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Alleged Charter School Sex Abuse Victim Says He Thinks Of Suicide

MIAMI (CBSMiami) -- Wearing tan slacks and a blue dress shirt, a little boy raised his hand to God and described the ungodly abuse he says he suffered at the Downtown Miami Charter School.

The child's testimony came in the second week of his lawsuit against Charter Schools USA, the owner of the Miami elementary school.

With his mom watching, the boy said the sexual abuse began on a private school van when he was seven and his abuser was 11 years old.

"He pushed me down and he pulled down his pants, and put his hand on my head and pushed my head toward his private part," the boy testified in a quiet voice. He said the older boy forced him to perform a sex act on the back row of the school van.

The child said he told his mother, who told the school's principal. The principal, Rebecca Dinda, assured the mother the boys would be kept apart, but the second grader says the abuser continued to follow and curse him on campus. He says he told the assistant principal.

"I came in and I said I'm still seeing (the other boy) everywhere I go," the boy said. The child testified that the assistant principal told him he would "take care of it."

The boy said it wasn't taken care of however, and the alleged abuser went on to assault him again in a first-floor restroom at the charter school.

"I went to the bathroom and (the other boy) was inside waiting for me," the child said. "He punched me in the stomach and he pulled down his pants." The older boy again forced him to perform a sex act, he said. He testified that he would twice be forced to submit in the school restroom. He did not tell anyone, he said, because of threats from his tormentor.

"I kept quiet because he kept saying 'If you tell anyone what happened, then I'll kill your mom.'"

The youngster finally spoke up after being hospitalized for trying to kill himself, once by running into traffic, and again by sticking a metal rod into an electrical outlet.

He testified that he is afraid to go out now, has panic attacks, a fear of restrooms, and nightmares. He no longer has a love of playing basketball.

"All the activities that I used to have that were fun, it doesn't seem fun anymore," the boy said.

He said he still has thoughts of killing himself "two or three times a week."

The child's attorney, Jeffrey Herman, ended his testimony with this exchange: "It's very important," Herman said to the boy. "I want you to look at the jury. Is everything you're telling us here today the truth?"

"Yes," the child replied.

Attorneys representing the charter school declined to cross-examine the youngster. Instead, they will play a video-taped deposition he gave them earlier in the lawsuit. That will not happen until the defense presents its case, perhaps beginning later in the week.

The charter school's principal, assistant principal, and others have testified the assaults could not have occurred in the way the boy has described. The school van driver said he witnessed nothing unusual on the bus the day the child claims he was assaulted. School officials have testified the restroom where the alleged assaults occurred was always monitored by a staff member during the times the child claims he was attacked, and was off-limits to the older students.

An expert witness for the allegedly abused youngster testified Wednesday that the school failed miserably in protecting the boy after the report of the initial incident on the school van.

Dr. Charol Shakeshaft, an expert on education and sexual harassment, said the school did not follow acceptable protocols after first learning of the abuse. She said the alleged abuser should have been monitored by an adult from "the time he came on campus in the morning until the time he left at the end of the day." He was not.

The trial before Judge Beatrice Butchko is expected to continue through next week.

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