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School, family clash on teen's flashing folly
A mooner is fighting his punishment.
By THOMAS C. TOBIN
Published March 16, 2007
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Taylor Tillung disputes that he mooned a teacher for 15 to 20 seconds: "The whole pulling down, spreading, pulling pants back up: five seconds."
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[Times photo: Ted McLaren]
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On a recent night at Palm Harbor University High, Taylor Tillung committed the most ill-advised act of his young life. He became angry at a teacher at an after-hours school event, pulled down his pants and mooned her. On that narrow set of facts, everyone agrees. After that, the story splinters into two versions. In one, Taylor is the victim of heavy-handed discipline by Pinellas school officials, who suspended him for six days and transferred him to Clearwater High for the last 11 weeks of his senior year. In the other, the mooning was part of a "prolonged and multifaceted series of offenses" that traumatized a respected veteran teacher and could have brought harsher punishment, including a criminal charge for sexual misconduct. Taylor's parents have hired a lawyer and are appealing the transfer, furious at what they say is a lack of due process, a series of exaggerations by school officials and the system's failure to consider such factors as their son's good grades and discipline record. Todd and Terry Tillung concede that their son's actions were wrong, but say school officials are being unreasonable. "If there was just cause, I could understand it," Terry Tillung said. "I just don't feel that this is fair." At issue: the nature of Taylor's act, the details of the moments leading up to it, the severity of his punishment and the process officials used in meting out discipline. The family has hired B. Edwin Johnson, a Clearwater lawyer who once was the School Board's attorney for 14 years. However the case turns out, the 18-year-old from Palm Harbor says he would take back the night of Feb. 21 if he could. "Everybody who's been through high school knows what it means to (graduate) with their class; not many people know what it's like to have it taken away from you because of one mistake," Taylor said this week. "I don't know of a better lesson that I've learned in my life. Good decisions will take you everywhere and bad ones will take you nowhere." While a student in the medical magnet program at Palm Harbor, Taylor had a 3.2 grade point average and was accepted at Florida State University on a Bright Futures Scholarship. He says his discipline record consists of two referrals for being tardy. A leader on the varsity baseball team, the transfer will prevent him from playing the second half of his senior season. What was he thinking when he mooned a teacher? "I didn't think about the repercussions coming out of it," he said. "In my mind, I thought it was a joke because you see it in movies." High school students who are transferred in their final semester can ask a district review panel to let them graduate from their original school. But Palm Harbor principal Herman "Doc" Allen has recommended against letting Taylor back into the school. He said teachers fear other students will engage in similar acts in the weeks before graduation "if we do not dole out a severe punishment for this sort of behavior." The incident took place the night of the annual Lip Sync show, which drew a full house in the school auditorium. Arriving late because of baseball practice, Taylor was one of about 12 students trying to get in after the auditorium reached capacity and ticket sales ended. Drama teacher Carla Webster came to the door to explain the situation. According to a letter Allen wrote to district officials, Taylor forced open the door and began to argue with Webster, saying he was a senior and a baseball player and shouldn't be deprived of seeing his last Lip Sync show. "Mrs. Webster indicated that he leaned into her in a threatening manner in his abusive tirade." Allen said Taylor backed off when the teacher said she was going to get the school resource officer. Moments later, he said, Taylor dropped his pants. "He even tugged a second time on the right side to make sure that his rear end was completely exposed," Allen's letter said. "Mrs. Webster indicated that Taylor bent over and used both hands to spread his buttocks apart as far as he could, with this exposure directed at the teacher." The letter said Taylor was 5 feet from the teacher, and that the gesture lasted 15 to 20 seconds. He also wrote that Taylor initially lied about the incident to the resource officer before coming clean. Webster declined to comment. But Allen wrote that she "feels that (Taylor) needs to understand that you can't just brush everything aside with a simple and insincere apology for such a blatantly vulgar act." After 37 years with the district, Allen said, Webster is retiring at the end of the school year and deserved more respect. He said she had never been mooned by a student. Taylor had a different account. "She opened the door enough for me to talk to her," he said. "And I did put my foot in the door to make sure she could hear me. There was no argumentation. There was a pleading on my part." He said of Allen's description: "It was a bit of an exaggeration. The words that they used make it seem like a lot worse than I intended it to be." He and his parents dispute that the act took 15 seconds. "The whole pulling down, spreading, pulling pants back up: five seconds," Taylor said. He said he initially lied about the incident because he was afraid, but quickly decided to apologize. He also said his remorse is sincere. He said he apologized to Webster that night and delivered a letter to her the next day. His mother, Terry Tillung, said she talked to the parent of a student who recently mooned people in the school auditorium with Webster present. That student was given a three-day suspension. Johnson, the Tillungs' attorney, said the district violated its policy when Allen made the decision to transfer Taylor. That decision should have been made by Alec Liem, a district-level official, after hearing all the evidence, he said. Liem heard the family's appeal last week, but only considered whether the process had been followed correctly. He ruled that it had, and that Taylor had been given ample opportunity to state his case. The family has one more appeal with the district and says it is prepared to go to court. Johnson said Taylor's punishment is the result of Webster's anger over the incident. "Let's not take anger to an unreasonable level," he argued. "You put that on the scale of justice and what do you got? What happens to Taylor - this life-changing event - is so major compared to the anger."
