Campus Safety | Jury Awards $48 Million to Former Students in California School Molestation Case

Campus Safety | Jury Awards $48 Million to Former Students in California School Molestation Case

EL MONTE, Calif. — Six former students of the Mountain View School District were awarded $48 million in damages on Monday after a jury ruled against the district and a former teacher convicted of molesting them.

The 12-person jury found that the former teacher, Joseph Alfred Baldenebro, 62, was responsible for molesting six fourth- and fifth-grade students at Miramonte Elementary School on school grounds over several years. The jury also determined that the district was negligent in supervising and employing Baldenebro, leading to the abuse that occurred in the classroom and elsewhere on the campus.

In 2018, Baldenebro pleaded no contest to one felony count of a lewd act upon a child and four misdemeanor counts of child molestation. He was initially sentenced to eight years in prison, but his sentence was later extended by 12 years when additional victims came forward. He was also required to register as a sex offender for life.

Jurors found that the molestation occurred due to a pattern of negligence, as the district failed to properly supervise Baldenebro during his tenure at Miramonte Elementary.

The impact of this verdict is a vindication of the child molestation victims against the school district that not only failed to protect them, but that also served as an accomplice in the molestations by its egregious negligence,” Nicholas C. Rowley, an attorney for the plaintiffs, told the San Gabriel Valley Tribune.

Rowley said the district ignored countless warnings by other teachers and students about Baldenebro’s inappropriate behavior. The abuse happened between 2002 and 2004, in 2010 and 2011, and in 2016 and 2017. Principals gave him written warnings in 2001, 2005 and 2010, but law enforcement was not notified.

Out of the total $48 million awarded on Monday, the Mountain View School District will pay $36.2 million, with the remaining amount to be paid by Baldenebro, according to the ex-students’ legal team.

Since the abuse came to light, the Mountain View School District said it has implemented measures to bolster student safety and provide awareness training about sexual assault and abuse.

Yahoo News | Los Angeles jury awards $48 million to students abused by teacher at South El Monte school

Yahoo News | Los Angeles jury awards $48 million to students abused by teacher at South El Monte school

A jury has awarded $48 million to six former students of a South El Monte elementary school who were sexually abused by a longtime teacher.

The students, who ranged in age from 8 to 10 at the time of the abuse, had reported that their teacher, Joseph Baldenebro, inappropriately touched, assaulted or harassed them while they attended Miramonte Elementary School. The abuse occurred between the early 2000s and 2017.

The Monday verdict came after a monthlong trial in which lawyers for the students presented evidence that Mountain View School District had warnings of inappropriate behavior by Baldenebro dating to the 1990s but took no action.

Baldenebro, 62, was convicted in 2018 of lewd or lascivious acts with children and sentenced to 8 years in prison. A second set of criminal charges related to child sexual abuse was filed against him in 2022 and resulted in a no-contest plea in the summer of 2024 and he was sentenced to 12 years in prison. He’s eligible for parole in 2031, according to state prison records.

“This school district knew about this guy — knew about this pedophile — for over 20 years,” said Nick Rowley, one of the lawyers who represented the former students in their lawsuit against the school district. “There were so many red flags — warning after warning after warning to the principals who just ignored it, who didn’t do anything, and who actually covered it up.”

Lawyers for Mountain View School District did not respond to a request Tuesday for comment. In a statement, the school district said it “unequivocally condemns abuse of any kind and remains deeply saddened by the harm caused to our students and community.”

The school district had acknowledged negligently supervising Baldenebro, who taught at the district for more than two decades, but asserted it was Baldenebro who caused the harm to the students, not the district.

The oldest of the former students had said she was in Baldenebro’s class from 2002 to 2004, during third and fourth grade, and that she was 9 years old at the time of the abuse, according to court papers.

She recounted growing close with Baldenebro, and said he had suggested he could become her “godparent,” according to an amended lawsuit filed in the case.

The student said she was aware that Baldenebro was the “godparent” to others, and court papers describe the benefit that Baldenebro gave to his purported godchildren: trips to amusement parks, lunches, clothes, CDs and after-school parties.

