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Tag: prince william county public schools

  • Former Northern Virginia choir director pleads guilty to sexual relationship with student, avoids jail time – WTOP News

    A former Northern Virginia choir director has pleaded guilty to sexual battery for engaging in a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old student.

    A former Northern Virginia choir director has pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of sexual battery against a former 17-year-old student, and has received a 12-month suspended sentence.

    Joel Adam Shapiro, 33, was sentenced Sept. 4 in Loudoun County Circuit Court after entering a plea to the misdemeanor. He was initially charged in 2024 with taking indecent liberties with a child while a custodian, which is a felony.

    Prosecutors said Shapiro worked from 2014 to 2017 for Clarke County Public Schools, and had sex several times with the student in his Leesburg home in 2017. He later worked as a choir director in Prince William County Schools from 2017 to 2024, which is when he resigned.

    According to a Virginia State Police investigator, the young woman contacted authorities in 2023 and provided pictures, text messages and handwritten notes from Shapiro.

    After the plea, Loudoun County prosecutors sought a one-year sentence for Shapiro, the maximum sentence for the Class 1 misdemeanor, according to the Loudoun Times Mirror.

    However, visiting Judge Robert J. Smith imposed a 12-month suspended sentence, and ordered Shapiro to provide a DNA sample and register as a sex offender.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Neal Augenstein

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  • ‘Letting us learn how to use it instead of hiding it away’: Prince William Co. schools readies students to use AI – WTOP News

    Prince William County, Virginia’s public school system is preparing students on how to use AI that is transforming workplaces and the workforce.

    While some fear artificial intelligence will enable students to turn in work that they didn’t research and create, Prince William County, Virginia’s public school system is preparing them on how to use the technology that is transforming workplaces and the workforce.

    “We’ll be launching Copilot” for high school students, said LaTanya McDade, superintendent of Virginia’s second-largest school system.

    “We want our students to be responsible digital citizens — it’s great to have the tools, but we also have to use the tools, responsibly.”

    In a WTOP interview outside Colgan High School in Manassas, McDade said AI-powered services, such as ChatGPT and Perplexity, are already available widely on consumer products, including phones.

    McDade said Copilot, which was developed as Microsoft’s generative artificial intelligence chatbot, can be used in ways to assist students organize their work.

    “They’re already using it outside of the classroom, right, without any levels of education around being responsible,” McDade said. “It’s exciting to me to have them leverage the AI tool, like Copilot, and use it for their actual learning.”

    McDade said using Copilot can help enhance and advance learning, “keeping kids curious and teaching them how to problem solve, and ask the right questions, because the thing about AI, it’s all about what you ask of the tool, right?”

    AI will also help teachers create lessons that will require students to do their own work.

    “AI can give you information, but it can’t think for the student,” McDade said. “The types of lessons that teachers will be able to generate using AI will really promote critical that only students can do.”

    ‘You don’t get that human feeling’

    In a separate interview, senior Kareena Grover said AI is “definitely a big and confusing thing to use, but I’m glad Prince William County Schools is letting us learn how to use it, instead of hiding it away — it’s our future.”

    Grover said she is already using AI to help in organizing.

    “I’m applying to colleges, and sometimes my organization habits are a little bit iffy,” Grover said “So, I asked ChatGPT to draft me a college applications timeline — it told me when I should be doing my college essay, when I should be doing my extracurriculars portion.”

    While critics are concerned that students might try to pass off content created by generative AI as their own, Grover said AI content is easily spotted.

    “I mean, ChatGPT is great, it can draft an essay in like three seconds,” said Grover. “But it doesn’t have the voice that humans have, it doesn’t have the same tone and style — you really can tell if it’s made up of ChatGPT or from an actual human.”

    If a student were tasked with writing an article or essay, Grover said AI wouldn’t measure up.

    “You can ask it to fix grammar or punctuation, but making an essay for yourself, you should just do it,” she suggested. “AI doesn’t have the same voice or tone as a human does, so you don’t get that human feeling.”

