A Florida mom, who is an OnlyFans model, has lost a lawsuit against a school district that stopped her from volunteering at a school once it discovered her occupation.
In 2023, Victoria Triece filed a $1 million lawsuit against Orange County Public Schools after the school district informed her she wouldn’t be able to volunteer at Sand Lake Elementary School because she created content on OnlyFans, according to Law & Crime.
The district found out because it received an anonymous email with two explicit photos of Triece in 2021 from a parent.
“It has come to several parents at Sand Lake Elementary that one of the room mothers that spends time at the school is publically (sic) posting pornography thru various sources on the internet,” the email read. “This woman is constantly around our children and her public profiles are well known. This is not the content or subject matter that our children need to be exposed to.”
After the school told her she couldn’t volunteer, she filed the lawsuit and spoke to the media saying that she felt “humiliated,” according to WESH. “Nobody has the right to judge what other people do for a living,” she told the outlet.
The 33-year-old mom also alleged that her sexually explicit images were shared among the school’s and district’s staff.
Judge Brian S. Sandor of Orange County Circuit filed a 22-page opinion on Jan. 29 and stated that Triece doesn’t have a “substantive due process right” to volunteer in the program. The judge also remarked that she never appealed the decision with the school district — and there’s no rule in the district’s policy that says parents automatically have a right to volunteer.
“That policy … does not include any language that confers any right or benefit upon an individual to participate in the program, to remain in the program, or to appeal a removal decision. On these points, the policy is silent,” Sandor wrote.
As for Triece’s images being shared to staff, well, the judge argued that they were public record. “Finding that the images are public records that are subject to public disclosure, the Court also finds that on the record presented, Plaintiff cannot prevail on her claim that OCPS invaded her right to privacy by disclosing the images within OCPS, to those OCPS employees who needed the information to respond to public records requests,” Sandor added.
Richard W. Smith, one of Triece’s lawyers and a partner at Nejame Law, told People the ruling was disappointing.
“We are quite disappointed with the ruling,” he told the outlet. “We tried to attack this from a number of different angles and the court didn’t agree with any of them. But Victoria is a fighter and told us she wants to appeal.”
In response to Sandor’s ruling, Triece wrote on Instagram that she “didn’t lose because it’s not over.” In another post to her page, Triece claimed she’d spent “well over six figures in legal fees” amid the lawsuit.
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