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WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Ohio Co. school board settles with man who says he was sexually assaulted by former teacher

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WHEELING – The Ohio County Board of Education has settled claims with a man who had blamed the school system for years of sexual assault by a former teacher with whom he had children.

“Chris Birch’s case against the Ohio County Board of Education has recently resolved with an agreement regarding all remaining matters between the parties,” Birch’s attorney Terersa Toriseva said in a statement released Nov. 14. “The board denies any and all liability in this matter. Mr. Birch is grateful and pleased the matter has resolved and is thankful for all the public support he received while the case was proceeding.

“Mr. Birch is anxious to move forward and will have no further comment on these matters.”


Harbert

No other terms of the settlement were disclosed. Birch was represented by Toriseva of Toriseva Law in Wheeling and by Shari McPhail of McPhail Law in Wheeling.

Birch’s former teacher, Elizabeth Harbert, was convicted in August of third-degree sexual assault of a student and is serving at least one year in prison.

Harbert entered an Alford or Kennedy plea Aug. 13. An Alford or Kennedy plea is one in which the defendant does not admit to the criminal act but admits the evidence likely would persuade a jury to find him or her guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Harbert will spend one to five years in prison. She was not ordered to pay any fines, but she will be registered as a sex offender for life. She also will have 10 years of supervised release when she gets out of prison.

In a highly publicized civil lawsuit that has drawn worldwide attention since it was first reported by The West Virginia Record, Birch says his relationship with Harbert started when he was her student in middle school and continued for 14 years. He also claims other school personnel, including a principal who now is a member of the county school board, knew of the situation but did nothing to stop it.

Birch filed a civil lawsuit against Harbert earlier this year, accusing her of sexually and mentally abusing him for years, including giving birth to his children. The former Wheeling Park High School Principal and current Ohio County school board member Christine Carder and the Ohio County Board of Education also were named defendants in that lawsuit. Harbert and Carder were dismissed from the lawsuit in June, but the school board still was being sued despite asking Ohio Circuit Judge Jason Cuomo to reconsider the decision. The undisclosed settlement puts the case to a close.

Cuomo previously dismissed 10 of the 11 counts in Birch’s lawsuit. Most of the issues related to the timing of the lawsuit, which was filed April 4 of this year. Birch is 28 years old. He became an adult on Dec. 4, 2008, which was his 18th birthday. The statute of limitations then would have been Dec. 4, 2010.

Harbert was arrested April 24 on a charge of sexual abuse by a parent or person of trust.

Earlier in April, Birch amended his original complaint to include lab results showing the first of their four children is his and was born when Birch was 16 years old.

Shortly after the civil complaint was filed, Harbert’s attorney says his client denied the allegations. In fact, he said she alleges she was a victim of physical and emotional abuse at the hands of her accuser.

"Elizabeth Harbert appreciates the wide range of support she has received from family, friends, and colleagues through this difficult time," Mark Kepple of Bailey & Wyant's Wheeling office said in a statement provided April 12 to The Record. "Ms. Harbert requests privacy to protect her four beautiful children from these reckless and false allegations. However, given the use of the press by Mr. Birch to spread salacious lies about her, a response is necessary.

"The allegations of wrongdoing and inappropriate conduct are denied. Ms. Harbert challenges any and all allegations which suggest she consented to a relationship with Mr. Birch when he was a student in the Ohio County school system.

  "Mr. Birch’s actions and his lawsuit represent a disgusting new low in the history of American jurisprudence. This lawsuit is nothing more than a money grab and an underhanded attempt to separate a mother from her children. We are confident that the civil justice system will expose the decade-plus history of the physical and emotional abuse she suffered at the hands of Mr. Birch and vindicate her fully."

Birch filed his original complaint April 4 in Ohio Circuit Court against Harbert, the Ohio County Board of Education and Carder. The amended complaint, filed April 9, included redacted lab results showing the near certainty that he is the father of the oldest child.

"Plaintiff and B.H. (the first child) had a DNA test completed by Certified DNA Solutions, and the test results indicated he was 99.99 percent the father of B.H.," the amended complaint states. "Because plaintiff was born on December 4, 1990, and B.H. was born July 7, 2007, as a matter of indisputable fact, B.H. was conceived just before plaintiff turned 17 years old."

In his complaint, Birch paints a picture of a relationship that is reminiscent of the infamous story of Mary Kay Letourneau, a Washington state teacher who pleaded guilty in 1997 to two counts of felony second-degree rape of a child, who was her 13-year-old student.

