Scamanda - BONUS: Nobody believed me: pushed out co-worker on Amanda the painful Principal
Episode Date: July 10, 2023Before she was indicted, Amanda became the Principal of Pacific Point Elementary School. How did she become a Principal, and what was she like to work with? Find out from an anonymous guest who in the... end had to leave her teaching career. Scamanda is a Lionsgate Sound podcast: http://lionsgatesound.com Hosted by Charlie Webster. Listen to another Lionsgate Sound podcast hosted by Charlie Webster, Died & Survived: https://link.chtbl.com/diedandsurvived?sid=sc Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hey, Scamander listeners, it's Charlie back with you again for our last bonus episode.
To finish up, we're going to take a bit of a look into Amanda's time as principal at
Pacific Point Elementary, and to help us get a better understanding, we have one of the
teachers who was actually working there at the time who knew Amanda.
Now, I'm not actually going to identify or say this person's name and because she wants to remain anonymous but I'd like to welcome her now. Thank you
so much for joining us and for sharing your story with us. I you know the first
thing I want to ask you if it's okay. Why do you not want your name mentioned
especially given the fact that we now know that Amanda is in prison.
It's because of the administration that's still there at Pat Point, there's still kind of a
protection around Amanda that still continues to this day even with the podcast. I don't want there
to be any retaliation or anything like that. I wanted to share my story because I want the truth to come to light about my time
when I was there and what happened in the events that unfolded.
However, I just wanted to remain anonymous
so that there just wasn't anything that could come back
on me afterwards.
You know, it's interesting because this
has been the case with a few people.
When we were making the podcast, but also since,
a lot of people have gotten in contact, but the podcast, but also since a lot of people
have got in contact, but that was a concern from quite a lot of people.
I just wonder why do you think there is this protection still?
Despite the conviction, the sentence in and the story we've told.
Now, it's very strange to me, I think even when Amanda was sentenced, there were still
people that were
protecting her, that were coming out and saying there's two sides to every story when all the allegations
were brought up against her. There were people immediately that believed it, but yet the administration
was still backing her up saying that we need to have Amanda's back, that we need to keep an open
mind, things like that. And I don't quite understand it
because there's so much evidence now,
there's been so many things,
especially through the podcasts that have showed
that this was going on before her time at Packpoint,
as well as during her time at Packpoint
and continuing when she left Packpoint.
And it's sad to me that the manipulation ran so deep
and people still choose not to believe that what
she was doing was wrong.
So you were at Packpoint as a teacher and you were there, I mean you're being part of the
community for quite a while but you were there a year before Amanda became principal.
What was the school like?
Maybe you could paint a picture for us before
a man to become principle. Yes, so I was a parent there first and so I had known this school for
a really long time. I actually did some of my student teaching there where I got to go and observe
in a classroom. So I've been a part of that community for a very long time and it's this homey loving
time. And it's this homie loving, tiny school that it's just you walk on and instantly feel like your child. If you have a child there is love and taken care of. You felt like the
administration was going to have your best interest at heart. You just walked on and you felt
like it was different unlike any school you'd ever been at.
It was great.
It was the best job I had ever had
prior to Amanda's arrival.
So then, I mean, it sounds like an amazing school.
So when Amanda arrives, what did you know about her?
And do you know how she got the job?
Cause she went for the job as a teacher, right?
Yes, at the end of the school year,
so my second year teaching at the end of that year,
they introduced Amanda to the staff that she walked into the interview.
She was from a very prestigious school,
another Christian school that was in San Jose.
She was walking in to get a job as a middle school teacher,
and they found out that she worked at this prestigious school,
and they offered her the position of the elementary principal.
They said because of her experience at that school,
that it made her a perfect candidate,
and they told us all they said,
you know, she nailed the interview and she walked out.
We were high-fiving and said,
that's our new elementary principal.
They're telling our entire staff this.
And I thought, well, that's so weird
because when I got the job,
they even though it's a tiny school,
I mean, it's a lengthy process to get
a job as a teacher there.
