Why” and have yet to receive an answer.

A district spokeswoman promised comment after the appeals court rules.

“We’ve almost lost everything trying to keep this up,” says Neka.

“What basically there are trying to do is run me and my family on to the street,” says Kenneth

While school expenses are generally available for public inspection Alief has attempted to block our opens records request.

FOX 26 News has however obtained invoices which show the district’s taxpayers have compensated Erik Nikols and his Law firm Rogers, Morris and Grover as much as $12,000 in a single month for waging the three-and-a-half year courthouse campaign against the Chibuougwu’s.

The meter, presumably, is still running.

“I know a lot of people have gained from this, a lot of people have been enriched by this,” says Neka.

As for Chuka, he’s now fourteen, attends no school and for five years hasn’t received a single minute of the free and appropriate public education that is his right

Their child, his parents insist, has been thoroughly left behind.

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  • odin2012

    This government great? And Obama wants more government power.

  • Beau Ryker

    Chuka, come to my little town. We still have morals, and do things the right way. This is a shame.

  • Sponge

    Wonder why we’ve never heard of such a thing when it involves mexican illegals.

    :gun: :roll:

    • DC

      Messicans don’t have to worry….they have rights… :roll:

    • Beau Ryker

      First of all, they’re called wetbacks in Texas. Elsewhere in the country, they are called displaced immigrants. :roll:

  • Tim Roesch – pseudo intellectual

    This case should be investigated and once found to be the horror show it appears to be (I have seen this sort of thing done before, usually with children with Down’s Syndrome) this should be the poster child case for pro LEGAL immigration and anti-public school as a source of political and social power.

    Here is the flag. Who will raise it?

    • Tim Roesch – pseudo intellectual

      I’m telling you all, again…
      This is a perfect issue.
      Assuming the family is an example of LEGAL Immigration, this would be a perfect venue to show that we, Conservatives, are not against LEGAL immigration.
      Maybe we need to do something like those people did in that town in TX when those black activists tried to hold a press conference about racism at the site of the black criminal shot while trying to burglarize (?) a home.

      Let’s do this.

  • Chuck O

    I can honestly say I’m not shocked. Why would I be? Our president and the MSM did pretty much the same thing to Joe the plumber while Obama was on the campaign trail.

    On the plus side, at least this kid hasn’t been brainwashed by the leftists in the education department for the last 5 years.

  • Tim Roesch – pseudo intellectual

    Someone should ask the family if they have an IEP. IEPs (Individualized Education Plans) are legal contracts between the school and the parents about how the child will be educated and what methods will be used to measure that education.
    Did they have an IEP? What did the IEP state?
    This IEP is a legal document, folks.

    • JayMS

      Yup.

      Also try an advocacy organization for kids with Down’s Syndrome. They can help pay for legal expenses and oftentimes have lawyers on staff.

    • YERMOM

      He has to get classified by a developmental doctor before he can get the IEP or 504 Plan if he doesnt qualify for the IEP.