Bully Starts Fight at Central Noble Football Game But School Sends Innocent Kid to Probation
Bully Starts Fight at Central Noble Football Game But School Sends Innocent Kid to Probation
Innocent child faces probation despite acting in self-defense.
September 24, 2026
This article was last updated by Alisha Shrestha on September 24, 2026
The Central Noble school community is facing mounting criticism after a troubling incident at a recent football game led to a victim being punished while the instigator walked away largely unscathed.
Parents and community members are now speaking out against what they see as a broken system that punishes children for defending themselves instead of addressing the root problem of bullying.
According to parent Steph Jacobs, her child was pushed into a fight during the game.
Instead of backing down, her child defended themself and ended up winning the altercation.
Rather than treating the incident as self-defense, the school reportedly escalated the matter, filing a report with the probation department against her child.
“What started as self-defense was turned into disorderly conduct because she didn’t ‘stop,’” Jacobs said.
“Who decides when it goes from self-defense to disorderly conduct? My kid is in trouble because the bully picked the wrong kid that day and got beat up.”
Jacobs also claimed that parents are not allowed to see the probation report unless the case goes to court or a lawyer gets involved, leaving families in the dark about what schools are reporting about their children.
The incident has struck a nerve with other parents who say they have witnessed similar failures in how Central Noble handles bullying.
One parent, Alyssa Ritchie, said her daughter was punched in the back after reporting dangerous behavior to a teacher.
Instead of protection, her daughter feared retaliation. She said,
“Hopefully they won’t file something on her, but it seems like the child that stands up always gets punished while the bully keeps going.”
Justin Evard added that the issue extends beyond one school, criticizing the education system as a whole:
“There is absolutely zero common sense in any part of the system anymore. Teachers don’t even teach past 8th grade, so they’ve made themselves useless.”
Other parents, like Hope McDonald, recalled long histories of their children being choked, punched, or harassed on buses and in classrooms with little to no intervention.
“The entire school is a joke,” she said.
“It’s no wonder their funding was cut.”
Stories of retaliation against students who fight back are not limited to Central Noble.
Junior Jor, a teacher, said the same thing happened to one of his students at West Noble. After months of being harassed, the student finally stood up to the bully—and was suspended.
“It’s as if they are trying to teach kids that it’s not okay to stand up for yourselves,” Jor said.
“Fuck that.”
Parents like Missy Thieme Berkes added that the problem has persisted for years, pointing out that her son faced bullying not only from students but also from teachers and administrators when he attended the school years ago.
Many parents are now urging each other to take action beyond social media.
Some suggested attending school board meetings, filing complaints with the Department of Education, and pushing for greater accountability for staff members accused of ignoring or even perpetuating bullying.
Jacobs emphasized that the issue is bigger than just her child’s probation case:
“The staff is the biggest bullies of all. When teachers yell in kids’ faces or dismiss their struggles, they are setting an example for students to follow.”
Community frustration continues to mount, with parents and teachers describing both Central Noble and West Noble as unsafe environments where children are left with an impossible choice: endure harassment or risk punishment for defending themselves.
Until the administration reexamines its policies and takes meaningful action against bullying, families fear that incidents like this will keep repeating—and more innocent kids will face the same unjust consequences.
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