Rowley, the lawyer, said Tuesday that Baldenebro described himself as a godfather to 24 students over a period of years.

In court papers, the student said that after she entered fourth grade, Baldenebro after school would summon her to sit on his lap, where he would touch her and kiss her. “He would tell her he loved her and he would tightly pull her into him,” lawyers for the student wrote in a trial brief in 2021.

In 2004, the student told the then-principal about her uncomfortable experiences with Baldenebro. Around that time, the student, her parents and Baldenebro met with the principal. Baldenebro “accused her of overreacting, and that he was just doing that as an act of love and care,” according to court papers.

The principal “convinced her parents that this behavior by Baldenebro was normal because he was her godfather,” according the a pretrial brief.

The jury awarded the student $9 million of the $48-million verdict, the second-largest amount.

Other former students recounted that they were subjected to unwanted hugs, kisses and patts on their butts, according to a pretrial brief filed by their lawyers. One student said Baldenebro fondled her genitalia and then raped her in his classroom; the student, whose name The Times is not disclosing, was awarded $16.5 million.

Of the total verdict, jurors held the Mountain View School District responsible for slightly more than $36 million; Baldenebro is responsible for the rest, although unlikely to pay.

A spokesperson for the district, Jocelyn Rios, said she was unable to disclose whether all or part of the verdict would be covered by the school district’s insurance companies or whether other district funds would be tapped to pay it.

In a statement, the district said it had instituted “meaningful steps … with the goal of preventing future incidents from going undetected or unreported.”

Among the steps are an annual “Be Seen: Be Heard” effort, described as “a district-wide, age-appropriate sexual assault and abuse awareness and prevention” program.

Before trial, lawyers for the district had offered a settlement of about $100,000 per student, Rowley said.

“From the very beginning of this case, the school district and their lawyers devalued what these victims went through and minimized what happened to them,” said Michael Carrillo, the lead attorney on the case representing the former students. “The jury saw through all of that.”

KTLA 5 | Southern California school district to pay $48M in student sex abuse case

KTLA 5 | Southern California school district to pay $48M in student sex abuse case

 

Kiro 7 | Puyallup man paralyzed after ‘low-risk surgery’ at UW Harborview files claim

Kiro 7 | Puyallup man paralyzed after ‘low-risk surgery’ at UW Harborview files claim

 

SEATTLE, Wash. — A Puyallup man, who said he is now paralyzed after a “low-risk surgery” has filed a claim against the University of Washington’s Harborview Medical Center and several doctors and healthcare providers.

A spokesperson for the law firm, representing Dr. Ron Ko, a dentist in Puyallup, said the claim alleges that Ko was never made aware of a risk of paralysis.

“The surgeon told him, ‘You were going to be fine.’ The surgeon did not tell him there was a risk that he was going to be paralyzed. And he shouldn’t have been paralyzed. He was paralyzed because of medical negligence,” said Nicholas Rowley, family’s attorney.

“It’s in the report. The risk of paralysis was not discussed,” he added.

The lawyer said the father never consented to allow residents to operate on him during his procedure to remove a spinal cord neoplasm, a benign tumor, on March 21.

The claim also alleges that Ko was misinformed that his surgery would be performed exclusively by two fellowship-trained surgeons, with residents only observing from behind a glass.

However, he said two residents-in-training worked on his surgery.

“Dr. Ko learned after the surgery that neural monitoring signals were lost approximately 70% of the way through the procedure, yet the surgeons continued the operation,” the family’s attorney said.

Ko is now paralyzed from the chest down.

The father of two children said he is still waiting to tell his children about his condition.

“My kids don’t even know I’m paralyzed and I told them, “Daddy is going to get better, give it 6 months,” he said.

Ko has lost his ability to work and support his family due to the permanent paralysis caused by the surgery, the family’s law firm wrote.

“No one deserves this, that’s why I’m doing this because we need to increase awareness and this should have never happened,” the father said. “I should be at home with my family. I should be with my team helping patients. I should not be here. I never made it home.”

KIRO 7 News reached out to the UW’s medical center. A spokesperson said the hospital can’t comment on a pending claim.

