A mom lost her $1 million case after suing a school because she was removed her from a parent volunteer group when her OnlyFans account was leaked.

Judge Brian Sandor dismissed Victoria Triece’s complaint, ruling that ‘parents do not have a right to volunteer.’ Sandor also pointed out that Triece did not appeal the decision with the school district itself, which contributed to the dismissal of the charge.

But Triece, whose child attended Sand Lake Elementary School, Orange County, says that she was ‘humiliated’ after her OnlyFans photos were sent in an anonymous email to school authorities, asking for her to be removed from the school’s ADDitions Program. Judge Sandor, though, classified these as ‘public record’ as her profiles could be found by anyone.

Triece argues that the photos were circulated among the adults and administrators at the school and used to shame her. “Nobody has the right to judge what other people do for a living. I feel judged, and so isolated,” WESH reported the mother as saying.

Triece brought the lawsuit, which alleged that she was ‘wrongly fired’ and that her ‘privacy was violated’ after the email and the photos were distributed amongst parents, teachers, and even the media.






Victoria Triece


Victoria Triece argues that her privacy was violated with the email
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victoriasnooks/Instagram)






Victoria Triece in blue bikini


Some of Triece’s OnlyFans photos were leaked by administrators to the media
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VictoriaSnooks / Instagram)

“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. This woman is constantly around our children and her public profiles are well known. This is the not the content or subject matter that our children need to be exposed to,” the 2021 email read.

“The mothers [sic] name is Victoria Triece but her online presence is Victoria Snooks. Her social media is widely recognizable and contains graphic content. I am posting several images for reference. Please let us know what course of action will be taken to keep this kind of material away from our children,” the email continued.

Principal Katie Phillips relayed the message to her boss, and after a review of Triece’s situation, Phillips ‘fired’ her from the volunteer program.

However, the judge issued a 22-page ruling, which stated that there was nothing in the school’s codes that made volunteering a right, which means the school can take or let go of parent volunteers as they please. He added that her privacy complaint ‘cannot prevail’ as ‘those OCPS employees… needed the information to respond to public records requests,” Sandor wrote.

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