"When schools fail to protect students from sexual abuse by teachers, there must be public accountability," Teresa Toriseva, who is one of Birch's attorneys, said when the complaint first was filed.

Birch’s relationship with Harbert began when he was a 13-year-old student at Bridge Street Middle School. He was her student and a member of the track team she coached.

“He thought of her as a mom,” the complaint states. “She played dual roles of mother and guardian, teacher, coach and girlfriend.”

Over the next 14 years, Birch says he tried to leave Harbert more than 30 times, saying he did so recently when he “finally found the way forward that did not cost him a relationship with his young children.”

“A 14-year-old cannot consent to sex with his 28-year-old teacher guardian coach,” the complaint states. “The sexual abuse and assault continued for over a decade unabated, with Chris admittedly at times believing he was in love.

“The abuse was apparently widely suspected and known by the principal, teachers, parents and even other peers. Reports were made, the teacher was told of such reports, and the school took no meaningful action to investigate even in the face of a teacher who was recently divorced, now pregnant, coming to and from school every day with Chris, and other obvious possible red flags of abuse.”

According to the complaint, Birch was living with his grandmother during the 2004-05 school year when he was an eighth-grade student at Bridge Street. He never knew his father, and his mother struggled with addiction. During the school year, Birch began living with Harbert and her then-husband, who also coached the track team.

“Harbert was Chris’s science teacher at BSMS,” the complaint states. “She would help him, give him advice and guide him.

She began purchasing things for Chris, including shoes. He was struck by this because she would let him pick out any shoes he wanted, an option he had never had prior to this. By the end of the school year, defendant Harbert decided Chris would move in with her and her husband and she offered to him and her husband.”

One time during the summer of 2004, Birch says the first instance of sexual abuse occurred. He was in bed sick at Harbert’s home. He was 14, and she was 28. She had just been appointed his guardian.

  “Harbert abused Chris, while Chris was in bed sick, with sexual petting and kissing,” the complaint states. “After that, the incidences of sexual contact increased and the first incident of sexual intercourse occurred in September 2004, after school.

“Defendant Harbert would regularly sleep in Chris’s bed when her husband worked overnight.”

Birch says Harbert’s husband at the time was a coal miner and worked shift work.

“Harbert would set a trap by the door so she’d have an audible warning of her husband coming in the front door (if unexpectedly) with his key, which would then presumably give her time to change bedrooms back to the master suite bed,” the complaint states.

The following school year, Birch moved on to Wheeling Park High School. Harbert transferred to work at the school as well.

“Chris was embarrassed and felt weird about her teaching at his new high school,” the complaint states. “Harbert claimed it was a better paying position even though she would no longer be coaching track and receiving no additional income.”

Birch says the first incidence of abuse by way of sexual intercourse occurred one September evening after school that year. Harbert took Birch to a drug store in Ohio so they wouldn’t be noticed buying condoms.

“After the sexual intercourse, Chris mentioned that he felt sad that he had lost ‘Liz’ as a mother,” the complaint states. “In response, defendant Harbert told Chris, then 14 years old, that, ‘He should just think of her as 70 percent mom and 30 percent girlfriend; no big deal.’

“As time went by and Chris progressed in high school, the percentages changed until she was ’70 percent girlfriend and 30 percent mom’ and then the concept faded away.”

During his freshman year, Birch was interviewed by a social worker for less than 10 minutes following a neighbor’s report that Birch might be being abused.

  “Harbert counseled Chris on how to respond in the social worker’s interview, drove him to the interview, and for a couple of days, purchased and made him use Trac phones that were not traceable, for them to communicate,” the complaint states. “Chris was asked if he was having sex with defendant Harbert. He said no, one time, answered a few other basic questions, and left.

During Birch’s sophomore year, Harbert and her husband got divorced. She also told Birch she had stopped taking birth control because “she couldn’t afford it and that it was no big deal because she couldn’t get pregnant anyway.”

Early during his junior year of 2007-08, Birch learned Harbert was pregnant with their first child.

“Chris was hurt, scared, nervous and panicked,” the complaint states. “Chris started trying to distance himself from her and he tried to end the relationship with her.

“Chris started dating a girl his age but was followed, harassed, and otherwise relentlessly tormented by defendant Harbert and was not allowed to see his young baby without having a romantic relationship with defendant Harbert.

‘Defendant Harbert sat Chris down and said that he ‘had to be with her because that is what was right and that is how it should be.’

