Parents sue after they say 6-year-old daughter was racially attacked at school: ‘It's disturbing'
'This is systemic, this is ongoing, and we weren't the first family to experience these issues,' Cathea said.
The lawsuit filed on their behalf against the DeKalb County School District claims the bullying began in 2023, when a white student started calling their daughter the 'N-word' and a monkey.
'It's disturbing,' they said.
The Treminios told Channel 2's investigative reporter Ashli Lincoln that the bullying escalated to physical attacks.
A September 2023 incident details when a student stomped on her daughter's hand. There was another incident where a student threw a desk at Treminio's daughter.
TRENDING STORIES:
Cobb Co. teacher, wife accused of denying their children food and bathroom, confining them
Judge approves request to move trial of Colin Gray, father of Apalachee High shooting suspect
State health department confirms new measles case in Georgia
The suit also details a 2024 incident, where a group of students dragged her daughter by the hair, scratched her face while yelling 'attack'.
'It has to stop. This is not acceptable,' Cathea Terminio said.
The mother said school administrators did little to address the bullying.
'I immediately asked for a safety plan, which to date, we never received a specific, comprehensive safety plan for our child,' Cathea Terminio told Lincoln.
In 2024, when attempting to get an update on the safety plan from administrators at the school, she said security told her she had to leave, and she was issued a no trespassing order.
'We've been prohibited from communicating with her teachers,' Cathea Terminio said.
To make matters worse, Cathea said she began receiving anonymous emails threatening her family.
She told Lincoln, the emails read: 'Get out, leave now, you're not wanted we don't want you here'.
Another email read in part: 'If you wanted to be at a school that's more diverse, maybe you shouldn't have moved to this neighborhood.'
Cathea Terninio filed a police report with Brookhaven police and said they were able to trace one email to California and another to China.
Dekalb County Schools sent Lincoln a statement, saying:
'The DeKalb County School District (DCSD) is fully committed to ensuring the safety and well-being of all students and employees. District and school leaders actively promote a culture of professionalism and respect, aiming to create and maintain learning environments free from bullying, threats, or intimidation for all students, staff, and families.
'It is the longstanding practice of DCSD not to comment on potential or pending litigation.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
5 days ago
- New York Post
SC Dem arrested in underwear, ICE agents' new safety fears, Meta chatbot standards scandalize kids
Democrats in South Carolina pressure their pick for governor to end his run after arrest video shows him nearly naked, screaming and using the N-word, ICE Agents worry a brand new, upgraded fleet of vehicles may put their safety at risk, and a leaked document reveals Meta let its AI chatbots have 'romantic' conversations with kids.


CBS News
12-08-2025
- CBS News
School district in Colorado to use metal detectors at stadium events, enacts clear bag policy
The Douglas County School District in Colorado is putting new policies into place when it comes to stadium events. This includes using metal detectors and having a clear bag policy, among other changes that begin this school year. The school district said it has purchased portable metal detectors to use at stadiums. DCSD said in a news release that the metal detectors are a pilot program "as part of its efforts to enhance safety and security at our stadium, particularly for our most highly-attended events." The clear bag policy allows only clear plastic bags in DCSD stadiums with a size limit. There will also be a no re-entry policy for those who choose to leave stadium events, as well as no outside food or drink allowed in the stadium. The policy also includes no drugs, alcohol or tobacco products, no pets, or weapons allowed.


New York Post
11-08-2025
- New York Post
Little-known synthetic opioid nitazene is up to 43 times more deadly than fentanyl, resistant to Narcan and killing young Americans
A pair of Texas friends died less than three months apart after ingesting pills laced with a dangerous new synthetic opioid, and now their mothers are begging US officials to sound the alarm on the little-known drug up to 43 times more lethal than fentanyl. The young men both died this year after swallowing different pills secretly tainted with the deadly, often Narcan-resistant opioids known as nitazenes, which have begun seeping into the US at an alarming rate. Lucci Reyes-McCallister, 22, died January 26 near Houston, Texas, after taking a pill labeled as Xanax that was actually laced with N-Pyrrolidino Protonitazene, an emerging form of nitazene. Advertisement 4 Lucci is seen baking with his mother. Youtube / City of League City TX The particular strain of the new synthetic narcotic that killed Lucci is 25 times more lethal than fentanyl, but other nitazenes are between five and 43 times stronger, depending on the type, according to the Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission. The stronger the strain, the more resistant the nitazene is to the overdose antidote Narcan, as seen in Lucci's case. Advertisement 'It was the first time I'd ever heard of it,' Lucci's heartbroken mother, Grey McCallister, told The Post of nitazene. 'It took them seven rounds of Narcan to try to revive him,' she said. But Lucci never came to. 4 Lucci died in January after he took a nitazene-laced counterfeit pill. Crowder Funeral Home Advertisement Nearly six months after his death, Grey received a call from another mother in the area who revealed her son also died of the same form of nitazene. It was Lucci's friend, Hunter Clement, 21. Hunter died on April 10 after taking a nitazene-laced pill branded to look like a Percocet. A few weeks after his death, Ruthi came across a news article about the dangers of nitazenes. Advertisement 'I told my husband, 'I feel like that could be what Hunter died from,'' she recalled. Nitazenes are produced in clandestine Chinese labs and may have made their way to the cartels in Mexico using 'their existing relationships' with 'suppliers' in China, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The drug was developed over 60 years ago as an alternative to morphine, but was never approved for medical use because of its high risk of overdose. Authorities in Europe have already seen several overdoses from the synthetic narcotic and the devastating poison is now starting to hit US shores more. Last January, a Florida man confessed to distributing protonitazene that he received in the mail from labs in China, according to the IRS. Customs officers at JFK are seeing the drug coming through the airport 'at least a few times a week in quantities ranging from just a few grams to upwards of a pound or more,' Andrew Renna, Assistant Port Director for Cargo Operations at the airport, said in May. And it's all part of China's 'ongoing attack against America,' former acting DEA administrator Derek Maltz told The Post. 'As America is just now really starting to talk about fentanyl, we have now seen all these other substances that are popping up everywhere, and they're coming out of these labs in China,' Maltz said. Medical examiners in Houston and the surrounding Harris County have already seen four cases of nitazene-related overdose deaths, according to the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. Advertisement 4 Hunter Clement pictured in a photo posted to his obituary. Dignity Memorial Hunter's mother, Ruthi Clement, fought through tears as she recalled finding her son that fateful night with his face down in his bed and his body cold and purple. She quickly started giving Hunter chest compressions and two doses of Narcan, but it wasn't enough to save him. 'Sometimes I get mad because I couldn't save my own son, but I do want to save other people, even if it's just one person in honor of him,' Ruthi told The Post. Traditional drug tests don't look for nitazenes since US authorities are just now learning of their existence, the two grieving mothers said. Advertisement 4 A DEA instructor holds a bag of isotonitazene pills. DEA Nitazenes are not in the standard toxicology tests used by Harris County medical examiners and the screenings are only ordered 'if there is suspected nitazene use and there is no other toxicology to explain the death,' the office said. The mothers are now warning America's youth in the hopes of saving lives. 'They could think something is clean or rather safe when it's actually pressed for something that's 20 to 40 times stronger, more deadly than fentanyl,' Grey said. Advertisement 'It just really lit a fire under me. There was no way Lucci was going to die in vain,' she added. Maltz urged the feds to run educational programs and social media awareness campaigns to meet kids on platforms 'where they are.' 'You have to educate these kids, you have to have mandatory education. The social media influencers, the athletes, the role models to speak out on social media sites with these video reels to educate the kids. That's where they are, they're not watching the news,' Maltz said.