August 29, 2022

USA: Parents Of Two Prosper ISD Elementary Students Are Suing The District Because They Failed To Protect Their Daughters From A Bus Driver Who Abused Them More Than 100 Times.

FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth published August 26, 2022: Parents sue Prosper ISD, alleging bus driver sexually abused their daughters. The parents of two Prosper ISD students are suing the district because they claim the district failed to protect their young daughters from a bus driver who abused them more than 100 times during the last school year.

Fox4 KDFW News, Dallas-Fort Worth local
written by Peyton Yager
Friday August 26, 2022

PROSPER, Texas - The parents of two Prosper ISD students are suing the district and seeking $5 million in damages because they claim the district failed to protect their young daughters from a bus driver who abused them more than 100 times during the last school year.

The lawsuit states the abuse started at the beginning of the school year, in September 2021, and then took place every morning the girls got on the bus with 61-year-old Frank Paniagua.

Video surveillance reportedly caught the abuse of the two young girls.

The lawsuit states Paniagua touched the 5-year-old inappropriately and gave her candy.

The suit said the older sister’s abuse was worse.

It stated Paniagua sexually assaulted the 7-year-old at the back of the bus for 3 to 5 minutes every morning.

Paniagua reportedly told Prosper ISD administrators that "the delays with de-boarding were due to the 7-year-old helping him clean up trash on the bus."

The lawsuit blames Prosper ISD employees that standing in the drop off line, claiming they missed clear signs of abuse.

It also claims Prosper ISD tried to sweep the allegations under the rug, and that the superintendent gave the girls’ mother a "scant courtesy call and insinuated she stay silent to not attract media attention."

In a statement to FOX 4, the district said it "…took swift and thorough action when we were first made aware of the allegation against this former employee."

In May, Paniagua was booked in the Collin County Jail on multiple sexual abuse of a child charges.

The lawsuit said he attempted suicide while in custody by jumping off the second floor of the jail, paralyzing himself.

He died a month later.

When asked for Paniagua’s cause of death, the Collin County Sheriff’s Office told FOX 4 it’s currently under investigation.

The Collin County Medical Examiner’s Office didn’t have his name on file.

One of the attorneys representing the family said after the abuse was brought to the district attention, the superintendent never notified other parents who had children on the same bus.

Now, the team of attorneys is asking any other children who were on the bus who may have experience the same trauma to come forward.
FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth published August 29, 2022: Anger at Prosper ISD meeting over lawsuit about alleged child molester. Some district parents expressed outrage because they say they still don't know whether their children were also on the school bus driven by Frank Paniagua. He committed suicide while in custody for continued sex abuse of a child. It's alleged he assaulted two very young girls every morning while they rode his bus.

Fox4 KDFW News, Dallas-Fort Worth local
written by Peyton Yager
Monday August 29, 2022

PROSPER, Texas - A packed house at Prosper ISD Monday days after a lawsuit claimed the district did little to protect two girls from a predator.

Some district parents expressed outrage because they say they still don't know whether their children were also on the school bus driven by Frank Paniagua.

Paniagua committed suicide while in custody for continued sex abuse of a child. It's alleged he assaulted two very young girls every morning while they rode his bus.

The board spoke in private right as the meeting started, and it stayed that way for more than an hour.

The district says it took swift action once the allegations were presented. But parents say they didn’t learn about the allegations until just a few days ago.

Parents and community members packed Monday night’s Prosper ISD school board meeting with a lot of questions.

Many in the crowd wore blue ribbons symbolizing child abuse awareness.

It comes less than a week after a lawsuit was filed against prosper ISD claiming the district failed to protect two sisters from a sexually abusive bus driver.

"How many things have to be swept under the rug before the reputation comes second to our children’s wellbeing," one parent said.

One parent identified herself as having a son also on the same bus.

"Why was I never contacted," she said. "My child could’ve come in contact with a child molester."

The lawsuit claims Prosper ISD employees missed clear signs of abuse and claims the district tried to keep the allegations out of the media.

It states Paniagua assaulted the two elementary students, 5 and 7 at the time, every morning they rode the bus totaling more than 100 times last school year. According to the lawsuit, surveillance video caught the abuse.

Prosper mother Hillary Morabito says parents were never notified of the allegations or Paniagua’s arrest until she learned about the lawsuit last week three months after the district and police launched an investigation.

"I am extremely disappointed in the lack of transparency due to the distrust mishandling of this tragic event," she said.

"It starts all the way from the top," said parent Pat Cochrane. "So there is systemic leadership failure. That’s what I see this as."

Cochrane had a kid who went to school in Prosper ISD. He and others at Monday’s meeting are asking for an independent investigation into how the district has handled this situation.

In a prepared statement after a 90-minute closed session, the board revealed an outside firm will step in. The announcement met with applause.

"We want to come together and make sure this doesn’t happen again and our children are safe," Morabito said.

Paniagua was arrested in May. He committed suicide while in Collin County custody and died in June.

Parents were pleased with the announcement of the independent investigation, but they are still calling on the superintendent to be fired.

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