A 12-year-old student with special needs Pakistani American was forced by a school here that says to sign false confessions that she was pa...
A 12-year-old student with special needs Pakistani American was forced by a school here that says to sign false confessions that she was part of ISIS and wanted to steal the closure of the school, after a further 25 million from his family.
The Muslim family from Long Iceland sued the school district Union Middle Islip 25 million and said his son Nashwan Uppal was insulted by his colleagues as a "terrorist" and was then repeatedly asked by school officials if there is a terrorist if for bombs when he knew that "Osama" was and whether it is a part. of ISIS
The lawsuit, filed in Brooklyn federal court on Monday, Uppal said, a Pakistani-American student, was in East Islip High School on January 6, while other children started sitting in the room, which would ask the contribution of New York "as Next, blow ".
Uppal, who has severe learning and social disabilities, tries to another table as an adult in the room did nothing to move to the action, but the attacker followed him and continued his Islamophobic provocations.
The lawsuit said the next day, Uppal of Superintendent John Dolan, director Mark Bernard and assistant director Jason Stanton, and interrogated from the physical education was.
"Nashwan Stanton repeatedly asked whether he was a terrorist, and he made bombs at his home," said the lawsuit, if he did not say, again in Stanton anger would cry. "You do not lie to us!"
A tremor Uppal was forced to sign a confession said he was "part of ISIS, knew how to make bombs, bombs that were in his house, and he would fence the school jump," the suit alleges.
The officials finally allowed to call her mother, Nubaisha Amar, who was told that his son had committed loyalty to ISIS and wanted to blow the school.
The police accompanied the mother and her son at his home before the whole house and the completion of the search, that there was no threat. However Uppal was suspended for a week of "criminal activity".
Attorney David Antwork said the child was scarred emotionally.
"The defendants trampled civil rights ... Nashwan insulted, and humiliated him Nashwan by forcing them to confess to crimes he did not commit, ignoring the fact that he constantly harassed and had social experience, language, learning disorders," Antwork was quoted.
The lawsuit also claims that Uppal "severe emotional distress and extreme" suffered "nightmares, insomnia, crying, anxiety, humiliation and stress" after the incident.