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Assistant Principal at Jack Yates High School Arrested in Multi-Million Dollar Houston Teacher Certification Scandal

In a recent development, the assistant principal of Jack Yates High School, who was involved in a fraudulent teacher-certification scheme worth millions of dollars, made a court appearance on Monday evening. This comes after Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced the arrest of the assistant principal.+

LaShonda Roberts, along with five others, has been taken into custody, facing charges for their alleged involvement in a teacher-certification scheme that enabled unqualified educators to secure positions within local school districts.

Roberts, who currently faces two charges of engaging in organized criminal activity, was not present in court on Monday evening. Instead, her attorney represented her during the proceedings. On Tuesday afternoon, the judge reduced her bond from $100,000 to $25,000 for each case. The judge also ordered that if she is able to post bail, she must have no contact with the other four individuals involved in the scheme.

Roberts’ lawyer, Brandon Leonard, requested a $1,000 bond for each case, asserting that his client posed no threat to the community and had not committed a violent offense. Leonard also pointed out that Roberts has been facing financial difficulties after losing her job. However, the judge ultimately rejected his plea.

Leonard mentioned that his client was taken aback by the unexpected arrest and being placed in custody. He emphasized that she was apprehended while on the premises of Jack Yates High School.

Roberts is anticipated to return to court on Friday.

During a news conference on Monday, District Attorney Ogg announced that from May 2020 to February 2024, Roberts and four others had falsified credentials in order to secure teaching positions for individuals who did not meet the certification requirements.

These are the individuals who took part in the scheme:

Tywana Gilford Mason, 51, previously held the position of director/VA certifying official at the Houston Training and Education Center. In her role as a test proctor, Mason was able to discreetly carry out the proxy scheme without detection.

Darian Nikole Wilhite, 22, a proctor at TACTIX, is accused of accepting bribes to enable Newton to act as a testing proxy.

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