[Last modified March 15, 2007, 23:50:07]
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Comments on this article
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by Amashkris
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02/03/08 05:07 PM
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Taylor is my hero. Go browneyes! :)
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by 14 ani
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06/10/07 07:08 AM
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My school in the future
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by Fred
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05/14/07 12:25 PM
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I feel that the punishment should fit the crime. Since he likes to drop his pants, send him to jail. Let's see if he drops them there. As a teacher, I feel that to show your buttocks to an adult is the epitome of disrespect. Whats more its illegal
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by thomas
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04/17/07 08:58 PM
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yaaa taylor!!!! gnarly dude
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by David
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04/07/07 09:25 AM
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I'll tell you what would have happened if the teacher had been my mother: Young Taylor would have been answering to me.
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by Joy
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04/06/07 06:38 PM
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I wonder what would have happened if he did that to someone's daughter at PHUHS? My son would of had heck to pay. A childish prank? The student is and adult. He should have been arrested for exposing himself. The parents are crazy!
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by Dave
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04/06/07 11:20 AM
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Grammar, in American standard formal English, commas go inside closing quotation marks.
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by Mary
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04/05/07 06:42 PM
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What Taylor did is worse than mooning and should have another name. He bent over, spread his cheeks and "gave her the ole browneye" he bragged.That really takes the act to another level than just dropping his shorts.
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by pete
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04/05/07 03:32 PM
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He should have been arrested for indecent exposure. He would have ended up in a place where mooning would have much worse consequences than being transferred.
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by Jennifer
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04/05/07 02:57 PM
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It's good that he's being punished. My sister is a teacher & I see too many little punks like this get away with being disrespectful. It should never have crossed his mind to do this. It's all in the home training. Some people have it and some don't.
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by Grammar
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04/05/07 02:49 PM
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Bethany, it's "too" when you mean "more than sufficient", and "to" when direction is implied.
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by Joey
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04/05/07 02:04 PM
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Moon them all, who really cares moons happen
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by Mark
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04/05/07 11:53 AM
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"Bethany" below is right, he should not have been transfered... He should have been kicked out completely and made to finish his school career in Summer or GED classes. Actions have consequences and it's time "society" quits making excuses.
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by Jon
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04/05/07 08:08 AM
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What a wonderful lesson to teach a young man as he embarks on his journey into adulthood; pay an attorney, and your irresponsible acts will not be followed by severe consequences.
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by Bobbie-Jo
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04/05/07 08:08 AM
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If one student did this act and didn't get transferred then why is he? Suspend him from the baseball team something but a transfer?It was the shooting of the moon not a shooting of a gun. What happens to bullies they are being disresptectful?
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by Skip
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04/04/07 11:04 PM
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The decline of respect in our public schools and society in general continues. This is outragous and the parents response is a microcosm of why our classrooms are overrun with disrespectful students, unwilling to pay for their outragous conduct.
