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Texas mom fighting back after school district demands $7K for bullying records: 'My son is not safe'

Family And Marriage,Bullying,Parenting,Schools,Culture

From the Right

A Texas mother is fighting back after her school district demanded she pay over $7,000 to access bullying records as she investigates harassment against her son.

Terrie Chumchal and her attorney, Warren Norred, joined "America's Newsroom" Tuesday to discuss her case and the push to get the Texas attorney general involved.

"As a parent, I have every right to know what's going on in the school and why my son is not safe in the school district," Chumchal said.

Chumchal's 13-year-old son has endured two years of verbal and physical bullying targeted at his Korean-American heritage, according to the family. Last month, Chumchal filed a public records request with the Joshua Independent School District for the number of bullying, incident, assault, police and grievance reports filed between 2015 and 2022.

Lawyers for the district responded that since it does not have any "existing documents reflecting a total number" or "the resources to run a search for reports automatically," manually retrieving 6,636 pages of reports and redacting all confidential information would cost a staggering $7,111.12, according to a letter obtained by The Daily Wire.

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