A school counselor receives a complaint regarding the principal sexually abusing a female student, but finds that getting the truth out in the open will be hindered at every turn by ways of blackmail and deception.
When a high-school student confides to her guidance counselor that the principal has been sexually harassing her, the counselor attempts to have the principal fired. The student recants her story and transfers to another school. Just when everything seems to be lost, the counselor discovers that the principal has a history of such activity. Can she prove the principal's guilt before he does it again?—Gilbert Blankenship <blankgm@cris.com>