a pedophile golf coach/Schools Superintendent as well as pedophile enabling officials, I guess. I hope these parents not only protect their kids, but learn from this: normalizing pedophilia, abuse, and bullying is bad. Two stories here, so the post is a bit long. The Newscow is my area’s local news site; the coverage is due to the accused being a local high school graduate. The Reflector story has more background and detail than alluded in the Newscow story, and is best read in whole, on site, for continuity. Again, normalizing pedophilia, abuse, and bullying is bad. As we here know. There is official description of what is alleged. I don’t think it’s triggering, but wanted to state that for everyone.
A Kansas student reported her coach for harassment and touching. School leaders kept it quiet.
Comanche County school board leaders, principal strive to blunt public outrage
By:Tim Carpenter-September 2, 20252:57 pm
COLDWATER β After the father of a small-town, southwest Kansas high school junior reported his daughter was the victim of sexual harassment and unwanted touching by her golf coach, he met with the coach and principal to lay out the teenagerβs concerns and disgust.
By the end of that meeting in May, the father said, the three men seemed to have an understanding that the coach violated policy β if not the law β when he made a stunning comment to the girl during golf practice: He told her to grip a club like it was a penis.
At the meeting, the coach signed a document affirming he directed lurid comments at the girl, according to a copy of the document obtained by Kansas Reflector. The student confirmed the accusations in a report with law enforcement and in an interview with Kansas Reflector.
The document said the coach on multiple occasions grabbed the studentβs hips, waist and shoulders while standing behind her. She also said that he held the back of her thigh, purportedly to improve her golf posture.
Ty Theurer eventually resigned as the South Central High School golf coach, which was his part-time assignment in the Comanche County School District. He didnβt surrender a much more influential position in the district: Superintendent.
Kansas Reflector interviews with students, parents, educators and elected officials tied to Comanche County schools revealed a concerted effort by insiders to shield the districtβs top administrator, despite ongoing law enforcement and Title IX investigations. People with knowledge of Theurerβs past said the golf practice incident wasnβt the only example of inappropriate behavior by the superintendent, who for years personally controlled how the district responded to alleged sexual harassment.
Kansas Reflector reporting shows the Comanche County school board president and vice president along with the high school principal collaborated to minimize disciplinary action against Theurer. It indicated the president sought to tamp down scrutiny of the superintendent as word of the studentβs allegation made its way through the sparsely populated district.
In a brief interview with Kansas Reflector, Theurer declined to respond to questions about the complaint.
βIβm not going to answer any of those questions,β he said. βI am under investigation. Iβm not allowed to speak about it.β
(snip)
In May, the studentβs father reported the behavior to Andy Uhl, the Comanche County school boardβs vice president. Uhl apparently passed the dadβs complaint up the chain of command. That resulted in the fatherβs meeting with Theurer and South Central High School principal Bud Valerius.
But instead of all seven members of the school board assuming a role in a personnel issue involving the person hired by the board to serve as superintendent, Valerius dealt with the studentβs complaint as if it were a clash between coach and athlete, emails show. Valerius took that approach despite conflicts of interest, including his job as a direct subordinate of Theurer, his assignment as assistant golf coach and his friendship with Theurer.
School board president Kelly Herd said in an email to other board members that in her opinion, βThere was nothing in the complaint that would warrant administrative leaveβ for superintendent Theurer. Instead, she told board members, coach Theurer had been given a βwarningβ to not offend again.
The school board replaced the superintendent as the districtβs Title IX coordinator with oversight of sexual harassment or sex discrimination complaints because it would be improper for Theurer to investigate himself. Those duties were passed several months ago to the districtβs elementary school principal, who would be expected to initiate an investigation of the superintendent.
In June, the studentβs parents attended a regularly scheduled Comanche County school board meeting with the goal of sharing information about what their daughter said she endured while coached by Theurer.
Herd, the board president, called the mother before the meeting in an attempt to dissuade her from making public comments about the superintendent, the mother said.
The mother decided to go to the board meeting. She attempted to read from a written statement. Herd cut her off by adjourning the meeting. A video obtained by Kansas Reflector showed Herd and other board members walking out of the room with the mother still reading from her prepared remarks.
βHow could this not be a priority? Not for my family alone, but for the school community?β the mother said in an interview. βThe sudden adjournment and insistence that such an issue of import was literally worth walking out on is deeply troubling.β
She said the school board presidentβs attempt to bury the complaint was βcompletely unacceptableβ and risked the health and safety of students in the districtβs three schools. Failure of the school board to address the superintendentβs misconduct ran βthe risk of appearing complicit in continuing toxic and dangerous situations,β the mother said.
βThere is no result that can serve justice other than immediate termination,β she said.
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Wellington grad placed on administrative leave at Comanche County School District via sexual harassment allegations
September 05, 2025 Cueball
Sumner Newscow report β A Wellington High School graduate has been placed on paid administrative leave as superintendent of the Comanche County School District.
Ty Theurer has been accused of sexually harassing a student. The story first appeared in the Kansas Reflector, in which a father of a small-town, southwest Kansas high school junior reported his daughter was the victim of sexual harassment and unwanted touching by her South Central High School golf coach.
The school district voted to place Theurer on administrative paid leave. According to the Reflector, the school board didnβt discuss publicly the reason for taking action against Theurer at this time. There was no board disclosure about who would temporarily lead the district or for how long.
The board adopted a vague motion to proceed with βnext steps,β which the board president said had been discussed in an executive session. None of that information was shared with the audience, according to the Reflector report.
More than 100 residents of the rural southwest Kansas school district β including some displaying raw, intense emotion β descended on the high school Wednesday night to demand ouster or suspension of Theurer. He is accused of, while serving as golf coach, advising a female student to hold clubs like she were gripping a penis. The girl had also complained of unwanted touching by Theurer.
βHow in the world did we get here?β said Zach Ellis, a county commissioner who has children in the district. βDoes this board not have a responsibility to the kids of this district to do the right thing? Kids donβt feel safe in this building. You have created a hostile and toxic learning environment as well as a toxic working environment.β
School board president Kelly Herd, who became aware of the studentβs harassment complaint four months ago, had resisted punishment of Theurer beyond the warning placed in his personnel file. She had told fellow board members no additional sanction was necessary in response to the allegations.
Theurer signed a summary of the studentβs complaint months ago, which was viewed by the studentβs parents as an admission of guilt.
Herd also sent emails to other board members saying Theurer βdid not deny nor make excusesβ and βhas been written up.β
In front of an unusually large crowd, the seven-member board moved in and out of executive session several times before Herd sought a motion to relieve Theurer of administrative duties in the 300-student district. According to the Reflector, he wasnβt at work on Wednesday and didnβt attend the school board meeting after the Kansas Reflector article was published on Tuesday detailing allegations against the superintendent and the school boardβs tepid response.