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Teacher no longer at West Springfield school after ex-students bring allegations of sexually charged exchanges
Teacher no longer at West Springfield school after ex-students bring allegations of sexually charged exchanges

Yahoo

time02-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Teacher no longer at West Springfield school after ex-students bring allegations of sexually charged exchanges

SPRINGFIELD — At 17, she told a trusted teacher at Lower Pioneer Valley Educational Collaborative that she just wanted a father. Hers had died in the waters of the Connecticut River in 2013, according to published reports. She was a small child then. Her mother had her own struggles, and the girl ended up in foster care. Kenneth Strout, a kindly information technology teacher, offered to be a father figure to her, according to records filed in Springfield District Court. And she was glad, until the tenor of the relationship changed in her senior year at the West Springfield trade school, which serves seven districts. Strout, of Monson, has been charged with two counts of annoying or accosting a member of the opposite sex, after two former students came forward to the the West Springfield police. The Republican has interviewed both of the alleged victims, but will not identify them to protect their privacy, given the allegations. The younger student, now a freshman at Western New England University, said the comfort that Strout offered to 'treat her like a daughter' quickly took a turn. 'He drove me home a number of times, telling me he had permission from the school, which was apparently false, and one time he brought me through a car wash and asked me to take my clothes off,' she said during an interview with The Republican. He began asking for nude pictures. She declined, according to a police report obtained by The Republican and interviews with the 19-year-old. After she went to school administrators and was encouraged to leave the matter alone, she said, she began poring through yearbooks to contact other female students to determine whether they had similar experiences with Strout. 'I cannot believe I was the first one he did this to. There had to be others,' she said. 'I just didn't want to be silent and have this happen to anyone else.' She has since blocked him on social media, she added. One other former student, who moved to Florida and is now 21, shared that she had unsettling exchanges with Strout on social media apps after she and her family relocated. 'He started messaging me on Snapchat, TikTok, all my social media. Until I blocked him,' the woman said during an interview on Thursday. She shared several text exchanges, including a shot of Strout's nude torso and face while he was in the shower, among others, and her responses. 'What are you in college for? Your (sic) the only student I've ever wanted to see naked fyi,' he wrote, according to the exchange provided from the second woman. 'That's a little weird Mr. Strout don't u think? Like I was very much underage in ur (sic) class ... jail bait,' she responded. 'That's awesome you want comp sci ... I know and I never said anything when you where (sic) my student,' Strout responded, according to the messages shared with the newspaper. 'I'm sorry if it's weird or uncomfortable. I will stop,' he said. The messages were sent under the handle 'TikTok Dad,' which also aligned with the torso shot the 21-year-old alleged victim shared. A lawyer for Strout, who pleaded not guilty to the charges earlier this month, said his client plans to fight the charges. 'This has all been overblown, and it will play out in court,' said Boston attorney Kenneth H. Anderson. The defense attorney also confirmed Strout no longer works at the school. 'It was a mutual decision,' Anderson said. A call placed to the school was not returned on Thursday. The younger alleged victim told West Springfield Police Detective Nicole Hebert that she felt she had been manipulated by Strout. 'She said she just wanted a dad,' Hebert wrote, and that Strout said if the girl lived with him, 'he wouldn't be able to control himself,' according to the report. The police report adds that Strout asked her to 'send him pics' after she turned 18, and she conceded to send one in a bra. He said he found her 'sexually attractive' after she turned 18 last year, the report notes. Certain staff rallied around Strout when he was placed on a three-week suspension, according to the police report. It was a misunderstanding, some said, warning not to ruin Strout's reputation. Springfield District Court Judge Danielle Williams released Strout on his own recognizance but ordered him to have no contact with the victims, plus a mandate for him to stay away from children under 16 without supervision, barring his own children and stepchildren. Read the original article on MassLive.

Meet The Social Network star Jesse Eisenberg's wife, activist Anna Strout
Meet The Social Network star Jesse Eisenberg's wife, activist Anna Strout

South China Morning Post

time14-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Meet The Social Network star Jesse Eisenberg's wife, activist Anna Strout

