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August 28, 2017 | celebrity | Lex Jurgen | 0 Comments
Every generation struggles with universal questions of who are we as a people. If this is an open vote, we really shouldn’t be a people who let varsity high school athletes sue the hot chick teacher’s they’re banging.
Kevin Eng was a few weeks before seventeen year old football player at James Madison High School in Brooklyn. A school nicknamed “Horndog High” in local lore for the sheer number of teachers busted for nailing students. Sex was in the air. In that vein, Eng started banging Erin Sayar, a relatively attractive, slender, and by definition “DTF” 30-something married English teacher.
Eng was no newbie or socially awkward teen. He was a football player with a girlfriend. The same girlfriend who informed on Eng and the teacher when she found Sayar was blowing Eng in her classroom and the two were humping in her SUV. After her arrest, Sayar was sentenced to ten years probation, the sex offender registry, and lost her teaching license for forever. Seems harsh enough. But Eng’s family wasn’t done. They sued Sayar for emotional and psychological trauma for $750,000. And won. Who’s the jury in these matters? The jealous angry girlfriend and her clique?
This is the moment when Perry Mason needs to step in and ask for who banged who exactly here. Was the football player boning his teacher on all fours and how does that affect the particular trauma he must have experienced as a victim of hot teacher snatch?
There’s zero evidence of Sayar using her position or authority to push Eng into anything. You need to take away this married teacher’s license to educate because she clearly loves teen dick quite a bit. Do you need to enrich the kid who got awesome free teacher sex while cheating on his girlfriend? Who are we as a people? Punishing horny chicks seems like a generally horrible idea.