And they're telling the staff that,
it's like, oh, we're high, you know,
administrations high-fiving as the man
that comes in and nails for interview,
where she came in as a teacher
and got an elementary principal job.
So we were kind of all a little bit shocked to say least, but she seemed really sweet at first.
Super bubbly, she was younger, she was a young mom. I remember the very first time we went over
and talked to her. Pizzar group of teachers and I and we had asked her like, oh, so what grades
have you taught? And she started naming all these grades. They were a bunch of grades in lower elementary,
upper elementary, and as well as middle school.
And then she also said she had her masters.
I'm like, and at first I got excited because I thought,
wow, I mean, she has so much experience.
She's going to be so knowledgeable about,
you know, what it feels like to be a teacher in a classroom
as well as bringing that knowledge into administration.
And then I walked away and I thought,
I started doing the math and I started thinking,
well, wait, she's only, you know, like 30 years old,
how in the world could she teach all of those grades
as well as get her masters and like,
I don't know if this really makes sense.
So that was kind of the first thing
that didn't make sense to me
and it was the very first time I had met her.
And did she have cancer at the time,
or did you know anything about her cancer
when you first met her?
So we did not.
There were a couple of people who knew her
from her church that said that she had health issues,
and I had had some health issues as well,
so I thought, oh, you know,
this actually might be something
that she and I can connect on.
I was there all summer,
because I was moving classrooms.
And so she was there setting up her office and decorating,
and she was painting her walls purple,
and I was painting my classroom.
And so I kind of got to know her a little bit
during the summer.
And there was just something from my initial reaction
with her.
And I'm not somebody.
I always look at people like, I see the best in them.
I'm not somebody that's like a skeptical person
that you know, immediately looks at someone with like an eyebrow
raise.
But there was just something about every time I interacted
with her, it didn't feel right.
And I couldn't put my finger on it.
Even to this day, I could not explain.
There wasn't something that she did exactly
that I could say, oh, this is why I felt uncomfortable
around her.
It was just every time I was around her,
there was just this feeling like something
wasn't right like I needed to give myself space with her.
And I didn't feel that way with anybody at the school.
And the only time it ever got worse was when I was
introduced to her husband, Corey. He came to the school, I think, to pick up their oldest son that day.
He was at the school for a little bit with Amanda, and immediately when I met him,
I had this overwhelming feeling I needed to get away.
Like, it was just this feeling that something was off, something was wrong,
and I got very uncomfortable.
It was like the hairs on the back of your neck stand up.
And again, I never met this person before.
I didn't even know who he was, and I literally introduced myself, and I walked out of the
office as fast as I could because I felt so uncomfortable.
I was like, I need to get out of here.
And after that point, I always distance myself from him because they just
didn't feel comfortable being around him.
Yeah, I mean, sometimes you get those feelings about people, don't you? And you can't
quite put your finger on it, but you just have this intuition or sixth sense.
You know, we've spoken to a few people that were involved in the school during this series, and from all reports, Amanda was wonderful with the kids,
you know, made them feel loved, did these like hug high five things when they first walked in.
But what was she like as a principal and how did she treat the teachers?
You know, she's now principal of the school, she's set herself in.
What was the environment like?
How did things change?
It was weird because right off the bat,
she kind of came in very strong.
It was always this sense like she was putting you down
like you weren't doing things the right way
or you weren't doing things good enough.
But it was very hard because
pretty much right off the bat Amanda wasn't there very often. So we started school in August
and she would come into work late. She would leave early, she would be gone during the days. So we
didn't really get to know her because she wasn't at school. So people started asking questions all
the time about where's about, where's Amanda?
Where's Amanda?
You know, if you had issues in your classroom
where you needed help, she wasn't there.
Her door was always closed.
We would get emails, basically.
We were micromanaged from wherever she was.
We would just get emails.
But then again, she wouldn't be there
for us to address it in person.
And so when people started asking questions,
we got called into a staff meeting.
