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No criminal complaint against Manhattan D114 teacher in the probe: boss

Manhattan, IL – A examined teacher of Manhattan District 114 Because of alleged misconduct, no criminal charges for Ryan Gulli, chief police chief of Manhattan, will be communicated on Friday.

The sports teacher at Manhattan Jr. High School was accompanied by school ownership and put on a paid vacation last week. District officers said they would carry out an internal examination of the teacher's behavior to determine the next steps. Two days later, officials said that the Manhattan police also examined the fact that the allegations justified criminal complaints. The examination ended a week later.

District officers are braided tightly in terms of details on the incident and behavior of the teacher. In a press release on Friday, the police chief of Manhattan, Ryan Gulli, exhibited that the police investigation wanted to determine whether the teacher had illegally recorded subjects.

“Detectives from the Manhattan police authority, with the support of the Ministry of Children's and Family Services, wants County Children's Advocacy Center and the law firm of Will County State's, immediately started an investigation to determine whether a violation of non-authorized video recordings (720 ILCS 5/26-4) took place,” said the publication.

According to Illinois law, it is illegal to knowingly create a video recording or to transmit a live video of another person in a toilet, a browning studio, the changing room, the changing room or a hotel bedroom without the consent of this person.