


The New Jersey district where bullied 14-year-old Adriana Kuch took her own life will now allow school officials to look through students’ cell phones in an effort to curb bullying.
The Central Regional School District in Ocean County will require middle school students to keep their phones in special pockets during class, while high schoolers will also have the option to keep them switched off and put away.
The updated electronics policy went into effect in August and applies to students in grades 7 through 12, NJ.com reported
The change in rules comes after 14-year-old Kuch died by suicide after a video was posted online of a group of girls cruelly bullying and physically attacking her.
Kuch, who attended Central Regional High School in Berkeley Township, was found dead at home two days after the horrific Feb. 1 assault.
An alarming video of the bullying showed several students attacking the teen, hitting her with a water bottle as she walked with her boyfriend down a school hallway. Kuch’s assailants punched, kicked and pulled her hair, while others looked on laughing.
Kuch’s humiliating beating and the online circulation of a video of the attack led to her taking her own life, her father said, calling her suicide a direct result of repeated harassment. His claims have prompted a firestorm of accusations that the school district has a culture of bullying.
At least three lawsuits have been filed against the school district over claims that officials failed to investigate on-campus harassment and bullying of students.
Three girls have been charged with third-degree felony assault and a fourth was charged with disorderly conduct in connection to the assault on Kuch.
At the time, Schools Superintendent Triantafilllos Parlapanides said police were not called directly after the attack, citing school policy.
Ever since Kuch’s family has alleged the school mishandled the videotaped attack, others have come forward to accuse the district of mishandling alleged bullying.
Central Regional announced a series of initiatives to evaluate and improve the district’s approach to bullying Following Kuch’s death and the recent spate of allegations against the district.
Those initiatives include a committee to update the school’s bullying policy and review the district’s cell phone policy, among other things.