What a surprise, the rapist is Black
Teacher raped by 15-year-old pupil
blames school for 'putting her in the way of a rapist'
Right: Serving life, a court drawing of
Dwayne Best
A teacher who was brutally assaulted by a 15-year-old pupil
accused the school where the attack took place of 'putting her in the
way of a rapist'.
The 32-year-old, who cannot be identified, said Westminster
City School should have warned her that it was unsafe for her to be in
her classroom alone after lessons.
The woman was attacked by powerfully-built Dwayne Best as she
marked books after school - within a week of starting her job in
September, 2004.
Best is serving a life sentence after being convicted at the
Old Bailey.
Miss X sued the governing body of the school over her 'truly
horrifying' ordeal. She has reached a secret settlement in the damages
action.
Her counsel, Neil Block QC, told Mr Justice Foskett at
London's High Court that her allegations of negligence against the
school were on the basis that there had been a previous less serious
sexual assault on a cleaner.
Best also had the 'most appalling' documented history in and
out of school, displaying a belligerent and aggressive attitude.
Speaking after the case, Miss X said she had decided to bring
a civil case because she thought the school should be held to account
for their failings.
'They really failed. They let me down and I do hold them
responsible for putting me in the way of a rapist.'
She said that the school had a duty of care to its employees
under health and safety law which had not been followed.
The school should have carried out a risk assessment after the
cleaner had been attacked, Miss X said.
'Nobody warned me. On a basic level that's what it comes down
to, if they had warned me, I wouldn't have been there in the classroom.
'Truly horrifying': The teacher was raped
by pupil Dwayne Best at Westminster City School (right). She says the
school should be held responsible for the crime
'I take my own safety very seriously and I always have. I
don't put myself in those kind of positions.
'Somebody else put me in the way of a rapist, that infuriates
me intensely. Everybody has the right, not only to not be raped, but to
make decisions about their own safety.'
Miss X said that Best's school records showed a 'degenerative'
pattern of behaviour that the school should have picked up on.
'It was really bad management. If you have pupils who are in
need of structure and behavioural management then you have in place
policies and structures for teachers to use.'
Best's continually disruptive behaviour meant he should have
been excluded, she said.
'If they had done right by me, I wouldn't have been there, and
if they had done right by him, he was entitled to be properly managed,
he wouldn't have been there.
'It's very sad that nobody valued my life enough to take one
or two simple steps, that's one of the most depressing aspects of the
case.'
Miss X said she hoped that her case would make schools go back
and look again at their policies and risk assessments to make sure they
are doing what they can to keep their staff safe.
Miss X has not returned to teaching since the attack.
She said: 'Being raped and losing my job was like being
bereaved. I lost a thing I loved doing. It was devastating. I lost
myself.'
Miss X said she was now looking forward to the future, with
hopes of setting up her own business and starting a family.
Mr Block told the court today that the two sides had agreed
that as there had been a 'generous award in another jurisdiction' to
Miss X, the current proceedings should be stayed on confidential terms
with the school paying her costs.
The judge said it was very much to her credit that she wanted
to use material from the case to ensure other people did not have to go
through the same ordeal, and wished her well for the future.
A spokesman for Westminster City School said: 'This incident
took place at the school five years ago. It was a highly unusual case
which could not have been foreseen by the school. Neither was this
incident the fault of the school.
'Both parties have now resolved this matter and are not at
liberty to provide any further information.'