Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Florida Mom And Daughter Caught Hacking Into School's System To Rig Homecoming Queen Vote

Florida Mom And Daughter Caught Hacking Into School's System To Rig Homecoming Queen Vote
WKRG

A Florida woman and her daughter were arrested for hacking a high school's computer system to gain access to hundreds of students' accounts in order to rig the Homecoming Queen vote in favor of the daughter.

Laura Rose Carroll, 50, is an assistant principal at Belleview Elementary.


She used her position to access the Escambia County School District's internal system to cast fake votes for her 17-year-old daughter—who attends Tate High School in Pensacola—so she could be queen for a day.

It appears the Sunshine State's reputation remains steady.



According to WKRG, both mother and daughter were charged with:

"offense against users of computers, computer systems, computer networks, and electronic devices, unlawful use of a two-way communication device, criminal use of personally identified information, and conspiracy to commit these offenses."

You can watch the news report below.

youtu.be

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) said the investigation began in November 2020 when hundreds of students casting their votes for Tate High School's Homecoming Court a month before were flagged as fraudulent.

After discovering 117 votes originated from the same IP address as Carroll's phone, the investigation concluded Carroll and her daughter had unlawfully accessed the FOCUS accounts of several students.

FOCUS is the Escambia County School District's student information system, which Carroll had "district level access" to.



Multiple students also told authorities the daughter bragged about using her mother's FOCUS account to cast votes for herself, which ultimately led to her being crowned as the school's Homecoming Queen.


The FDLE investigation also uncovered Carroll's FOCUS account from August of 2019 had access to 372 high school records—339 of which were Tate High students.

Evidence showed a total of 246 votes were cast from accounts accessed through computers tracing back to the mother and daughter's home in Pensacola or from Carroll's phone.

District Superintendent Tim Smith told the Pensacola News Journal Carroll was suspended from her job.

She was booked and released from the Escambia County Jail on Monday.

The daughter was expelled from the school and taken to the Escambia Regional Juvenile Detention Centre.

More from Trending

group of men; Silverback gorilla
Sean Murphy/Getty Images; JOSE JORDAN/AFP via Getty Images

Viral Tweet Claiming That 100 Unarmed Men Could Beat A Single Gorilla Sparks Heated Debate

In the early morning hours of Friday, April 25, X user DreamChasnMike posited the outcome of a showdown between Homo sapiens sapiens and one of our closest relatives.

Or rather 100 men versus one of our fellow primates.

Keep Reading Show less
GOP Lawmaker Dragged After Admitting He Has No Evidence Of Student 'Furries' Using Litter Boxes

GOP Lawmaker Dragged After Admitting He Has No Evidence Of Student 'Furries' Using Litter Boxes

Texas Republican state Representative Stan Gerdes admitted on Wednesday that a bill he sponsored served no purpose and addressed an issue that never existed in American schools.

His bill, HB54, would ban "furries" from classrooms. Furries are a subculture that enjoys dressing up and acting like non-human animals.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump
Win McNamee/Getty Images

The White House Now Has Its Own News Website—And People Are Calling It Out For What It Is

Critics called out the Trump administration for running its own propaganda network after the White House publicized "White House Wire," its own news website that features news articles from conservative news outlets like the Daily Caller and Fox News.

The White House Wire (WHWIRE) primarily features positive coverage of the president and administration, with stories mainly sourced from conservative outlets and contributions from government staffers. One early headline, "100 Days Of Hoaxes: Cutting Through The Fake News," was notable but did not include a direct link to a story.

Keep Reading Show less
A young blonde woman in a black suit sits at her desk, her laptop is open and she is staring off in deep thought, she seems a bit perplexed.
Photo by Magnet.me on Unsplash

People Reveal The Pettiest Reason They Stopped Sleeping With Someone

Some sexual encounters you remember for life for the wrong reason.

That's why people should come with warning labels.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Donald Trump
Fox News

Trump Suggests Kids Will Just Have To Deal With Having A Lot Fewer Toys Due To His Tariffs

President Donald Trump was criticized for his response to concerns about empty store shelves due to his tariffs, suggesting that children will just have to settle for "two dolls instead of 30," and that those dolls might cost more than they used to.

U.S. businesses are already canceling orders from China and delaying expansion plans as they brace for the fallout from Trump’s trade policies.

Keep Reading Show less