“Chris tried to attend junior prom but was harassed and harangued by defendant Harbert for going to prom with a girl his age (another student).”

Their first child was born July 7, 2007.

“His senior year was filled with a baby in diapers, a girlfriend his age that he really liked and who felt mutually, and a teacher who would threaten that bad things might happen (loss of ability to see his son) if he broke up with her,” the complaint states. “Chris was stalked, harassed and followed by defendant Harbert when he tried to distance from Harbert. This was seen and known by various people who saw her presence everywhere Chris might be found.”

He again tried to attend prom.

  “Harbert was furious and harassed and harangued him to the point that he had to shut his phone off completely overnight for incessant, non-stop ringing,” the complaint states. “Chris quit playing all sports as a senior – basketball, football, and track. He had played sports since seventh grade but felt that he had more ‘adult’ things to worry about.

As he was about to graduate, Harbert told Birch he wasn’t going to college but would work in the coal mine to “provide for his family.” He did that from age 18 to 23.

Harbert “groomed and brainwashed” Birch, according to the complaint.

“She controlled his living conditions, controlled his money, controlled his transportation, manipulated him with affection or withheld it, controlled him with discipline, and controlled him with dramatic instances of public that would cause him to comply with her to avoid the public drama,” the complaint states. “Chris has tried to leave or ‘break-up’ with defendant Harbert 30 times or more over the years.

“Each time, Chris was threatened that he would not be able to see his children for various reasons. In fact, each time Chris tried to break away from the dominion and control exercised over him, he was denied access to his children.

“Every time Chris tried to pull away from defendant Harbert, she would harass him, yell, scream, cry and throw fits.”

The complaint details an incident when Harbert dented Birch’s car by throwing a pumpkin at it and another when she rammed his car with hers to keep him from leaving.

“She told him who he ‘was allowed’ to spend time around, where he could go, how long he could be gone, where to work, what house to buy and more,” the complaint states. “Chris had to ask permission to play basketball with my friends.

  “Defendant Harbert told Chris that he wasn’t smart enough for college anyway and that ‘men needed to work.’ Defendant Harbert openly and repeatedly told Chris that she had plans to cut Chris out of the children’s lives.”

Harbert taught at Wheeling Park until last August when she resigned to “avoid being taken out of school in handcuffs,” according to the complaint.

“No school official ever fully investigated or took appropriate action against defendant Harbert for her longstanding and apparently widely known illegal and immoral relationship with Chris Birch, her student, and a boy who thought of her as a mom,” the complaint states. “Further, defendants Harbert, Carder and the Ohio County Board of Education acted in concert with each other to conceal facts from plaintiff Chris Birch and the local authorities to prevent exposure and therefore, obstruct the prosecution of the sexual abuse.”

Carder was the principal at Wheeling Park when Birch was a student. She now is a member of the Ohio County Board of Education.

“Parents of students and relatives of Chris contacted the school to report their concern that Chris was being sexually abused by a teacher,” the complaint states. “The school interviewed defendant Harbert but never interviewed Chris. Chris only learned about these reports after he left Defendant Harbert in 2018.

“All of the above caused him to be under such duress as a minor that even after reaching the age of majority, he was still under a mental disability as to his relationship with defendant Harbert such that he was unable to make an objective evaluation of the situation and his rights regarding the ongoing sexual assaults against him.”

  Birch accuses the defendants of negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, civil conspiracy and fraudulent concealment, saying they all willingly and knowingly conspired to cover up reports and red flags about Harbert’s abuse. He accuses the school board of vicarious liability and negligent retention, hiring and supervision. He accuses Harbert of sexual assault and harassment at school and school events. He also accuses the defendants of wrongful birth based on the “open secret” that Harbert was having an inappropriate sexual relationship with him.

Birch also says Carder violated state law by not reporting a known incident of neglect or abuse.

“Carder knew defendant Harbert was sexually abusing Chris,” the complaint states. “In addition to her actual knowledge, there are factual instances that alerted and gave defendant Carder reason to believe that defendant Harbert was sexually abusing Chris.”

Both Birch and their first child together, identified only as B.H., are listed as plaintiffs. Birch is listed as the father on the birth certificates of the three youngest children, but not on the one for B.H.

Birch was seeking compensatory damages for permanent physical injuries, past and future pain, suffering and mental anguish, past and future lost enjoyment of life, past and future humiliation, embarrassment, indignity, shame, economic damages, diminished earning capacity and future lost wages, attorney fees, court costs and other relief.

Ohio Circuit Court case number 19-C-89

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