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • From medical training to weapons detectors: How Northern Virginia is changing up the new school year – WTOP News

    Summer is officially over for tens of thousands of Northern Virginia students as many are returning to the classroom for the new school year.

    From saving on school supplies to the impact of federal cuts, the WTOP team is studying up on hot-button topics in education across the D.C. region. Follow on air and online in our series, “WTOP Goes Back to School” this August and September.

    Cheerleaders in front of Centreville High School commemorate the first day of the 2025-26 school year on Monday, Aug. 18, 2025, in Fairfax County, Virginia. (WTOP/Scott Gelman)

    Summer is officially over for tens of thousands of Northern Virginia students as many are returning to the classroom for the new school year.

    Monday marks the first day of school for both Fairfax and Prince William counties, the state’s two largest school districts.

    Middle and high school teachers in Fairfax will be using a new grading policy, as new cellphone rules will be put in place.

    Instead of early release Mondays for Fairfax elementary school students, those days will fall on Wednesday this year. There will be eight early release days throughout the school year, allowing teachers sufficient planning time.

    The district switched days this year in response to scheduling challenges that resulted from Monday holidays.

    Weapons scanners roll out in Fairfax Co.

    When middle and high school students arrive on campus each morning in Fairfax County, they’ll have to walk through weapons detectors. The division launched a pilot program last spring, putting the technology at different high school campuses on various days.

    Calls for stronger security measures became stronger after a stabbing at West Potomac High School in April. Fairfax County Public Schools Superintendent Michelle Reid recently told families the software will be in all middle and high schools by this fall.

    She said she’s hoping it becomes “another seamless part of our safety and security procedures.”

    The district studied different software and tools for weapons detection, Reid said, and found OpenGate to be the product that was most mobile and nimble.

    “We had always intended to phase those in over time, over all of our schools,” she told WTOP while at Centreville High School.

    Junior Aidan Kownacki said while it’s a measure that aims to keep students safe, “it is going to be a little bit annoying to have to take out binder, computer every morning. But it could definitely help me feel safer at school.”

    Senior Daniel Ahn, meanwhile, said “nobody wants to be scared of this type of stuff at school. I just hope that it doesn’t make it really hard to get into the school, like everyone funneling through some of the doors.”

    Separately, as part of safety initiatives, Reid said buses have turn-by-turn tablets and there’s going to be a way of carding on and off buses so drivers know who’s on the bus and “who maybe shouldn’t be on the bus.”

    Students react to new cellphone policy

    Fairfax County high school students aren’t allowed to use their cellphones in between classes this year, as part of a change to the division’s cellphone policy.

    Elementary and middle schoolers with phones will have to put them away for the entire school day.

    Senior Sienna Lucas said students will “learn more, hopefully, without having cellphones on themselves.”

    But Senior Madysan Rich said while phones should be restricted during the school day, “I think we can have phones out in the hallway.”

    Meanwhile, senior Brady Conway said while he understands why the new rules are in place, “I can’t agree with it.”

    Junior Devyn Greene said she’s “definitely a little upset about it, and I know most students are, but I can see why they did that.”

    Few staffing vacancies, superintendent says

    Fairfax County has less than 1% of positions to fill, Reid said.

    “We’re pretty much fully staffed, and we’re excited about that,” she said. “Everyone benefits when we’re fully staffed.”

    Reid cited the work of the district’s HR department and word of mouth as contributing factors to having few vacancies.

    “Recruitment and retention is a year-round task anymore,” Reid said. “We start early, and honestly, we’ll continue recruiting throughout the year.”

    New career-based programs for Prince William Co. students

    As for Prince William County Public Schools, it’s opening the 2025-2026 school year with new technology for middle school students, a new cellphone policy, two medical-based career certification programs, and a focus on providing a positive learning environment for students.

    With 100 schools and programs, PWCPS is expecting almost 90,000 students this year, 13,000 full-time employees, and no bus driver vacancies.

    Starting this year, all middle schools have new iPads for students. Occoquan Elementary School is on track to become the county’s first net-zero school, opening this winter.