She basically told us that she did have cancer,
that she was taking medication,
the medication basically would paralyze her body.
And so she wasn't able to move in the morning.
So that's why she wasn't able to be at school
until about any time between 10, 10, 30, 11 o'clock during the day
because she was physically
paralyzed in the morning.
So I mean, everybody felt
horrible.
I was going to say how was
it received?
Yeah, I mean, we also also,
I mean, this is like a very
loving school.
Everybody felt terrible.
I mean, immediately our hearts
went out to her.
And so it just continued to get
worse with how many absences
she had at school.
She wasn't there very often.
And we would get these emails.
And the tones of the emails were usually very harsh.
We were being micromanaged.
And so it was hard because we didn't get
to establish these relationships with her to begin with.
And then she's not there.
And she's, you know, kind of belittling people.
It was very, just very harsh, the tone of it.
You need to do this.
You need to do that.
People aren't doing this correctly.
You're not doing that correctly.
So it was just very like, nothing ever felt like
it came from like a loving place at all.
It was just very much, you're not doing this,
you're not doing that.
It was just always this harsh tone
that you felt like you weren't doing a good job
as a teacher.
It sounds like it created a shift in an environment
from what you described to us of what the school was like.
And then were there any suspicions around her
that started to creep in?
Or was it just about the toxicity?
No, there definitely were.
So I remember one day, pretty early into the school year,
I had gone into the office after school,
and I was asking a question in the phone rang,
and one of the secretaries had answered and said,
no, comment, and put the phone down pretty harshly.
And then I see Amanda coming around the corner
and they go, Amanda, they're calling again.
And I looked over at Amanda, like, right in her face.
And I said, we, who called?
They don't understand, like, wow, that must have
been really bad for you to like slam the phone down.
And Amanda goes, oh, it's Corey's ex-wife.
She's so jealous of me.
She thinks I'm faking cancer.
And so she's trying to get people to look into me.
And she just started going into how Corey's ex-wife
was horrible and just all of these things.
And she was starting to get emotional about it.
And she was crying.
And my first initial reaction was, oh my goodness,
I feel so bad for her.
And then as I walked out of the office,
I started thinking, why would someone call a school?
And that was like another thing
that just didn't sit right with me.
We could never get a street answer about her cancer.
Like some people were told she had blood cancer still.
Some people were told she was in remission.
Some people, you know, were told that she was still in medication.
Like nobody's stories matched up.
The environment, like you said, of the school
completely shifted in such a short amount of time
where it just didn't feel like this happy
loving place that it was prior to Amanda's arrival.
And did anybody or yourself report that behavior
as this went on?
Yes, so some teachers started coming to me
and voicing their opinion about Amanda.
People were still loving towards her
because everybody thought she was it.
Most teachers weren't bringing up
that her cancer wasn't real.
They were saying
things of we're being torn down. We're not feeling like we're good enough teachers. Teachers that
had been there for, I mean, 15 years were saying things and teachings are really hard profession
and you put a lot into it. And so when somebody's constantly making you feel like you're not doing
your job the right way or that you're not doing it good enough, it just tears you down.
Yeah, you start to question it yourself.
Exactly.
You can't help but internalize that when people say that to you repeatedly.
Yes. I gave it some time. There was another person on the administration team that I had
approached to tell her my concerns, to tell her how many teachers were going forward that how
Talks sick the environment was getting at the school. I even had parents coming up to me for my class thing
What's the difference this year like I don't understand why the teachers just look like they're you know sad or down and it's just a different feel
So I decided to talk to her
She suggested that we go and speak to a
school board member. So she went with me to speak with a school board member and this was in October
of Amanda's first year. We met with a school board member and we had me at night, I know,
we had a sneak around so that administration didn't know when we met with
this school board member. There were other administration issues taking place and so
the conversation kind of went as, well, Amanda, yes, we understand there's concern, but
there's someone above her that basically needed to be out first before we could address
the Amanda issue.