 

People | Starbucks Ordered To Pay $50 Million to Man Burned by Hot Tea in Drive-Thru Incident

People | Starbucks Ordered To Pay $50 Million to Man Burned by Hot Tea in Drive-Thru Incident

 

Starbucks has lost a lawsuit to a man who suffered severe burns after a drink spilled in his lap at one of the chain’s California drive-thru locations.

On Friday, March 14, a Los Angeles County jury ordered the Seattle-based coffee company to pay delivery driver Michael Garcia, who was burned in the drive-thru incident, a sum of $50 million, according to the Associated Press, the Los Angeles Times and CBS Los Angeles.

Garcia suffered life-changing injuries, including third-degree burns and permanent injury to his genitals, as a result of the Feb. 8, 2020 drive-thru incident at an L.A. Starbucks location, in which a scalding drink spilled into his lap moments after he collected it from a barista, the outlets reported.

The L.A.-based delivery driver was picking up three Venti-sized “medicine ball” drinks — an off-menu item featuring tea, lemonade and honey — when a Starbucks barista “negligently” put one of them in the to-go carrier with an unsecured lid, per court records obtained by the L.A. Times.

After the barista handed Garcia the tray, the lid popped off of the unsecured tea drink and the contents fell into his lap within seconds, as seen in surveillance footage of the incident provided by Trial Lawyers for Justice. Garcia suffered third-degree burns as a result.

According to Garcia’s attorney and Trial Lawyers for Justice co-founder, Nick Rowley, the delivery driver had to receive two skin grafts on his penis, which was permanently discolored and disfigured, and now results in only painful sex.

Lawyer Monthly | Starbucks Hit with $50M Payout After Scalding Tea Burns Man’s Genitals

Lawyer Monthly | Starbucks Hit with $50M Payout After Scalding Tea Burns Man’s Genitals

 

Scorching Starbucks Tea Spill Leaves Man Permanently Disfigured—Jury Orders $50M Payout!

A Los Angeles County jury has hammered Starbucks with a $50 million verdict after delivery driver Michael Garcia suffered excruciating burns to his genitals from a scalding-hot tea spill at a California drive-thru.

The shocking incident happened on February 8, 2020, when a venti-sized tea—served at dangerously high temperatures—tipped over moments after being handed to Garcia. His lawsuit accused Starbucks of negligence, arguing that the employee failed to secure the cup properly in a takeout tray, leading to a horrific accident that left Garcia with permanent, life-changing injuries.

“This jury verdict is a powerful statement against corporations like Starbucks that put profits over customer safety,” said Nick Rowley, one of Garcia’s attorneys.

Starbucks Fights Back—Calls $50M Verdict ‘Excessive’

Despite the damning verdict, Starbucks isn’t backing down. The Seattle-based coffee giant released a statement dismissing the ruling and vowing to fight back in court.

“We strongly disagree with the jury’s decision and believe the damages awarded are outrageous,” Starbucks said. “We remain committed to the highest safety standards when handling hot drinks.”

But Garcia’s legal team says the coffee chain refuses to take responsibility for the catastrophic injuries its product caused. Skin grafts, unbearable pain, and permanent damage—this wasn’t just a simple spill; it was a life-altering disaster.

Not the First Time! Starbucks Joins Long List of Hot Beverage Lawsuits

This case echoes one of the most infamous lawsuits in fast-food history—the 1990s McDonald’s hot coffee scandal, where a woman was awarded nearly $3 million after suffering third-degree burns.

Other lawsuits have had mixed results, with some juries siding with fast-food giants and others holding them accountable. But Garcia’s $50M payout sends a clear message—restaurants serving boiling-hot drinks must protect their customers.

What’s Next? Will Starbucks Pay Up or Keep Fighting?

With $50 million on the line, Starbucks is gearing up for an appeal, determined to avoid paying what could be one of the largest hot beverage settlements in history.

But for Garcia, no amount of money will undo the pain, suffering, and disfigurement he’s endured. The public outrage is growing, with many calling for stricter safety regulations on hot drink temperatures and serving practices.