No criminal charges for Arroyo Grande teacher

May 10, 2023

By KAREN VELIE

The San Luis Obispo County District Attorney’s Office is not filing criminal charges against an Arroyo Grande middle school teacher who was accused of assaulting a 13-year-old student last month.

Sarah Watts, a 42-year-old teacher at Mesa Middle School, allegedly pulled a hairbrush out of the teen’s hand leaving visible injuries. Later in the day, Watts allegedly dropped or threw schoolwork towards the same student resulting in a paper cut to the student’s temple.

Multiple sheriff deputies, eight according to the log, arrived at the school on April 25 to arrest the teacher, causing outrage in the community. The teen’s father is a SLO County Sheriff deputy.

On April 27, deputies asked prosecutors to charge Watts with child abuse causing injury. However, after reviewing applicable law, investigative reports, photographs, and body worn camera footage, the District Attorney’s Office determined there was insufficient evidence to file criminal charges.

Investigators determined that Watts took a hairbrush from the teen after she refused to comply to repeated demands to stop brushing her hair, allegedly leaving scratches on two of the teen’s fingers.

Public school teachers are required by law to hold students to a strict account for their conduct. The law also prohibits prosecution of a teacher who exercises the degree of physical control over a student that a parent is entitled to use.

“Every teacher in the public schools shall hold students to a strict account for their conduct on the way to and from school, on the playgrounds, or during recess,” according to California Election Code 44807. “A teacher, vice principal, principal, or any other certificated employee of a school district, shall not be subject to criminal prosecution or criminal penalties for the exercise, during the performance of his duties, of the same degree of physical control over a student that a parent would be legally privileged to exercise but which in no event shall exceed the amount of physical control reasonably necessary to maintain order, protect property, or protect the health and safety of students, or to maintain proper and appropriate conditions conducive to learning.”

District Attorney’s Office staff determined that several students in the classroom were unruly and that the teen’s brushing of her hair was disrupting Watts’ ability to teach the class.

The injuries alleged to have occurred during the hairbrush incident were minimal and consistent with an accidental scratching as described by Watts, according the the District Attorney’s Office. None of the four students interviewed by deputies “described seeing the incident.”

In addition, investigators determined Watts did not intend for the paperwork to hit the student when it was either dropped or thrown.  The student said she did not believe Watts intended to injure her.

“Other students present in the classroom corroborated this description,” according to the District Attorney’s Office. “Further, the minimal scratch observed in the photos of the student appeared to be superficial.”

Also, the teen’s father said he thought the scratch near her temple was from a separate incident occurring the day before and that the scratches on the student’s two fingers appeared to be “old.”

“Given the totality of the evidence and applicable law, the charge of child abuse causing injury in both the hairbrush incident and paperwork incident cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt and the request to file criminal charges has been declined,” according to the District Attorney’s Office.

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If anyone reads the story you will see that the father/deputy is minimizing any injury to the teen as opposed to making g a big deal of it


Likely only because of the public outcry and the obvious abuse of power sending 8 deputies to a school, its called CYA.


Based on the way the Sherrifs department handled this ‘high risk’ arrest I NEVER want to hear a complaint that the Sherrifs department is understaffed and needs more money.

EIGHT Deputy’s….. give us an effing break!


“eight officers” were listed in the police log, but that doesn’t mean all eight were actually in the classroom making the arrest. Some officers get assigned to an incident and end up being cancelled, redirected, or never even step out of their car but they will still end up on the police log for that incident. It’s not like 8 officers surrounded and took down the teacher to arrest her.


Good. Discipline and the the right behavior in school begins at home with the parents.


Certainly seems the Sheriff Deputy father needs to discipline his daughter a bit more or possibly even just some, at home, spoiled child comes to mind here. She possibility could have thought since her dad is a Sheriff she can get away with anything and dad will take care of it, but agreed using 8 deputies to make the arrest needs to be investigated. We can expect the Sheriff’s department is cirlciling the wagons to protect their own though, normal procedure for them.


I’m sorry Ms. Watts had to go through all of this. If she quits the profession after this school year, it’s understandable.

If she were my kid’s teacher, I’d send her a big bouquet of flowers and a gift card.

Ms. Watts did nothing wrong. Shame on the eight deputies who stormed into her classroom and humiliated her.


Back in the late 60s I was being disruptive in class and got a yard stick across the back of my head, I told my parents and got punished again.


I think a huge apology is in order too!


They needed EIGHT deputies to arrest the teacher, what?


Don’t you know they need to show us little people who is in charge. They can’t let us think they are just like us.


LORDY LORD!!! Finally, a sense of reason! We’ve been waiting to hear about this case. In total shock that she was actually arrested “IN the classroom”!! Right in front of the students, totally belittling her authority. That little girl who cried wolf to Daddy, was NO better off when he took action. HE will have to deal with her snitty attitudes…and its only going to get worse! The teacher should sue, keep the Daddy’s out of the classroom!


I have to scratch my head and ask why was she arrested in the first place. Teachers and police both have tough jobs but someone overreached on this one.


The someone who over reached was the students father who happens to be a Deputy Sheriff.


And the entire sheriff’s department who apparently does not have policies to prevent such an overreach from happening.