But during that conversation,
he proceeded to tell both of us
that he had an anonymous note put on his car
a couple days prior to our meeting
that said that Amanda was faking cancer
and that he needed to look into her past
before he continues to allow her
being the principal at her school.
What did you think of that?
I was shocked.
It was like, this is what I've been saying.
Like, there's so many things that aren't adding up.
And then you have some anonymous person.
I'm like, it took somebody a lot of courage
to go and put an anonymous note on your car.
You need to look into it.
So I questioned him and said, well,
what did you do with that?
He said, well, I gave it back to the administration
to look into and check into our past.
Which I was like, no, they're supporting her.
They're backing her.
You guys need to.
That's where we're coming to you and not going to them
because they have her back.
What started was that they spoke with Amanda
is what they told the staff.
We spoke with Amanda. We told her she needed to be there, that the environment at the school
needs to change.
So we gave it a few more months and things continued to be the same as they were before.
Did anything change?
Did she say anything to any of the teachers?
Surely she knew she must have known somebody complained about her.
Exactly. I mean, it changed that she was more watchful of us. She became more harsh with us. The administration was definitely watching us more. It just continued to become this downward spiral
It just continued to become this downward spiral at the school. And there were teachers continue to come to us.
We decided to go meet with more board members
because we gave it a few months.
We went to the board.
It was very emotional.
There were teachers.
There was a teacher crying.
Everybody, it was the same thing of,
at this point, we all kind of suspected
that maybe Amanda's cancer wasn't real,
maybe her sickness wasn't,
but she's definitely pushing it
so that she doesn't have to be there.
The treatment of us is poor.
We just went into all of that
and laid it all out for hours to them.
After that meeting, they said they were going to meet with Amanda and
let us know if she would be back. All the teachers are nervous because they don't know if she's coming
back or not. And we're basically, I sought out the board member that we went to see last. And he said,
you know, all of the board members voted no for Amanda to come back,
but I think that she deserves another shot to come back.
And my mouth just dropped.
I think I started crying because I felt like I'd let the teachers
sound because they entrusted me.
And it all kind of felt like it was for nothing.
And then now we all had giant targets on our backs.
Yeah, I can imagine.
It must have felt really daunting
because you knew that you didn't have that protection,
but why did was she given a second chance back?
No matter what she's done,
but even if she didn't do anything,
the fact that the majority of the teachers said,
no, then normally that decision would be okay,
then for the harmony of the school,
we have to change principle.
Why?
Exactly.
It was because one of the administrators that was still there
was fighting to keep her.
My suspicion is that right after we fell this out,
we were called into our last staff meeting
before the end of the school year.
Amanda walked in, very kind of angry and upset. So everybody, you know, is quiet or nervous about what's going to happen.
And then she sat down and basically told us, my cancer is back. I'm going to be gone all summer long.
I'm going to be in treatment. I don't know what's going to happen to me. Just basically laid it
out to the staff that, you know, her cancer had returned.
So of course, then people feel horrible
that they had gone to school board members
and now she has her cancer.
So we just all left for this summer
just completely defeated.
Because regardless of if she had cancer or not,
the way that we were all being treated by her was so poorly.
It was an awful way to end the school year.
Everybody was very nervous to come back the following year, but we didn't even know if
Amanda would come back because her cancer had returned, so we didn't really know what
to expect at the beginning of the next school year.
So it sounds like she was given a second chance because her cancer would come back.
I actually have a few of the notes from those pages that the teachers gave.
I just want to read very quickly a few of them out with some of the points.
One of them was our new principal is absent all the time.
Our new principal speaks to us very respectfully.
She has a my way or the time. A new principal speaks to us very disrespectfully. She has a
my way or the highway attitude. She said in an exact direct quote, I can't give
my staff a choice, they just need to be told what to do. Lunches and snack breaks
have been taken away and teachers are exhausted without having breaks, no time
to recharge. Lying, lots of little lies you mentioned, gossiping. Amanda's constantly
heard gossiping about staff members, parents and even students, double standards, about
absences leaving school. Amanda is often not present, as you spoke about. But also, she
wouldn't let people have any time off, right? It says here, unless she was given, they were given 14 days in advance notice.
