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Student walk out at Cape Elizabeth High School

Walk out scheduled to protest students suspension and support sexual assault survivors at Cape Elizabeth High School

CAPE ELIZABETH, Maine — Approximately 40 students staged a walkout at Cape Elizabeth High School on Monday, October 7, just before noon.

The students say they were walking in protest of the school suspending three female students. The three girls were suspended for bullying after posting notes in the school bathroom, accusing an unnamed person of sexual assault. 

Students passed around flyers with a list of demands for the school.

The demands include expunging the records of the three girls who were suspended for posting the notes, mandating education for staff on sexual assault complaints, improving ways students can report an assault, improving curriculum surrounding consent, and providing an alternative grievance procedure that circumvents the superintendent and school board president.

A sophomore at Cape Elizabeth High School told NEWS CENTER Maine on Friday, October 4, that she was suspended for bullying after she left sticky notes in two girls bathrooms reading, "There’s a rapist in our school and you know who it is.

But school officials said the law requires they are required by law to investigate any time a student bullies another student and said they are confident in their investigation of the incident.

Mansmann said allegations of sexual assaults have occurred for years and the administration hasn't listened to the allegations. She said she posted the notes because she and other students don't feel safe at school.

"On a day-to-day level we don't feel believed," she said. "We don't feel supported."

Mansmann learned of her suspension hours after NEWS CENTER Maine spoke with Cape Elizabeth Superintendent Donna Wolfrom. Wolfrom said the school is taking all proper steps to ensure that students feel safe. She said she is confident students are in no danger.

Wolfrom said students should have voiced their concerns in a different way.

"I think there is a proper way to do it," she said. "If they go through the proper channels, I think [reporting it] is perfectly fine. We are willing to listen to our students ... [The sticky notes] caused a lot of confusion. We spent a lot of time investigating. It had adverse effects on other students. I think there could have been a better way to do it."

Cape Elizabeth schools released a statement later Friday afternoon saying the school department has never disciplined a student for advocating for their peers or their views on cultural, social and political matters. 

RELATED: Student who warned of 'rapist' at Cape Elizabeth High School says she was suspended

"It is important to understand, however, that when a student’s speech bullies another student, we are required by law and by school board policy to investigate and take prompt action, even if that same student has also spoken out on a matter of public concern," the statement reads. "We are not able to comment on the specific student matter recently reported in the press because of confidentiality laws, but we can say that we are confident that the matter was exhaustively investigated and that we took the action that law and policy require." 

Cape Elizabeth's School policy on bullying found here.

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