DALLAS (AP) _ The Dallas school system was rocked by allegations that staff members at an inner-city high school made students settle their differences by fighting bare-knuckle brawls inside a steel cage.
A 2008 report by school system investigators says the principal and other employees at South Oak Cliff High knew about the cage fights and allowed the practice to continue.
The report was first obtained by The Dallas Morning News. It describes two instances of fighting in an equipment cage in a boys’ locker room between 2003 and 2005.
But it appears the fights were more widespread than first thought.
The newspaper reports that Angela Williamson, a parent, said she was ignored when she attempted to bring the matter to the attention of district administrators after her son, Cortland, told her he had been in a cage fight.
His hand was injured during a 2004 fight with another boy. She said her son indicated students stood around clapping and screaming while watching the fight.
Her son is now a 21-year-old college student in East Texas.
Superintendent Michael Hinojosa told the News that there were “some things that happened inside of a cage” and called the fights “unacceptable.”