It just carries on and on about some of those details. And then what happened when she came back
for this second year. So we started our teacher training in August again of that year. We didn't
know if Amanda was gonna be there,
but the funny thing is she tells us
that she's going through treatment,
but we can all see those of us
that are friends with her on Instagram
that there's pictures of her traveling.
Looks like she's having this wonderful summer
and she's going on vacations
and all of these things,
not somebody who just said they relapsed
and had cancer again.
She comes back at the start of the school year.
We're all thinking this is going to be addressed,
and it's never spoken about.
There's not a word uttered about her cancer,
just kind of confused as to what's going on,
but administration will never address what's going on.
And when we did the series,
we talked about someone called Miss Cindy. Were you there
when Miss Cindy, who's suddenly passed away now, was raising money for her cancer? So that was
that school year. So it was the second school year as her principal? Yes. So in the fall, Miss Cindy, she was at the school forever.
So loved.
I mean, the school was her family.
She didn't have her own children.
I mean, she treated the kids like they were,
her own children.
I think that's probably the hardest part
about the entire thing with Amanda is,
not only was it how she treated all of us, but what
happened with Miss Cindy. She was diagnosed that fall. It was awful. Amanda immediately
said that she would take the reins because she knew what Miss Cindy was going through.
We donated money. Amanda, of course, wasn't at school when we tried to give her the money.
So I had asked Amanda, how do we get to the money.
She said, oh, just put it in the envelope under my door.
So I remember putting cash in an envelope,
putting it underneath Amanda's door,
hoping that it was going to get to Miss Cindy.
And then she said she was going to put a basket together,
because she knew exactly what she would need for chemo and everything.
And so we didn't really get to see Miss Cindy very much
at all because you can't be at a school
with a bunch of children that have multiple viruses
and things like that.
Yeah, your immune system's really low.
Exactly.
And so Miss Cindy wasn't there very often.
She did come, we all had a Christmas party
at Amanda's house.
And Miss Cindy showed up.
The whole entire time you just felt like Amanda
was trying to be the center of attention over Miss Cindy.
And that kept rubbing me the wrong way
because this was our time to love on her
and show her how much we love her and support her
and had been praying for her.
And it was just about Amanda.
Did Miss Cindy get the money?
So we did donations.
We don't know for sure what money she did get.
The school ended up doing a 50-50 raffle,
but because Amanda had children and a husband
where Miss Cindy didn't, she was elitated more money
than Miss Cindy was.
You think it'd be the way around, because she didn't have the was elitated more money than Miss Cindy was. You think it'd be the way around because she didn't have the support?
Exactly.
And then how did things progress from there?
Because I know that you're no longer at that school.
So then how did things progress there?
Did Amanda leave before you did and how did that happen?
Yes, so I left first. I left a year before Amanda left.
That year, it just got really toxic
because of everything that had happened with the board
and Amanda knew that we went forward.
So she was constantly watching us,
when she was there.
I remember one time walking out of my classroom
to pick up my students from lunch and Amanda's standing at the top of this stairs.
And at first I kind of was like, oh, I'm surprised to see Amanda because again, you didn't see Amanda very often at school, let alone on the playground.
I go back to my classroom. My children had a special class they went to PE. And I got a my email and had an email from Amanda that basically said that the head,
yard duty teacher wrote an email that basically said that I pick up my student's lead all the time
and that she's been complaining to her multiple times and that I need to be there and I'm going to be written up
if I'm not out there
and kind of went into this whole lengthy email.
A first thing is my heart broke,
not thinking that this was something that wasn't truthful.
I went straight to that yard duty teacher
and I told her I said,
I'm so sorry if I've ever been late to pick up my students.
I would never want to take advantage of your time.
And she's looking at me with this blank stare on her face,
like, what are you talking about?