    The school system said it’s continuing to prioritize a positive climate and culture in schools. Each middle and high school will have a dean of students to support school leaders in maintaining consistency across all schools.

    A division-wide, cellphone-free policy is in place: In elementary school, devices must be off and stored away all day. Dual-purpose watches can be worn, but cellular features must be turned off.

    For middle and high schools, devices must be off and away during the bell-to-bell day but can be used before and after school. Exceptions can be made for students with IEPs, 50 plans, or safety plans.

    New Pharmacy Technician and EMT programs in Prince William Co.

    Starting Monday, as part of its Career and Technical Education curriculum, the school system is offering a pharmacy technician program at Freedom High School and new emergency medical technician programs at Unity Reed and Brentsville District High School.

    “Pharmacy techs are in high demand,” said Jessica Doiron, administrative coordinator for specialty programs at Freedom High School. “It’s a medical-based industry, and we have a lot of students who are very interested in medical fields.”

    The four-year program of study includes Introduction of Health and Medical Sciences, Medical Terminology, Pharmacy Technician 1 and Pharmacy Technician 2.

    “By their senior year, they will have to spend some clinical hours in a pharmacy,” said Doiron. “We have community partners, like CVS, where our students will actually gain hands-on experience.”

    Doiron said students who finish the program can earn a certificate that would allow them to work in a pharmacy. If a student wanted to further their education, they could continue into college and ultimately become a Doctor of Pharmacy.

    Also new this year, 11th and 12th grade students at Unity Reed and Brentsville District High School can get a hands-on introduction to a career as an EMT.

    According to PWCPS, “Students explore and apply the fundamentals of emergency medical services (EMS), anatomy, physiology, and medical terminology while demonstrating skills in assessing and managing patient care, including the understanding of medical emergencies, trauma, shock, and resuscitation.”

    “There are opportunities, careers that exist out there that you can actually start, right out of high school,” said Doiron. “And that’s extremely important to a lot of our students.”

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Neal Augenstein

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  • In first year of weapon scanners, no guns brought to Prince William Co. schools – WTOP News

    In first year of weapon scanners, no guns brought to Prince William Co. schools – WTOP News

    In the first year they were used, weapon detection scanners deterred students from bringing weapons and vapes on campus, Prince William County Public Schools reported.

    In the first year they were used, weapon detection scanners deterred students from bringing weapons and vapes on campus, Prince William County Public Schools reported, and their use will now be expanded to some sporting events.

    During the 2023-24 year, the first with Evolv scanners in all middle and high schools, there weren’t any guns brought into schools, a school district spokeswoman said.

    In May 2023, the school board in Virginia’s second-largest school division approved a plan to install the screeners in middle and high schools, including both traditional and nontraditional schools. At the time, the division said it planned to use the equipment over four years, which it anticipated would cost about $10.7 million.

    As the school division contemplated the plan, critics argued they weren’t a necessary expense and would make entering a school feel similar to walking into a prison. A year later, some are praising the technology for keeping schools safe.

    “I recognize that school is far different for my daughter, as a soon-to-be 13-year-old, than it was for me,” parent Alexis Hackett said. “As a parent, I have a lot of things to worry about in her day-to-day, and it’s one less thing that I feel like I have to worry about that helps me feel a little bit more secure as she goes to school.”

    Now, in the second school year with the screeners, the school division is planning to use them at varsity basketball and football home games.

    “It’s a great thing, because there have been things that have happened at these games,” Hackett said.

    The process proved to be quick for most kids last year, as 93% of students passed through the system without needing to be searched, the spokeswoman said.

    The Evolv scanners use artificial intelligence and sensors to detect knives, guns and other weapons. Students just remove their laptops while they’re passing through, and an alarm sounds if the system detects something that appears dangerous.

    Hackett described the process as smoother than she expected it to be, and that lines to enter the school never seemed unreasonably long. There was only one day, when her daughter had cleats in her bag, that she set the alarm off, Hackett said.

