Texas high school held cage fights, records say

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Texas high school held cage fights, records say

DALLAS - A Dallas high school staged "gladiator-style" cage fights among troubled students, making them settle their differences with bare-knuckled brawls inside a boys locker room, according to school district documents.

The principal and other employees at South Oak Cliff High School "knew of the practice, allowed it to go on for a time, and failed to report it," according to a 2008 report revealed Thursday. The fights, unleashed inside a steel utility cage, happened between 2003 and 2005, the report said.


The Dallas Morning News obtained the documents for a story in its Thursday editions.

"It was gladiator-style entertainment for the staff," Frank Hammond, a middle school counselor, told the Morning News. Hammond was fired from South Oak Cliff and has filed a whistleblower lawsuit. "They were taking these boys downstairs to fight. And it was sanctioned by the principal and security."

District investigators first learned of the fights during a probe into the school's unauthorized fundraising and grade-changing for athletes that cost the school its 2006 boys state basketball championship, the Dallas Morning News reported.


"The cage" was inside a section of the boys basketball locker room barricaded by wire mesh and metal lockers, according to the report. Security monitors used it to let students settle their differences.



Former Principal Donald Moten denied the allegations, saying he had nothing to comment on because the fights never happened.



"That's barbaric. You can't do that at a high school. You can't do that anywhere," Moten told the Morning News.



Moten resigned during the grade-changing investigation.


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Dallas Morning News on the 'cage fights'
District Superintendent Michael Hinojosa, however, confirmed that there were "some things that happened inside of a cage" and said that the fights were "unacceptable," the Dallas newspaper reported. He told the paper that criminal charges were not filed but that "there was discipline taken."



School board members have called for another investigation.


Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
The coach at the junior high where I taught kept a pair of boxing gloves in his office --- these were the plumpest, softest things that wouldn't kill a mosquito with a direct hit. If 2 boys, or girls on occasion, wanted to fight, he'd whip out those gloves and give them 2 minutes.

But this "cage fighting" is barbaric.
 
nothing surprises me anymore if it involves the Dallas Independant School District
 
Oh, gimme a break. Barbaric?? When we had an issue with another kid, we'd meet just off school property, where the principal's power ended and use whatever was at hand to beat the crap outta one another. When are these liberal arts panzies gonna piss off and let humans be humans for a while. Go hug a freaking tree and leave kids be kids. It's very simple. This is done under supervision. When one kid's had enough .. it's stopped. If one kid doesn't want to fight, it doesn't happen. This isn't a **** fight where neither side has a choice. They both walk in under their own power. Odds are, they both walk out the same way ... and probably with a sight more respect for each other than a pair of kids sent home on three day suspension (vacation) for being unsociable.
 
Oh, gimme a break. Barbaric?? When we had an issue with another kid, we'd meet just off school property, where the principal's power ended and use whatever was at hand to beat the crap outta one another. When are these liberal arts panzies gonna piss off and let humans be humans for a while. Go hug a freaking tree and leave kids be kids. It's very simple. This is done under supervision. When one kid's had enough .. it's stopped. If one kid doesn't want to fight, it doesn't happen. This isn't a **** fight where neither side has a choice. They both walk in under their own power. Odds are, they both walk out the same way ... and probably with a sight more respect for each other than a pair of kids sent home on three day suspension (vacation) for being unsociable.

I'd have to agree, when we were kids we settled things behind the school , away from "jurisdiction", never got out of hand and most of the time it ended right there. I will say that weapons were never allowed, bare fists, old fashioned man to man, none of this whipping out a Glock or Nine, which IMO makes you a wimp. Mutual respect for one another usually occured and if it didn't you just stayed out of that persons' way for the rest of your school days. I got in two fights throughout my school years, never more than a few punches thrown before it was settled, a little pride hurt that is about it. Kids these days would rather settle their differences with a weapon (gun) than with their fists. I really think every school should have an "area" where the differences can be settled under supervision. All this pansie crap has to go.
 
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