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    Home » Texas Leadership Charter Academy Lawsuit Exposes How Adults Used Push-Ups as a Weapon Against Children
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    Texas Leadership Charter Academy Lawsuit Exposes How Adults Used Push-Ups as a Weapon Against Children

    Sierra FosterBy Sierra FosterApril 18, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    With its scuffed floors and humming fluorescent lights, the gymnasium at Texas Leadership Charter Academy in San Angelo appears to be a typical school gym, similar to those found in any mid-sized Texas town. However, twelve families claim they will never fully recover from what happened inside that building on February 25, 2026. The doors shut. Whistles began to blow. And almost eighty students started what turned out to be one of the most well-documented cases of institutional child abuse in recent Texas history, according to a lawsuit filed in Dallas County.

    According to the court filing, the story begins with an almost ridiculously small detail. The same jersey number had been given to two pupils. The error of the coaches. The lawsuit claims that instead of quietly correcting the administrative error, the head football coach ordered all of the student athletes onto the gym floor for a punishment that consisted of continuous, whistle-driven push-ups for the better part of a class period, or about 45 minutes. No water. No relaxation. No pauses. Five coaches paced among the students, reprimanding anyone who slowed down, and the students estimated that they were required to complete between 300 and 420 repetitions.

    The language used in the lawsuit is exact and purposefully uncompromising. “The coaches told the kids to get up and carry on when they fell. The coaches made fun of the kids for being weak when they cried out in agony. The coaches blew whistles and demanded more when the kids pleaded to stop. The detail about the gymnasium doors being closed carries a lot of weight when reading those lines. It’s not a coincidence. It is important.

    The pupils returned to school the following morning. Many were unable to raise their arms high enough to pull a shirt over their heads, brush their teeth, or eat breakfast. Dry medical terminology doesn’t resonate with you in the same way as the image of an adolescent unable to dress themselves, shuffling into a school where the adults responsible for their injuries were still at their posts. However, the lawsuit claims that the coaches made the students perform push-ups for an additional two days.

    About 20 students were admitted to the hospital between February 27 and March 2. Rhabdomyolysis, a disorder brought on by the quick breakdown of muscle tissue that floods the bloodstream with proteins the kidneys are unable to process quickly enough, was the most common diagnosis. Kidney failure may result from it. It can be lethal in extreme circumstances. One child’s muscle enzyme levels were found to be almost 750 times the upper limit of normal, according to the lawsuit, which also notes a mortality rate of 30 to 50 percent in serious presentations of the condition. Since then, a number of students have been referred to kidney experts. Some have been informed that their ability to engage in physical activity may be permanently restricted. They are teenagers.

    Someone in the TLCA hierarchy might have thought that this type of punishment was appropriate for athletic conditioning. That would be a serious error in judgment. According to Ryan Johnson, the lead attorney, student athletes in Texas endure two-a-day practices in triple-digit heat every August without being admitted to the hospital due to organ failure. The main contention of the lawsuit is that what transpired in that gym crossed the line between hard training and something else entirely, to the point where the term “discipline” is no longer applicable.

    When the Gym Doors Closed: Inside the Texas Leadership Charter Academy Lawsuit That Left Children With Permanent Damage


    Institution NameTexas Leadership Charter Academy (TLCA) — San Angelo Campus
    TypePublic Charter School
    LocationSan Angelo, Texas (approx. 200 miles west of Waco)
    Parent OrganizationTexas Leadership Public Schools
    CEO / SuperintendentWalt Landers
    Compliance DirectorCurtis Milbourn
    Incident DateFebruary 25–27, 2026
    Students InvolvedApproximately 80 students forced; ~20 hospitalized
    Injuries DiagnosedRhabdomyolysis, permanent kidney damage in multiple students
    Hospital Stay Duration2 to 7 days per student
    Lawsuit FiledApril 10, 2026
    Court193rd Judicial District Court, Dallas County, Texas
    Case NumberDC-26-06347
    Law Firm Representing FamiliesCherry Johnson Siegmund James (Waco, Texas)
    Lead AttorneyRyan C. Johnson
    Defendants NamedTLCA San Angelo, Texas Leadership Public Schools, CEO Walt Landers, 4 administrators, 2 former coaches, 2 current coaches
    Damages SoughtAt least $500,000 per student, plus punitive damages
    Alleged Cover-Up ActionsCoach reassignments, email deletion, liability waivers inserted into enrollment forms
    Texas Leadership Charter Academy Lawsuit Exposes How Adults Used Push-Ups as a Weapon Against Children
    Texas Leadership Charter Academy Lawsuit Exposes How Adults Used Push-Ups as a Weapon Against Children