    The detectors have also deterred students from bringing vapes into school, the county said. Vaping is down 22%, and other weapons are down 72%, the spokeswoman said.

    “While the safety screening technology isn’t infallible, it adds an extra layer of protection alongside our school security officers, school resource officers, and other security protocols,” the county said in a statement. “PWCS is committed to ensuring our facilities are safe, welcoming and sustainable. The safety and security of our students and staff is our top priority.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • New school year begins for hundreds of thousands of students in Northern Virginia – WTOP News

    New school year begins for hundreds of thousands of students in Northern Virginia – WTOP News

    The first bells of the 2024-2025 school year rung for hundreds of thousands of students across Northern Virginia Monday morning.  

    From vaping, the cost of school supplies to cellphone policies, the WTOP team is studying up on hot-button topics in education across the D.C. region. Follow on air and online in our series “WTOP Goes Back to School” this August and September.

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    As students return to school, teachers, parents discuss new phone policy in Prince William County

    The first bells of the 2024-2025 school year rung for hundreds of thousands of students across Northern Virginia on Monday morning.

    Public schools in Alexandria, Fairfax City, Fairfax County, Falls Church City, Manassas Park City and Prince William County welcomed students back, some attending for the first time.

    Fairfax County

    “I am thrilled to welcome our students, our staff and our families back to another fantastic year of learning,” Fairfax County Public Schools Superintendent Michelle Reid told WTOP, standing outside James Madison High School in Vienna.

    Fairfax County Public Schools is Virginia’s largest school district, with 180,970 students enrolled last year.

    Reid said the new school year is an “opportunity to really focus on teaching and learning,” with a “distraction-free” classroom pilot program at seven middle schools and eight high schools across the county.

    Students at those schools will place their cellphones in either a hanging pouch or storage locker during class time. They will still be allowed to use them during lunch and between classes.

    “It’s really important that during class time we really stay focused on the teaching and learning task at hand,” Reid said. “We need to think about how we can use cellphones and technology in general as a tool to support, rather than distract.”

    The school system has seven early-release Mondays scheduled for this school year. Reid said that allows an opportunity for teachers and other staffers to ensure they have the early-literacy training required by the Virginia Department of Education, plus “enabling them to have planning time to support quality instruction.”


    More Back-to-School stories


    Prince William County

    In neighboring Prince William County, students at Gainesville High School were greeted by excited teachers and other school employees.

    “The energy that you have on the first day of school is hard to match,” principal Neil Beech told WTOP.

    He said this is the first year all four grade levels at Gainesville High School will be filled.

    “I’m excited to see all of the things that we can do as a result of having a full staff and a full student body. The graduating class this year, the class of 2025, is the first class to have gone through all four years at Gainesville High School. That’s a big deal for our school and our community,” Beech said.

    Gainesville senior Maddy Lis could feel the excitement of the first day and filed in to the school before 6 a.m. for back-to-school festivities.

    “This is a once in a lifetime opportunity. It’s our senior year. We thought we might as well continue to get involved and just make a good memory out of this,” she said.

    Prince William County Public Schools expanded its restrictions on cellphone usage to all middle and high schools this year. But Beech said he doesn’t believe it will become a huge issue.

    “Last year, we asked our students to put their cellphones away during each of our class periods … the students were responsive to that,” Beech said. “And again, I think the students understand why it’s a good idea. It’s just to reduce distractions in our classrooms.”

    Babur Lateef, chairman at-large of the Prince William County School Board, told WTOP the first day of school is “the most optimistic day of the year.”

    Lateef said the school system hit a graduation rate of 94.3% back in June, and he’s hopeful that rate will reach 95% this school year.

    WTOP’s Neal Augenstein and Luke Lukert contributed to this report.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Matt Small

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  • Thousands more Prince William Co. students to get free school meals next year – WTOP News

    Thousands more Prince William Co. students to get free school meals next year – WTOP News

    Thousands more Prince William County Public Schools students will have access to free breakfast and lunch next year.

