Allred to Defend Boy, 13, Suspended for Having Pot
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The parents of a 13-year-old boy have hired attorney Gloria Allred to represent their son, who may face marijuana possession charges in Juvenile Court.
Tyler Hagen of Saugus and three other Arroyo Seco Junior High School students could be charged with offenses ranging from possession to the sale of a controlled substance on school grounds, according to a Sheriff’s Department spokesman.
Sheriff’s officials, without giving details, cast doubt on Tyler’s story that he turned over a small amount of marijuana to his parents to help a scared friend dispose of the drug.
The seventh-grader, however, maintains that he thought he was doing the right thing when he alerted his parents instead of school officials about the marijuana on campus.
By not going to school officials immediately, Tyler was found to have violated the district’s strict school policy on illegal drugs and received a five-day suspension that ended last Friday and was transferred to another junior high school in the district.
“The actions taken by the school in reference to Tyler have been cruel and seemingly without regard to Tyler’s intentions and his good deed,” Allred said at a news conference Wednesday at her Los Angeles office.
Allred, along with Tyler and his mother, Linda, attended a William S. Hart Union High School District board meeting Wednesday night.
“We will request the right to address the board on this issue and explain why this decision to suspend and transfer Tyler is unjust and should be reversed,” Allred said before the meeting.
Allred also responded to a Sheriff’s Department announcement on Wednesday that it intended to seek charges in Juvenile Court against the junior high students who were in possession of marijuana.
“While the release did not name the boys against whom the sheriff seeks to file criminal charges, Tyler appears to be identifiable as a target of the sheriff because of the context of the release and the high-profile nature of the case,” Allred said.
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