The Social Network star Jesse Eisenberg is gearing up for a busy year. He's kicking things off by doing the rounds of Hollywood's awards season in support of his new film, A Real Pain , which follows two cousins in Poland as they uncover their heritage in honour of their late grandmother . It's a film close to Eisenberg's heart: he wrote, directed and stars in it. Perhaps more important, Eisenberg, 41, is of Polish heritage and revealed last year that he'd applied for – and has now been granted – Polish citizenship. As reported by Variety, he also noted that A Real Pain was shot on location in parts of Poland to which he has a family connection, such as Lublin, Warsaw and Krasnystaw. He shares this Polish connection with his wife, Anna Strout, whose family is originally from Łódź and who also applied for Polish citizenship. But Strout isn't just Eisenberg's other half. The activist is a force of nature in her own right, rallying support for survivors of domestic violence and channelling her mother's legacy of advocacy. Here's what we know about the behind-the-scenes star. What does Anna Strout do? Anna Strout at the Vanity Fair 2019 Cannes Film Festival party. Strout has worked in Hollywood as a producer and crew member on films such as Don't Say a Word (2001) and The Emperor's Club (2002). But according to IMDB, her last movie project was in 2011. More recently, Strout has been engaged in philanthropy and activism. She spends a great deal of time volunteering at and organising fundraisers for Middle Way House. Located in Bloomington, Indiana – Strout's hometown – the institution is a shelter for victims of domestic violence, sexual assault and human trafficking. Anna's mother, Toby Susan Strout, was an executive director of Middle Way House and would take Anna to marches, rallies, community meetings and city hall press conferences, where she could become involved in advocacy first-hand. What age is Anna Strout? Jesse Eisenberg, Anna Strout and producer Robert Stein at the 2005 Independent Spirit Awards after-party, Santa Monica, Los Angeles.

Jesse Eisenberg says he feels 'most comfortable' living in Indiana after leaving 'unstable' Hollywood
Jesse Eisenberg says he feels 'most comfortable' living in Indiana after leaving 'unstable' Hollywood

Fox News

time07-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Fox News

Jesse Eisenberg says he feels 'most comfortable' living in Indiana after leaving 'unstable' Hollywood

Jesse Eisenberg has no regrets over his decision to leave Hollywood and embrace a quieter life in Indiana. During a recent interview with CBS News, the 41-year-old actor explained why he joined the growing list of celebrities who have moved out of Tinseltown. "I lived in Indiana for the last decade on and off," the "Social Network" star said. "That's where I feel kind of most comfortable. I'm not somebody who wants to surround myself in an industry that just feels kind of unstable to me." Eisenberg recalled that he and his wife Anna Strout previously spent a lot of time in her hometown of Bloomington, Indiana, which he described as "one of the great American cities." The pair first began dating in 2002 but called it quits in 2012. Eisenberg and Strout rekindled their romance in 2015 and tied the knot two years later. "We've been going back there for the last 20 years just to visit," he said of their trips to Bloomington. Eisenberg told CBS News that the couple initially moved to Indiana to care for his late mother-in-law, Toby Strout, after she fell ill. "Then we had a kid and then the pandemic hit," said Eisenberg, who shares son Banner, 7, with Strout. "So we wound up being there for several years." While living in Bloomington, Eisenberg and Strout worked as volunteers at the domestic violence shelter Middle Way House, where Toby had served as an executive director. "During the pandemic, there was no acting work, obviously," Eisenberg said. "And so I was just volunteering every day at the shelter." The "Zombieland" actor, who launched his professional acting career at the age of 16, said that working at the shelter was "the happiest time of my life." "I was painting walls and fixing garbage disposals and it was like — it was the first time I had, like, a real job," he said. "It sounds strange to say that, but at 38 years old was the first time I had a real job. And I just loved it so much. I loved being able to accomplish something where there was no critique of it, you know what I mean?" He continued, "I could be active and working and helping and doing something that's really contributing nicely, but not in a way where I was receiving praise, which somehow sometimes feels like it negates the contribution or receiving criticism, which hurts because it's criticism. And so it's just like this amazing feeling. I tell my wife all the time, it's the first time I felt like if I never got another acting part, I would be OK in this world because I like doing things." "I'm not somebody who wants to surround myself in an industry that just feels kind of unstable to me." "It was kind of like revelatory for me to have a real job at that age and love it," he said. Eisenberg is currently gearing up for the 2025 Academy Awards after receiving a best screenplay nomination for penning the script of his movie "A Real Pain." The New York native also directed the buddy-road comedy drama and co-starred alongside Kieran Culkin, who was nominated for best supporting actor. While speaking with CBS News, Eisenberg noted that his life in Indiana also affords him more time to concentrate on writing screenplays, rather than competing for acting gigs. "I like to keep as many feet outside the door of the entertainment industry as possible, so I don't feel like I'm somebody constantly trying to pound the pavement and knock on doors and get jobs," he said. "I just don't want to be that person. It doesn't fit me. So being in Indiana from, like, a professional perspective was really great because it made me feel like, you know, if I'm not working now, that's fine." "And I have this other life and I could write during the day," he added. "And so, being in Indiana allowed me to have, like, an extra foot outside the door of the entertainment industry that in a way that was really comfortable."

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