MD - Elementary school teacher charged with sexually abusing at least 8 students - June 11, 2024

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Matthew Schlegel, 44, who worked as an elementary school teacher in Severna Park, Md., faces 55 charges of sexual abuse of at least eight children under his instruction, according to documents obtained by CBS News, WBFF-TV and the Capital Gazette.
 
On a playdate, the 10-year-old girl theorized with two friends about why her favorite third grade teacher was no longer at Severna Park Elementary School.

Did Matthew Schlegel have a kidney stone? Had one of his family members died? Or was he, she wrote on her iPad, a “doctor in disguise”?

“Because he would always touch us,” the girl testified on Wednesday at the Anne Arundel County Courthouse. “We thought that maybe he was a doctor.”

The reason was much darker...

The girl testified for almost 2 1/2 hours as a dog sat near her out of view to help reduce stress. Defense attorneys estimated that they have several more hours of cross-examination, and she will return on Thursday to the witness stand.

She said she’d often sit next to Schlegel, and he started touching her two to three weeks into the school year.

But she said she never told her parents. They later discovered that message she wrote on her iPad.

During cross-examination, Patrick Seidel, one of Schlegel’s attorneys, asked her to provide an example of a true statement.

The girl replied that Schlegel touched her.

Seidel then inquired why she gave that answer.

“Because,” she said, “it’s true.”



 
For more than three weeks, Severna Park Elementary School third grade teacher Matthew Schlegel has stood trial on charges that he sexually abused multiple students between 2022 and 2024 in his classroom.

Besides prosecutors, defense attorneys, bailiffs and witnesses, there has been another recurring presence in the courtroom: dogs.

Anne Arundel County Circuit Judge Pamela K. Alban, over objections from Schlegel’s attorneys, has allowed the canines to sit in the witness stand with children to help reduce stress.

Alban has instructed the jury to not draw any inferences about the use of the dogs and has taken other precautions…

Children are more likely to disclose what happened to them if they feel comfortable, said Gavin Patashnick, chief of the Cecil County State’s Attorney’s Office’s Special Victim’s Unit, which is housed in the child advocacy center.

“We’ve seen kids lay down with these dogs and take a nap. We’ve seen kids talk to these dogs like they’re people. We’ve seen kids draw pictures of these dogs,” Patashnick said. “The impact that Poppy has on the front end of an investigation is immeasurable.”

Poppy, he said, is “a bit of celebrity.”



 

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