So I told her this story, I just said,
I just got an email, Amanda told me
that you've been coming to her multiple times,
and she was like, I've never complained about you.
You always pick up your students on time.
She was sitting there like, you're being crazy right now. Like this, I've never done this. I said I'm gonna confront Amanda
and so I went to her and I told her after school Amanda, I'd like to discuss the email with you.
So she told me she'd be down in my classroom. She sat down. She was very cold when she walked in.
I told her that I spoke with a yard duty teacher and that she was very adam when she walked in. I told her that I spoke with a Yardoodie teacher and
that she was very adamant that this never happened. Amanda told me that the Yardoodie teacher
was lying that it had nothing to do with her. And you know, she kept going on on a
said Amanda, I know that she didn't do it. I don't understand why. Like it was the first
time I ever like called her out and said, I don't understand why. Like it was the first time I ever like called her out and said,
I don't understand why you're doing this. Like, why would you try to make me look bad if it's not true?
And then she completely flips it around and says, well, I hear your leaving and not coming back
next year. I heard you upset at the school and you don't want to be here anymore. I said, I'm going
to never said that. I said, I told a couple teachers, I might not come back next year because of health issues.
I said, but if I leave the school, it's going to be the hardest thing I ever do because
I love this school, but I have to put my own family first.
I can't be here if my health keeps continuing to deteriorate.
And then she puts her hand on my knee and she starts getting closer to me and starts saying,
I know exactly how you're feeling. I try to ask Shanda all the time, you know, and tell her that I
should leave, but she tells me, no, that I can do this. And so I feel like I have to stay, but I
totally understand what you're going through. I have never been so outraged. Like when she was
touching me, I just was like,
you're lying. You're lying to me right now. And now you're using
what I'm going through to try to make it seem like what you're
going through. And you first got caught in something and you
flipped it around and now you're trying to act like, Oh, no, I
know what you're going through. Let me be here too. You know,
have your back and, you know, let's have a kumbaya moment.
And it's like, no, this is not what happened.
So then she ended up getting up and saying that,
great love for you to see, but if you have to go,
I totally understand.
Like, I knew that she wanted me out of the school.
I knew that she didn't want me to be there anymore
because I was continually bringing up this stuff.
But yeah, so it just got to this point
that the toxicity on the campus, I couldn't
I couldn't take it anymore. I couldn't see my friends that I loved, the upset. I couldn't see the
the lies on a daily basis because they just ate me up and they knew that there was nothing I could do because we went through every avenue we had.
I just felt like everybody had to be silenced.
And it was really, really tough
because administration made it very, very difficult
to work there.
If you were not gonna fall in line with Amanda
and how administration was doing it,
it was like there's the door.
And it was like, you take Amanda's
sickness out of it.
The way that everybody was being
treated on that campus was just
awful. It was horrendous.
I mean, like you had said, the 14
days getting to be asked to get
any time off.
I mean, we had a teacher whose
daughter, you know, was having
headaches and went in and she was told she needed to have
an emergency MRI and the teacher went to Amanda in front of all of us and said, I need to take
tomorrow off, I need to be with my daughter. And Amanda said, it's not 14 days. You didn't give me
14 days notice. And we just had their like, when did we start working for a school that didn't
prioritize family and people above being there?
It was just heart-wrenching. It was so heart-wrenching. And it just, you felt like you were crazy.
And then on top of all of that too, the conversation was Amanda had told me that I would have her
son in my class that she wanted me to be her son's teacher. And that was like the final straw for me.
I was like, there's no way that I can be his teacher.
I can't have him coming into class every day late
between 10 and 10, 30 with Starbucks in his hand,
saying that my mom, you know, one of my friends
was his teacher in first grade.
And he would walk in with Starbucks, he'd walk in late,
he was falling behind in school,
and she couldn't do anything because Amanda would just say,
I'm sorry, I can't be at school.
I knew having him and the fact that he was being kind of groomed
to tell lies with his mom,
it would be really, really difficult for me as a teacher.