    In Prince William County, 24 more schools will be added to the Community Eligibility Provision, which allows schools and school divisions to offer free meals to students without requiring applications.(WTOP/Scott Gelman)

    Thousands more Prince William County Public Schools students will have access to free breakfast and lunch next year after a major change to the criteria used to determine whether a school can offer free meals to the whole student body.

    Previously, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said 40% of students at a school have to automatically qualify for free meals to make them available to every student at the school. But the agency recently changed that to 25%, and as a result, over 26,000 more students will be offered the meals in the upcoming school year.

    In Prince William County — Virginia’s second-largest school district — 24 more schools will be added to the Community Eligibility Provision. That allows schools and school divisions to offer free meals to students without requiring applications.

    “It just removes a barrier to participation in our meals,” said Andrea Early, the school district’s director of food and nutrition. “And so, the more kids we can draw into the program, the more good nutrition we can get to them, the more they can contribute to their academic success in our schools.”

    Now that more schools in the district will be offering the free meals, Early said the school system has launched a campaign to make sure families are aware of the change. For students at schools not covered under the Community Eligibility Provision, accessing the free meals requires paperwork, and eligibility is tied to income level.

    Abby Izzo, the band teacher at Parkside Middle School in Manassas, said she expects most of the students there to take advantage of the free lunch. Over half the students there were participating in the free lunch previously, but she said she expects more to start this fall.

    “They’re going to be more apt to learn, they’re going to be more apt to be successful, if they’re not hungry,” Izzo said.

    Dominick Izzo, a choir teacher at Osbourn Park High School, said the expansion of the program will help parents allocate money elsewhere for classes that have field trips or other costs.

    Osbourn Park is one of the two dozen schools where free meals will be available to every student this upcoming school year.

    “The students that I teach, in which lunch is free for them, seeing them walk into my room to eat lunch, having that hot meal every day is so important to a child’s happiness throughout the school day,” Dominick Izzo said. “Many of our students go home to a place where there isn’t a hot meal.”

    Scott Munnelly, an area manager with the division, said, “Kids come through the line, and there’s no thought of who’s paying for it, where it comes from, they’re just able to get a great, nutritious meal, and families don’t have to worry about incurring a debt for that.”

    The schools that will now start offering free breakfast and lunch to all students include:

    Elementary Schools

    • Antietam Elementary School
    • Chris Yung Elementary School
    • Coles Elementary School
    • Covington-Harper Elementary School
    • Kyle Wilson Elementary School
    • Lake Ridge Elementary School
    • Mary Williams Elementary School
    • Montclair Elementary School
    • Pattie Elementary School
    • Penn Elementary School
    • Rosa Parks Elementary School
    • Signal Hill Elementary School
    • Springwoods Elementary School
    • Tyler Elementary School
    • Victory Elementary School
    • Westridge Elementary School

    Middle Schools

    • Lake Ridge Middle School
    • Parkside Middle School
    • Potomac Shores Middle School
    • Saunders Middle School

    High Schools

    • C.D. Hylton High School
    • Osbourn Park High School
    • Potomac High School
    • Woodbridge High School

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Scott Gelman

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  • Prince William Co. schools are hiring another human trafficking prevention specialist. Here’s what the job entails – WTOP News

    Prince William Co. schools are hiring another human trafficking prevention specialist. Here’s what the job entails – WTOP News

    Prince William County Public Schools will be hiring another human trafficking prevention specialist, which will be funded by the recently approved fiscal 2025 budget.

    The Edward L. Kelly Leadership Center serves as the administrative office facility for Prince William County Schools. (Courtesy Prince William County Public Schools)

    Prince William County Public Schools will be hiring another human trafficking prevention specialist, which will be funded by the recently approved fiscal 2025 budget.

    The county’s board of supervisors approved the school system’s budget in late April.

    Virginia’s second-largest school system already has one human trafficking prevention specialist, a role that’s been around for over a decade. Anthony Clark, the school division’s supervisor of school social workers, said the concept came to be in 2012, when the Virginia General Assembly updated the state code to say that school districts will provide resources and prevention around human trafficking.

