Multiple charges will be issued. But that student will not be expelled for committing an assault off school property.
Why is the loud mouth balding fat *** getting a pass on this? He started it all. Have some common sense and self control dude. It's common sense not to shout at large groups of kids gathered on the street. And then the guy chases after a teenage girl?
So he can't protest the protesters? He needs to have self control and not say anything, but she doesn't have to control herself and keep the water bottle in her hand? That is what started it. Him chasing her, while wrong, was a byproduct of her not having self control. How dare someone shout back at protesters.
Once again you don't understand the rules of the school. No one is saying they should be expelled for committing an assault, she could be expelled for leaving the campus without permission. It is called elopement and different districts have different policies.
It appears that you only deal with the end result and want to judge that. I'll share an incident that took place in my school. Texas law prohibits use of cell phones and other personal communication devices, other than district issued laptops, during the school day. Any personal devices are to be turned off and stored in their backpacks. A girl was walking down the hall and a fight broke out, the girl immediately pulled out her phone to record the fight, he phone ended up on the ground and the screen shattered. She blamed the girl behind her for bumping into her and causing her to drop the phone. While true, the girl did bump her and caused her phone to fall and shatter, the real issue is the phone shouldn't have been out to begin with. If the phone is in the back pack, it isn't broken. Choice/ consequence.
To tie it back to this interaction. The students are supposed to be in class, they weren't. Had they been in class doing what they are supposed to be doing, the old guy doesn't yell at her, she doesn't throw a water bottle at him and this is episode doesn't take place.
There are plenty of opportunities to protest ICE, global warming, or any number of social justice causes these students want to protest on their own time. Skip school and protest all you want, but once they enter the school, there are rules and regulations they need to adhere to. Again, choices/consequences.