Because my heart as a teacher is wanting to always lift
up my students, help them, protect them.
And when I know this is going on
and I can't do anything about it,
I just, I knew it would be too much to continue.
So I decided not to come back for the following school year.
What impact did that have on you?
It was a huge impact.
There were actually about seven to eight teachers
that left. We were actually about seven to eight teachers that left.
We were all deemed troublemakers.
They were telling parents that,
which was crushing to my spirit,
because I loved this school.
I poured so much into the kids and families,
and I loved them like they were my own.
And then, to literally be told that I'm this troublemaker
teacher and that I needed to leave and all of this
when I'm protecting you by not going out
and saying all these things about administration,
I just put it on my health and said I needed to go.
I went through such a depression that first year
and I didn't even talk about it to people.
I felt like I let down my friends, the people I loved, that I couldn't do anything to protect
them.
I felt like this career that I had that I wanted since I was in kindergarten was taken from
me.
I still, to this day, don't think I could ever go back into teaching ever again because
just being in a school environment, the trauma and what happened being torn down
and the way it was made to feel was so hard.
It was really, really tough.
It still is tough, but I honestly feel like the podcast hearing all of the other people that were victims too,
and that she made to feel horribly.
And I know there's people that were treated way worse than me.
And when I think of Corey's daughter and everything,
and just it's heart wrenching to me.
But yeah, I'm so grateful for this podcast
because honestly, I feel like grateful for this podcast because honestly, like,
I feel like the first time I can move forward in a long time where I've been kind of stuck
for many years since I last.
I'm just sorry that, you know, I suppose to sit here and ask the questions, but I'm
going to comment.
You left the job, and I think, understandably, it's very hard to be in that kind of environment.
Never mind whether somebody's lying or not.
But the fact that this is a career that you dreamt of since you were a child,
you worked really hard, it's not easy being a teacher at all.
And you've not been able to continue your career because of what she's done.
Yeah.
That's really, I'm sorry for that.
Thank you.
I just used to think that.
I don't know, I get choked up.
Like it's like validating.
Like, when I left, I was made to feel like I did something so wrong
and that I had been doing something wrong
for those years that I was there.
But I knew it with such conviction
that what I was doing was right,
but the way that I was treated by that administration
that's still there to this day,
and how they made me feel like I was this horrible person.
It was tough.
It's super, super tough.
And I, it's like every school year
when this school year begins,
it's like my heart just drops
because I'm getting my kids ready for school.
And it's like, I want to be in my classroom,
I want to be teaching,
I want to be loving on these kids.
And these scars, I have to learn how on these kids and these scars.
I have to learn how to work through them
if I'm ever gonna figure out a way to get back in the classroom.
Well again, I don't want to speak out of turn.
On a side note, I've got quite a lot of experience in trauma
and I think it's something you should definitely grow through
and teach because well, from, you know, we've met you and, yes, I think education deserves teachers like you.
So maybe, hopefully, this is something that you can, you know, now that you know what's happened,
it's something that you can maybe think about trying again. What do you think about Amanda now and the fact that she has been
sentenced for this? That's a funny thing is that even through all of it when I
looked at Amanda all I wanted was for her to get help. I know that it didn't end
with Park Point. So hang on, did she leave Park Point as principal,
or did she get pushed?
Yeah, so they said that she resigned due to health issues.
Probably more like they said that she needed to leave
is my guess, but what they told all the parents
and everything was that and the staff
was that she resigned due to health issues
and that still painted that story.
There's two sides to every story.
You can't believe what you read.
You need to remember who Amanda is, like, all of these things.
And so it was really, really tough when all of that came out
because she was still heavily being backed by the school.
It makes me sad because my sister got diagnosed with cancer right at the beginning
of the pandemic in February and she passed away six months later and she had lung cancer, stage
four, it had metastasized through her whole entire body when they had found out. Like she had
20 plus tumors in her brain. It was all through her body, her bones, muscles everywhere by the time that they had found
it.
