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Jessica's Legacy Lives On
The Omaha World Herald (Omaha Nebraska) sent one of their prize winning
contributors to research the facts behind Jessica's life and death and future.
The original story line was to run as a multipart series, but was truncated to
just the two following stories below.
Published Sunday
June 13, 2004
Stakes rise as bullying grows more serious
BY STEPHEN BUTTRY
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
GARRETSON, S.D. - Jessica Haffer insisted she could handle the bullies.
With a third-degree black belt in tae kwon do, 14-year-old Jessi could have hurt
her classmates easily. But she
let them hurt her - scratching, pushing, hitting, taunting, excluding. Former
Nebraskan Jessica Haffer endured bullying before taking her life last year at
age 14. Even when Jeri Haffer could see something was wrong, Jessi would tell
about the abuse only if her mother promised not to complain to the school. The
bullying gets worse, Jessi said, if you tattle. On a snowy Sunday morning last
November, Jessi took her parents'handgun and killed herself on their driveway. As another school year ends,
Hollywood is counting box-office receipts from "Mean Girls" and Midlands towns
and schools are trying to heal
the wounds of real-life bullying:
• In Malcolm, Neb., students and adults wonder how close they were to a
Columbine-style slaughter. Joshua Magee, a 17-year-old junior who was teased by
other students, faces a charge of attempted
murder after taking explosives and a rifle to school.
• La Vista Junior High is working to prevent a recurrence of a public beating
of a 13-year-old girl by six other girls.
• Three Millard North High School students face third-degree assault charges for
the videotaped beating of a
student.
• In the grieving town of Garretson, school leaders vow to respond aggressively
to bullying.
"Maybe I didn't teach her to be tough enough or mean enough," Jeri Haffer said,
tears rolling down her cheeks.
Bullying took perhaps its most noticeable toll in the 1999 attack at Columbine
High School in Littleton, Colo.,and has claimed lives in school shootings since then. A more steady cost, in
teenage suicide, draws little
notice beyond the immediate circle of grief. The obituary in the Sioux Falls
Argus Leader after Jessi's death
Nov. 23 merely said that God had called her home.
Bullies have always been part of growing up. No one formally studied bullying
until the 1970s, but studies since
then indicate it is growing more serious. "What used to be fists 25 years ago is
now a knife and a gun," said Peter Kanaris, a New York school psychologist who
helped develop an anti-violence program for the American Psychological
Association. A common feature in cases where bullying turns deadly is guns.
"It's very likely that kids will resort to all kinds of bad decisions," said
Joan Duffell of the Committee for
Children, based in Seattle. "As they have access to firearms, it just means a
bad decision turns fatal."
Keith and Jeri Haffer bought a .38-caliber handgun after a 1992 burglary. They
hid the gun in a drawer in theirbedroom and kept the bullets in a separate drawer. Until the day she killed
herself, Jessi had not shot the gunand her parents didn't know that she even knew where it was.
A 2002 study by the U.S. Secret Service and U.S. Department of Education,
prompted by the Columbine
attack, examined 37 school-based attacks since 1974 in which a student or former
student committed violence
with a particular target in mind. Two-thirds of the attackers used guns they
brought from home or from a relative's house. Seventy-one percent felt they had
been bullied, injured or persecuted before they attacked.
Not all childhood aggression is bullying. Educators say bullying has three
characteristics:
• An imbalance of power. One child is older, bigger, stronger or higher in a
social pecking order.
• Intent to hurt. Bullies know they are hurting other children and take pleasure
in it.
• Repetition. Bullies pick on the same child or children over and over.
Boys tend to be more physical in their abuse and girls more verbal, but bullies
of both genders use both. And
verbal abuse sometimes hurts more.
"In some cases girls are probably worse than boys, especially in middle school,"
Garretson School
Superintendent Robert Arend said.
Even when victims don't physically hurt themselves or others, bullying has a
lasting impact.
"They remember the experience of being humiliated and embarrassed and scared,"
said Susan Swearer, an
assistant professor of educational psychology at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln.
The effects can be profound:
• Children who are bullied are more likely to suffer from depression or anxiety.
Bullies also are more likely to be
depressed and suicidal.
• Bullies are more likely to drop out of school and to be arrested as adults.
• Victims become afraid to go to school. Studies show that as many as 160,000
children a day avoid school
because of bullies.
• Grades suffer for victims and bullies alike.
Jessi Haffer, an eighth-grader, was in middle school, where bullying hits its
peak.
Born in 1989 in Lincoln, she moved to South Dakota when she was 4. Her parents
bought a house on 19 acres
with 4,500 lilac bushes. "I loved the idea of a small town, my daughter living
in a small town, feeling she would be safe," said Jeri, who grew up in Fairbury,
Neb. Jessi, born when her mother was 47, was the couple's only child. Jeri had
four children from an earlier marriage and Keith had one. During most of their
time in South Dakota, Jessi was the only child at home. Keith develops
veterinary vaccines. Jessi helped Jeri run a store in downtown Garretson selling
gifts and health products. It's not clear why other children picked on Jessi.Bullies tend to focus on children who are different in some way, often
physically different. Kids called Jessica
fat and ugly, her mother says, but photos show a slim, pretty girl with an
engaging smile.
Jessi was different, though:
• The Haffers travel frequently and own a large home. Classmates expressed
jealousy about Jessi's life.
"People perceive us to be very wealthy," Keith said. Though his work pays well,
a lawsuit forced the Haffers
into Chapter 13 bankruptcy in the 1990s.
• Keith is Jewish and Jessi was the only Jew in her school. A report published
in the Journal of the AmericanMedical Association says race or religion is the reason for 9 percent of
bullying.
