The former superintendent of the New Jersey county where Adriana Cooch committed suicide once lectured teachers about school violence.

The disgraced former superintendent of the New Jersey school district where 14-year-old Adriana Cooch committed suicide after being mercilessly bullied, once lectured educators about the importance of identifying violent students before they hurt people.

“Many of these kids will show signs, we need to make sure we don’t miss the signs,” then-Principal High School Central Regional District Triantafyllos Parlapanides said in a 2018 TV interview after Nicholas Cruz killed 14 students and three teachers in Parkland, State Florida, in one of the deadliest massacres in the nation’s history. “They missed the signs.”

“Children don’t learn anything because they don’t feel safe,” Parlapanides preached.

His finger-pointing remarks at Florida educators during a televised jersey matters bout come back to bite him.

He confidently explained, “The only good thing about all kids today is that they post everything on Instagram, on Snapchat, so if he made a threat online, the police have a reasonable suspicion that they will go there. [his residence] and actually go and search the house to make sure everyone is safe.

Parlapanides notes during the sit-in that if there is a “live threat” on the Internet and if a student “reports it to a school official… we actually have a memorandum of agreement with our police that we can immediately notify them, share this information. ”


Adriana committed suicide just two days after four students beat her in the school hallway.
Facebook/Jennifer Ferro

seated TV
After the deadly Parkland school shooting, Parlapanides told a television interviewer that Florida educators “missed the signs” that could have saved lives.
YouTube/Jersey Matters

One commentator in a TV interview quipped, “Well, it’s not outdated.”

Adriana committed suicide two days after being severely beaten by four students in the school hallway. The harassment continued for days after the attack as the humiliating video circulated on social media, the teenager’s family said. The cops were not called, and the attackers at first received only a suspension.

Parlapanides resigned over the weekend after trying to shift the blame for Adriana’s suicide onto her family, claiming her father’s “affair” and her drug use caused turmoil in her life. He is still paid an annual salary of $190,000.

Four teenage girls from New Jersey were accused of beating. One was charged with aggravated assault, another with stalking, and two with conspiracy to commit aggravated assault.


alarm attack
The disgusting video shows Adriana’s assailants throwing a drink at her, kicking and punching her.

This week marks five years since the fatal shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
This week marked the fifth anniversary of the deadly shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, where 17 students and staff were killed.
AP

On Thursday evening, students were joined by hundreds of parents and community members who attended the first Central Regional School District board meeting since Adriana committed suicide on Feb. 3. testified to a long list of disturbing incidents that were allegedly swept under the rug.

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texasstandard.news contributed to this report.

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