Posted on 02/15/2004 6:46:32 AM PST by Non-Sequitur
ROANOKE, Va. The two-lane bridge that Ron Mayfield Jr. came to the morning of his death stands almost 200 feet above the waters where his father took him fishing as a boy.
Years later, he spent hours there with his own son, casting for catfish and perch.
He made two final calls on his cell phone that morning, gasping out a farewell to his wife and dialing 911 without saying a word. Then he lay the phone beside the road and straddled the knee-high metal bridge railing.
At an hour when the school day was just getting started six miles away at Woodrow Wilson Middle School, Mayfield leaned sideways and let go, falling into the river.
The note he left tucked in the Bible, on the front seat of the car he left properly parked in the rest area by the bridge, began this way: I am so sorry for what I have done, but there is no way I could carry on, absolutely no way.
The apology was for taking his own life. He had no need to apologize for what drove him to his death, because Mayfield knew it was untrue.
A student at Woodrow Wilson told authorities that he had been assaulted by Mayfield, 55, who taught English to non-native speakers. Mayfield denied it, but his word, his reputation and his spotless record weren't enough. He had been suspended, and police were called in to investigate.
What Mayfield didn't know as he mounted the bridge that morning was that police had cleared him of wrongdoing.
No national statistics are kept on the number of false accusations that students make against teachers, but experts have said the evolving culture of the classroom has caused the number of reports of abusive teachers to increase in the last 15 years. A study in Great Britain found that 1,782 allegations of abuse by teachers resulted in 96 prosecutions.
There is a culture now where students know how to get rid of a teacher, they know how to get a teacher removed from a classroom, said Greg Lawler, general counsel for the Colorado Education Association.
Lawler said the change occurred after states began requiring schools to report alleged abuses by teachers because stuff was being swept under the rug.
When he took the education association job 17 years ago, Lawler said, he spent 30 percent of his time defending teachers accused of criminal acts. Accusations have increased so dramatically that he and another lawyer now work full time defending teachers, he said.
Mayfield's friends and family said they are struggling to understand how a man who never had as much as a traffic ticket and no history of depression or mental illness could be driven to such despair.
So many of us are at a loss to comprehend what level of loneliness and isolation he was feeling to drive him to such a tragic end, said Anita Price, president of the Roanoke Education Association. It is hard to just even begin to fathom how someone could feel so totally alone and isolated.
The flow of the waters where Mayfield fished as a boy and a man is controlled by a dam. The waters were slowed the morning after his death, lowering the river level to aid in the search for his body. A National Park Service ranger found it about 11 a.m., caught on rocks normally beneath the water.
At his funeral, a student gave the family a letter. It said: He taught us how to be courteous and polite like he was. I would never forget what he taught us. Thanks for being a great teacher, Mr. Mayfield.
You can ask such a question in this politically sensitive day and age? Where accusation alone is enough to impeach, and legal findings of innocense are meaningless?
No. Death is not a reasonably foreseeable result of making a false accusation. Not that it's an impossible result, just that it's not expected.
If your conclusion were to hold, think of the jilted lovers, especially teens, who commit suicide over the loss of their boy or girlfriend. We don't charge the partner that dumped them with manslaughter, and shouldn't.
I didn't ask a question, I stated an opinion. And I can tell you with certainty that if I were falsely accused of something similar that I'd fight like hell for justice and to restore my reputation. Instead, he took the easy (and cowardly) way out. .....And utterly destroyed the lives of his family in the process.
So, his reputation at his schoolteaching job was more important to him than his wife and kids. And now, after killing himself, he has none of them and he's set a bad example for others to follow. He's not a hero in my book.
Absolutely not. There should be a stiff penalty for malicious accusations with no basis in fact.... But this outcome by Mayfield is bizarre and not predictable.
In my opinion, no. I believe the great majority of those who are falsely accused don't kill themselves. Something in Mayfield's own psyche led him to take his own life.
If the police have clear-cut evidence that the charges were fabricated they should prosecute the student for making the false accusation, but not for manslaughter.
Good luck trying that. The harder you fight, the more guilty people will think you are. There is no way to defend against a false accusation in today's America.
Not that suicide is the answer either. Just look at the responses of people on this string that think the man must be guilty of something or he wouldn't have killed himself.
Well then the only option is what I stated. It may or may not work, but there are no other (sane) choices.
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