The high school homecoming queen who was arrested following claims she and her mom rigged her school s 2020 election is filing suit against those responsible for her charges.
Emily Grover, 18, is suing Florida law enforcement and her school district after an arrest pertaining to her homecoming queendom cost her her collegiate admission and scholarship.
2020-21 FSU ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME CLASS seminoles.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from seminoles.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The good news this week is that the country is getting ready to open up again. Festivals, outdoor concerts, and sports will soon welcome live audiences. This is big news. So big, that it is awakening 3 trillion cicadas who will soon be joining us for a fun time.
   Cicadas are insects the size of your thumb. Sorta like murder hornets, except cicadas won t kill you, they will just annoy the hell out of you. They will soon be emerging from the ground in 15 states in the midwest and east where they spent the last 17 years hibernating. Now, they are coming out to eat your trees, have sex, and die. They are ugly, destructive, and very noisy, so it will be like 3 trillion politicians with big red eyes invading the land. Cicadas are also edible and can be fried and are said to taste just like crickets.
By Bender
May 6, 2021
A Florida teen is accused of rigging a homecoming queen election, with her mother s help, and she is being charged as an adult. The girl, who just turned 18, and her mother, face multiple felony charges from the October homecoming vote at Tate High School in Pensacola. Here’s how it went down, according to investigators: the teen’s mother was an assistant principal at an elementary school in the same county, so she accessed the school district’s internal system to cast fraudulent votes for her daughter so that she would win.
Problem is, there were 117 votes from the same IP address within a short period of time. That’s when investigators found evidence of unauthorized access to the system linked to the mother’s cellphone and computers at her home. Ultimately, there were 246 votes cast for homecoming court from those devices.