    The allegations of what followed make the Texas Leadership Charter Academy lawsuit more than just a tale of one unfortunate event. The filing claims that after their children were admitted to the hospital, not a single school official contacted any of the impacted families. Rather, the lawsuit claims that the involved coaches were discreetly reassigned by school administration. The plaintiffs contend that the inclusion of liability waivers in the enrollment registration materials for the following year was an intentional attempt to deprive families of their legal rights before they were fully informed of the situation. Workers were allegedly told to remove emails. According to the lawsuit, administrators handled the hospitalization of twenty children as a reputational issue that needed to be contained rather than as a crisis requiring accountability.

    Curtis Milbourn, the school’s compliance director, issued a cautious and legal response. Officials said they have been open with parents, collaborated with law enforcement, and promptly reported the misconduct to child protective services. They contest the definition of a cover-up. It’s still unclear which version of events the evidence will support when that dispute finally takes place in a Dallas County courtroom. However, there is a significant discrepancy between the school’s claims and what the families describe, necessitating an explanation.

    Seeing a case like this unfold gives me the impression that it affects more than just one West Texas charter school. The more general issue of oversight in charter school settings, where accountability procedures may be less well-defined and administrative structures may be thinner than in traditional public schools, has been discussed for years without coming to a conclusion. These kinds of accusations are not new to TLCA, and they most likely won’t be the last. The lawsuit was filed under a recently amended section of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, which increases civil liability for schools and staff who neglect to report abuse. If this provision had been implemented in this case, at least some of these students’ outcomes might have been different.

    The families want punitive damages in addition to at least $500,000 per student. Although the numbers are substantial, the lawyers are adamant that money is not the main factor in the case. It’s about taking responsibility and arguing loudly in court that what transpired in that gym wasn’t a training mishap or a coaching error of judgment. The lawsuit states unequivocally that it was child abuse.

    It still affects the students who were present on that February morning. Some people experience nightmares. Some people are terrified to return to school. One person reportedly had a dream in which they were lying in a hospital bed and performing push-ups. These are the specifics that are often obscured by case numbers and medical jargon in court documents and press releases. However, they are the ones who explain the true nature of this case.

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    Sierra Foster
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    Born in Kansas City, Sierra Foster writes about politics and serves as Senior Editor at kbsd6.com. She was raised paying attention to this city, not just living in it. Sierra has a strong, deep connection to Kansas City, from the neighborhoods east of Troost to the discussions that take place in the city hall halls. Sierra, who is presently enrolled at the University of Kansas to pursue a degree in Political Science, applies the rigor of academic study to her journalism. She writes about politics in Missouri and Kansas as someone who genuinely cares about what happens to the people in these communities—the policies that impact them, the leaders who represent them, and the civic forces influencing their futures—rather than as an outsider watching from a distance. Her editorial coverage encompasses state-level policy, local government, and the national political currents that permeate bi-state regional life. Whether it's a city council vote or a Senate race, she has a special gift for turning complex policy language into writing that feels urgent, relatable, and worthwhile. Sierra seldom sits still off the page. She claims that playing soccer on a regular basis has sharpened her instincts for political reporting because of the sport's teamwork, strategy, and requirement to read a changing game in real time. She's probably somewhere in Kansas City with her friends when she's not writing or on the pitch, discovering new reasons to adore a city she already knows so well.

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