    Prince William County received a grant from the Potomac Health Foundation and hired the school system’s first trafficking specialist in 2013. The role was funded using grant money until 2018, when the school board made it permanent.

    The county, Clark said in an exclusive interview with WTOP, was the first in the state to create such a role. A Loudoun County schools spokesman added that the school system has a number of staff members trained in trauma-informed practices but not a position specific to that role.

    The job is helping keep students safe, Clark said, by recognizing that schools are in a unique position to assist students who may be involved in trafficking.

    “We see every student in Prince William County, therefore they pass through our educational system,” Clark said. “We find ourselves better equipped to work with our community as a partner to help identify what the needs of these students and this vulnerable population looks like.”

    Clark described the position as a dedicated person at the school level “to identify these students who may be involved in human trafficking, whether it’s labor or sex trafficking, and also do some prevention around them with respect to direct services and intervention for those students.”

    What the lessons entail

    Tiffany DiBenedetto started in the human trafficking prevention specialist role this school year. The job, she told WTOP in an exclusive interview, is different every day.

    DiBenedetto regularly monitors data and often consults with school social workers. If they’ve identified a concern about a student, they consult with her about specific cases. She also coordinates the school district’s Human Trafficking Prevention Program, working closely with physical health and physical education teachers to implement that presentation into the ninth grade curriculum.

    Since the program started, almost 50,000 students have participated in the trafficking lesson. It’s part of the school district’s Family Life Education curriculum for high school freshmen.

    Part of that lesson, Clark said, is showing students what trafficking looks like. They explain that it’s not similar to what happens in the 2008 movie “Taken,” where someone is kidnapped, taken to another country and sold. Teachers explain it could start by someone wanting to start a relationship with them, buying them expensive gifts and admiring their physical appearance.

    The lessons reveal warning signs, such as getting involved with an older romantic partner or getting a tattoo or some type of branding. The school district also looks at factors such as absenteeism.

    “We can really see ourselves as sort of a central hub, as far as getting that information that some of our other community partners and agencies may not even be aware of,” Clark said. “Because we have so many staff in place, a lot of things are said, a lot of things just kind of take place within the school setting.”

    Once the presentation ends, students get the chance to meet with school social workers. Sometimes, they’re seeking more information about prevention.

    “We may meet with the student together to provide that additional education around human trafficking,” DiBenedetto said. “Other times, it may look like there are some concerns there. Together, the school social worker and I will identify the student’s needs and make the necessary referrals.”

    Each year, Clark said, the school system discovers that one or two of its students are involved in trafficking.

    “The instances are very rare in the county, but I do believe that it’s an important education to raise that awareness piece for students and staff, so they can identify what the warning signs are, be educated around that area, as well as know where to go for help,” DiBenedetto said.

    If the school system learns a student may be involved in trafficking, the goal is then to connect them with services and support “to try to get them out of that environment of trafficking.” They also contact law enforcement and connect with other community groups.

    Clark said the county is working to determine any gaps in services that could be addressed when a second specialist is hired.

    “We do see an expansion of our existing practices and programming,” Clark said.

    Common trafficking misconceptions

    As part of the school district’s programming, Clark said officials are working to show students what trafficking doesn’t look like.

    “This is not a situation where someone’s going to come kidnap you and just take you off to some far land, and have you involved in trafficking,” Clark said.

    Traffickers usually target 12 or 13-year-old students. The majority of trafficking victims are female.

    However, Clark said, “The misconception becomes that males are not targeted.”

    If male students are targeted, Clark said they’re usually not targeted to be brought into sex trafficking but instead are recruited to be brought in as a trafficker themselves.

    “We have victimization on both sides of that, typically with males,” Clark said.

    The county also explains to students what the grooming process looks like and emphasizes that it’s something that happens over time, not quickly.

    “We think, for a lot of our young people, that’s a big part of the misconceptions around what traffickers do in order to groom their victims,” he said.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Scott Gelman

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