JUSTICE: High School Senior No Longer Suspended For BUYING EXTRA CHICKEN NUGGET – IOTW Report

JUSTICE: High School Senior No Longer Suspended For BUYING EXTRA CHICKEN NUGGET

DC: The principal at a high school in Knoxville, Tennessee has decided to rescind a suspension given to senior Carson Koller after Koller made the mistake of purchasing an extra chicken nugget in the school cafeteria.

Koller, an Eagle Scout and the captain of the drum line at Farragut High School, received the one-day suspension on Monday because he took six chicken nuggets — instead of the customary five nuggets — and then duly paid for the sixth nugget.  MORE

24 Comments on JUSTICE: High School Senior No Longer Suspended For BUYING EXTRA CHICKEN NUGGET

  1. Todays public schools are crawling with uncontrollably vicious and dangerous little thugs with impulse control issues just like this one. He deserves no less than 24hr lockdown in some heavily guarded reform school.
    We need to get a handle on this problem and it appears the schools principal is on it.

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  2. Brown Eyed Girl, I live 10 minutes from this kid’s high school. Farragut is a very pish tosh/ hoi polloi area. As in “We live in Farragut, dahling”. I’m pretty sure there are no free lunches.

    Which has made this story all the more bizarre to the local populace.

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  3. @WDS, yes, paying for them is probably the issue. If he was a little commie who felt entitled because mama and daddy blew his college fund at strip joints and casinos there wouldn’t have been a suspension and this never would have hit the news.

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  4. I always suspected that the ladies behind the counters in schools and in college were hate filled crypto Nazis. I remember them sizing all of us up and giving less to tall skinny guys (like me at the time) and more to little people. Strange…..

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  5. The kid’s mother handled this far more graciously than I would have.

    I hope someone tells her to demand a review of how this was written up in the kid’s “record”. Most likely it says that there for suspension for theft, and then another line (if any) that the suspension was lifted per the principal, without any explanation. At some point in the future, say, when he goes for a security clearance, all other evidence being gone, that will be read as “He stole. Principal cut him a break”.

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  6. WTF was he supposed to do with it? He couldn’t put it back, so paying for it was the only right thing to do.

    I’ve got a grandson in that school; I’m sure I’ll hear a different story later on.

    And 911, all the principal needed to say was “I’ve got a student that needs tasing”, and that cop would have been on it like a duck on a junebug.

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