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by Fred
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04/04/07 09:22 AM
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The kid is a jerk. And his parents are even bigger jerks. He got off lightly. He should have been arrested.
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by Greg
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04/04/07 08:43 AM
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Taylor's lesson is learned and he appears to feel terrible over this but the punishment is just. Good things will come from this experience; for both Taylor and Webster.
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by Kay
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04/03/07 04:47 PM
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so he got transfered, big deal. it's a good lesson that punishment does not always fit the deed. such is life! too often people do things intentional and think saying "sorry" makes it ok. it doesn't.
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by Goad
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03/29/07 05:22 PM
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Blame it on the television and pray you don't have to report to this "charming" individual one day.
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by Bethany
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03/28/07 09:14 PM
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Who has never made a mistake? No one! This poor kid made a mistake. I understand that the school needs to discipline him but making him transfer in the last few weeks of his senior year is outrageous! That decision is way to harsh for his mistake.
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by doris
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03/28/07 05:03 PM
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he is going in the wrong path inlife it looks like. He is acting like he is all that and everything should be handed to him. That is not real life . If he takes his punishment like a good teenager then he will learn his lesson and will think next tim
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by voiceofreason
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03/28/07 10:15 AM
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Why are the parents defending him? They should be telling him to suck it up and try not to be so stupid in the future.
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by Lindsey
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03/25/07 01:16 AM
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What bothers me is the fact that his parents are spending probably thousands of dollars on what? having an irresponsible son? PUNISH HIM! Don't make him think this was okay to do!
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by former phu student
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03/25/07 01:15 AM
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I graduated from PHU last year I was involved in theatre and had class with Taylor. Mrs. Webster has seen it all she's not the type to overreact what he did was crude and high school graduation shouldn't be the highlight of your life!
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by Bobby
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03/23/07 01:57 PM
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Ok, I think obviously what he did was wrong but we have all done stupid things when we were kids and to suspend him and transfer him durring his senior year was just too harsh. Suspend him, fine but let him spend the last weeks with his classmates!!!
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by Cat
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03/22/07 02:45 PM
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Teachers deserve respect, fine, I agree with that but I think it ridiculous that the school board really believes they can just transfer him. It was stupid, kids make mistakes and they learn from them. Give him a break, suspend him and let that be it
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by friend
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03/21/07 05:36 PM
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all you people talk about him like you know him or something. I attend that school and you know nothing so shut your mouth
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by Big Poppa
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03/19/07 08:22 AM
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School District screwed up by giving one punishment to one kid and another, more stringent punishment to this knucklehead. They will likely rescind the punishment due to the disparate treatment. He clearly should have been arrested. What an idiot!
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by Jessica
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03/18/07 08:06 PM
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Being a former PHU drama student, I am disgusted at the act. Webster deserves respect. Taylor should know that the fire department is ALWAYS out to shut the theatre down. So being a senior baseball player does NOT get you in. Think before you act.
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by Melissa
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03/18/07 11:01 AM
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In 37 yrs of teaching I feel this teacher should realize that kids make quick and stupid decisions. Does this teacher deserve respect? As far as we know yes. Does this young man deserve to be punished? Yes, but let the punishment fit the crime.
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by ray
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03/18/07 03:25 AM
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Once again we see gross disrespect of a teacher and the parents want to sue. That's why we can't educate our children properly. The parents never support teachers when their misbehaving little darlings act out. I think the punishment is correct.
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by TONY
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03/18/07 02:49 AM
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I HOPE HE "ROTS" AT CLEARWATER HIGHSCHOOL, HOW DOES IT FEEL NOT GOING TO GRADUATE WITH ALL YOUR FRIENDS. A PERFECT PLACE FOR YOU CLEARWATER THUG HIGHSCHOOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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by nomonner
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03/18/07 12:00 AM
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This kid doesn't deserve to have his face in the paper. How 'bout a close-up of those spread cheeks with his name in bold letters!
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by sal
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03/17/07 11:53 PM
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For crying out loud! He knew what he was doing when he did it. If his "record" is so clean, all the more reason to face the music! What a shame that people will actually waste the court's time with such frivolity! Take his scholarship away too!
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