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A judge ruled Orange County Public Schools had the authority to ban a mother from volunteering at her child’s school after it was revealed she posted explicit content on the adult website OnlyFans.
Victoria Triece helped organize class parties and assisted in lab assignments at Sand Lake Elementary School, where her two children attended, as part of the district’s ADDitions program. She had served as a volunteer for five years until an anonymous tipster in 2021 sent an email to the principal containing some of Triece’s OnlyFans content. Then she was told she was no longer welcome.
Triece, who made international headlines after speaking out, sued two years later, accusing OCPS of violating her right to volunteer and denying her right to appeal the decision to ban her.
But the 22-page summary judgment by Judge Brian Sandor, filed Jan. 29, concluded she had no right to volunteer, and said that OCPS policies make mention of an appeals process only “in the context of criminal history checks and an applicant’s criminal history.” Even then, according to the ruling, school district policies found in court filings explicitly state that a volunteer’s eligibility “does not guarantee volunteer placement.”
“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,” Sandor wrote. “On these points, the policy is silent.”
The images sent to higher-ups at Sand Lake Elementary were from Triece’s OnlyFans page, accessible to subscribers for a fee. When she was removed as a volunteer in 2021, Triece told reporters she always dressed appropriately on school grounds and that her day job was kept from the children. Mark NeJame, whose law firm represented Triece, blasted OCPS as being “morality police” when the district banned her anyway.
The lawsuit further accused the district of violating Triece’s right to privacy by circulating the photos to “staff and employees that were not in need of the information,” but Sandor ruled that emails between district employees containing the images were sent “for the purpose of carrying out OCPS’s official business.” That includes releases of the email tip containing the images in response to public records requests by news outlets, including the Orlando Sentinel.
Other than that, Triece “did not supply any evidence in support of her claim” that the photos were illegally disseminated, Sandor said. NeJame did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
“It’s just not fair at all,” Triece said in 2023. “I don’t want another mom, I don’t want another dad, I don’t want anybody to have to deal with not seeing their child when you aren’t hurting anybody.”
Her lawyers said she did nothing illegal by appearing on OnlyFans, a site popular among sex workers. Her content also wasn’t a secret — a search through Triece’s public social media accounts reveal less explicit but still revealing photos and videos by the mother of two, who has since gone on to model for Playboy magazine.
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