Crazy cheer drama

Kjahenso

New Member
Jurisdiction
North Carolina
Hello. My daughter is 9 years old. She was at cheer practice tonight (very laid back and not instructor led at the time of the incident). She found a phone on the cheer mat in the floor so she pucked it up and aske the coach if it was his. He told her no, so she held onto it for about 5 minutes. She pushed the buttons a few times to see if she could tell whos it was...but it was locked. It ended up being an older cheerleaders phone, he saw her with it and asked for it back. He noticed his screen protector was cracked and my daughter stated that is what it looked like when she picked it up of the floor...and that she didnt do anything to it.
So here is my question:
The mother of the older cheerleader and the cheerleader feel like my daughter broke the phone (although no one saw her do anything to it other than hold it in her hands) and they feel i should pay them 500.0o to replace it. The cheerleader says he left his phone on a table, not on the floor...and he thinks my daughter must have taken it and broke it. My daughter (who has her own phone, computer, kindle, etc...and has NEVER broken a single electronic device in her life) swears she never harmed it in anyway...it was the way she found it. I believe her. She is not malicious and I can tell if she has something to hide. I agree she should have never picked the phone up, and we had a long conversation about it but I do not feel we are responsible for replacing the phone. They called me, yelled and screamed at me, threatened to take me to court and I have asked them numerous times tonight to stop contacting me...to which they have not done so.
Do they have a case against us at all? I feel like this is ridiculous and her sons phone shouldnt have been left out for anyone to grab... forthermore, my daughter says she fpund it on the floor and anyone could have taken it or stepped on it, etc.
Thank-you!!
 
Yes, anyone could have taken it.
Maybe the owner damaged it.
Maybe ten other people played with it.
Perhaps a leprechaun broke it, or a ghost.
But, your child got caught with it.
She inquired about it, she was seen foundling it, not the leprechaun.

Yes, anyone can sue you.
Many people threaten to sue others.
Most don't.

You can block the calls, stop communicating, stop explaining, go silent.

Your child might get harassed, only time will tell.

If you don't think your child is the culprit, do nothing, wait out the storm.

If you're served, you respond by going to court and defending.
Based on your recitation of events, the other party has a viable case, and you have a viable defense: SODDI - some other dude did it.

Instruct your child to have no contact with the alleged victim, and not to make any comment about the broken device.
 
Back
Top