• Jessi might have angered bullies by befriending other victims. "Whoever they
were picking on, that person
became her best friend," Jeri said.
• Jessi was smart, another common factor in bullying. "She didn't want people to
know she was smart," her
mother said.A prolific writer who kept a journal, Jessi planned to attend Stanford
University, then Harvard Law School (a
Harvard pennant still hangs in her bedroom). She wrote about marvelous devices
she planned to invent. She
dreamed of being a ballerina, an opera singer, a vaccine scientist, a Supreme
Court justice.
Jessi's mother recalls dealing with bullying when Jessi was in second grade. "I
could tell by Jessi's face that
something happened." But Jessi would only tell her mother, "If you see someone
hurting someone and you tell
the teacher, you're a tattletale."
In later years, Jeri Haffer asked about scratches on Jessi's neck and a torn
coat. "She would say, 'I can handle
it.'" Despite Jessi's pleas, Keith Haffer did seek help at the school once. The
next few days were brutal. "Kids took
turns punching her, running into her and calling her names," Jeri said. Jeri's
grandson, who is older than Jessi, was visiting once when some boys threw her
against a wall, scraping her arm. She held back her nephew, who wanted to go
after the bullies. He told Jeri, "Grandma, she won't defend herself and she
won't let me go after them."
Her mother asked Jessi why she wouldn't defend herself. She responded, "I didn't
want to hurt them, Mom."
The bullying intensified in middle school, Jeri said. "They would push her, call
her narc, slut, you can imagine
the names." Like other students, Jessi swapped notes in class. In one note, a
boy asked, "How can you be so nice to people who are so awful to you?" She
begged her mother to keep her confidence. "I did nothing because she said, 'If I
can't tell you, Mom, then I won't be able to talk to anyone.'"
Despite the bullying, Jessi usually was cheerful, and her parents did not think
she was depressed.
She had a lot of friends, including girls who played nicely at parties or Girl
Scout meetings at Jessi's home but
turned on her at school. For Jessi's bat mitzvah in 2002, the crowd at Mount
Zion Temple in Sioux Falls included many classmates. A framed photo
commemorating the occasion sits on the Haffers' living room coffee table next to
a ceramic urn that holds Jessi's ashes.
Experts say teen suicides seldom have a single cause. Jessi left no suicide
note.
Her parents see the bullying as a leading factor, though, and school officials
held a community meeting the
month after she died, to discuss bullying as well as suicide prevention.
The superintendent says teachers had no idea how severe the bullying was until
after Jessi's death.
Classmates' taunts were not the only conflicts in Jessi's life.
Her parents have filed complaints with the Garretson school district and the
South Dakota Department of
Education against Julie Mueller, a teacher who they say discriminated against
Jessi based on religion. Mueller
declined a request for an interview, and Superintendent Arend would not comment.
The Haffers also were battling with city officials over whether they could keep
Jessi's two horses inside
Garretson's city limits. The Haffers bought the horses last summer, a bay
gelding she named Macs and a black
mare she called Baby. A letter arrived Saturday, Nov. 22, telling the Haffers of
plans for another hearing.
"Why can't they leave us alone?" Jessi asked.
Jessi seemed to be planning, seeking solutions. She asked her parents to
home-school her. They said yes.
She circled an ad for a home in Sioux Falls and asked if the family could move
there. They said they would
look. The next morning, Jessi went outdoors with her father to help clear the
5-inch snowfall. As Keith worked with an ATV farther down their lane, Jessi
shoveled up by the garage. Until she pulled out the gun and pointed it at
her head.
Her funeral, the day before Thanksgiving, filled the school gymnasium.
Classmates came to the Haffers' home
to express grief, some confessing their abuse. "They came to my door and told
me, wanting me to absolve
them," Jeri said.
Mistreatment continued even after Jessi was gone. Children defaced photographs
of Jessi and objects of hers
at school and even in her bedroom. Students spread rumors that she was pregnant
and using drugs. Dr. Brad Randall, Minnehaha County coroner, said the autopsy
showed she was not pregnant or using drugs.
In a Dec. 22 community meeting, school officials started educating staff,
parents and students about the
impact of bullying and about their new policy. First offenses involve talking
with the bully, second offenses
involve an in-school suspension.
Jeri and Keith Haffer keep trying to figure out their daughter's life and death.
"The pain doesn't go away," Keith said. "Not knowing why she died - it doesn't
make any sense to us."
What schools can do
Adopt anti-bullying programs.
Educate children how to respond to bullies, even if they aren't the victims.
Take bullying reports seriously.
Listen to children who report being bullied.
Don't single out victims. This can bring repeated attacks. Don't say the victim
told you about an incident; say
you know about it.
Involve the bully's parents in discipline, so they know and can help change the
behavior.
What parents can do
Encourage children to talk and don't blame them.
Don't encourage them to fight back. Suggest walking away or seeking help from an
adult. Help them practice
what to say.
Let them know you're going to help.
Tell your children you're responsible for protecting them. Without promising
secrecy, tell them you'll work out
a plan to inform the school in a way that doesn't worsen the abuse.
Talk to a teacher, guidance counselor or principal. Most schools have policies
that take bullying seriously.
Don't wait to seek treatment for a depressed child, just as you wouldn't for a
child with a limp or headache.
Bullies as well as victims may need treatment for depression.
Source: Dr. David Fassler, University of Vermont, American Psychiatric
Association
Getting help
If you are considering suicide, please call the Girls and Boys Town National
Hotline, (800) 448-3000
Contact the Omaha World-Herald newsroom
©2004 Omaha World-Herald. All rights reserved.

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