And she had just went in one day feeling like she was having heart complications and they
found everything.
By August, she had passed away.
And so I saw firsthand what cancer does to somebody.
And when I hear that Amanda was like saying
that she had lung cancer and it was stage four,
like I saw that firsthand.
I saw what somebody just crying and screaming and pain
because the cancer's all over their body
and they can't do anything about it, you know?
I my sister like got down to like 70 something pounds
and passed away. I mean, it was horrendous.
And even through all of that, it was like the administration like
still wouldn't reach out, wouldn't say anything. Like it's just,
it's just hard to be because it's like, I feel like
the administration has put such a target
to make me and my family and all those other teachers look so bad that it's like when it
comes down to real life, like you're willing to back somebody that faked cancer, but then
people that are really going through cancer, like Miss Cindy and there were other teachers
that had other health issues that I can't miss and
guys didn't do anything, you know, you guys didn't have their backs. I feel like Miss Cindy the entire time the school barely was there
to support her because again it was more about Amanda because Amanda loved the showiness and love to be in the limelight.
And Miss Cindy was the type of person that was like, I will give you the shirt off my back.
I'm the person that will do anything for anybody.
And she got this back road help
where Amanda was, you know, front and center
through the whole entire thing with hers.
And it just, it's so heartbreaking to me
because it's like, there's some of the best people I've ever met
in my life that work at that school.
I've grown so much from those people
and how selfless they are.
What the administration did was not okay
to those teachers and to the parents even,
but the way that those teachers are treated is so wrong and
it still continues in this protection mode of Amanda and it's not okay, it's not
okay. I'm sorry firstly about your sister. Thank you. That's really upsetting and I
can imagine extremely painful for you and your family. And I appreciate even more that you share in it
because of your own experience.
Yeah.
But yeah, just I wanna say thank you so much
for sharing with us and I hope in some way,
it gives you a little bit of closure
with everything that you've been through.
Definitely.
Now thank you.
I appreciate like, that's been my hope and
prayer through all of this is just getting to speak about it. And to you guys who
actually believe me is so therapeutic and I think also helps me to move on. I
feel like I've been taking breaths that I haven't taken in years.
And I feel like for the first time,
I'm actually hopeful for the future
where I kind of felt like I've been stuck
for a really, really long time.
And I've never wanted to stick to this.
I want to be the joyful mom to my kids and stuff.
And so I've put on a good face,
but I feel like I've been really, really stuck
since leaving. And I felt like I've been really, really stuck since leaving.
And I felt like I lost a lot of people in my life that I loved
and being on here and just getting to share
and in a way that I feel like it's being received in love.
It means a lot to my heart, and I think you're alive.
Well, thank you. And I just want to assure you that you're not the only one.
There's a lot of people and you know, you are a part of that community.
And so what you're feeling, don't feel it in isolation
because there's a big community that are with you and have been treated the same.
And you know, I'm sure we'll support you moving forward.
So hopefully, you know, this is like I said,
a bit of healing to move forward now.
Definitely.
Thank you.
Thank you, guys, very much.
Thanks to our guest today,
and, you know, I really hope you enjoyed our last bonus episode
and getting, you know, a real,
a real deeper understanding into human wonder is and how this was all done.
And thank you for listening and for making this show what it is.
We really do appreciate it and we hope you stay tuned for more from Wiresgate Sound.
Thank you again.
During the production of this podcast, we reached out several times to the superintendent at Pacific Point Christian Schools for comment. We are yet to get a response.
Scamanda is hosted and produced by me, Charlie Webster, and produced by Jackson McLeanan.
Edit and theme music by Nico Pellele.
Assistant producer Casey Hertz. Assistant editor, Cima Graywall.
Additional production support from Steven Slatton, Will Hagle and Nicole Urban.
Executive produced by me, Charlie Webster and Nancy Moskotelo.
Scamander is a Lionsgate Sound Production engineered by Pilgrim Media Group.