February 14, 2014
Fla. School Won't Expel Student for Protecting Gay Classmate
Jason St. Amand READ TIME: 2 MIN.
Officials from a Florida high school decided Monday not to expel a student who was suspended for protecting a gay student from a bully, Fort Myer's NBC affiliate WBBH reports.
Mark Betterson, a senior at East Lee County High School, was suspended earlier this month for 10 days after getting in the middle of a fight in order to protect a bullied openly gay student. Betterson said he needed to do something when James Griffin, 18, allegedly attacked and used anti-gay slurs against Jonathan Colon.
"If I didn't jump into it, it would have got serious," Betterson said. "It would have been worse than what he got." He added: "Jonathan was just going to stand there and get beat up ... if I didn't jump into it."
Police arrested Griffin after watching security camera footage of the attack. He faces battery charges. Meanwhile, Betterson was suspended for nearly two weeks.
Betterson met with school officials on Monday, however, to talk about his punishment. He was able to return to school Tuesday and avoid expulsion.
"Bullying isn't called for, and everyone should be respected for what they want to be and what they want to do," Betterson told WBBH.
He also said he would defend Colon again.
"After he kept getting hit he wasn't doing anything back to them. They just kept hitting him," Betterson said.
According to the authorities, Griffin hit Colon in the face and the back of the head.
"I think it's a good punishment as substitution for expulsion, but he shouldn't even have been considered for expulsion for what he did," said sophomore Cody Lesie.
Fellow student, sophomore Kyle Piogrim, echoed similar statements.
"I think it's horrible because he got suspended for doing something right," he said.