After her son committed suicide due to bullying, an American family demands $100 million in compensation

The family of a young American who committed suicide resorted to prosecuting his school and its principal, demanding compensation of $100 million.

The family of 15-year-old Nate Bronstein, who committed suicide after being severely bullied for months by his colleagues, said that "her son could have survived, if the school principal in Chicago had taken deterrent measures against the bullies." , according to the Washington Post.

His mother, Roslyn, said that she "sued a lawsuit against the school and its former principal, demanding compensation of $100 million," explaining that "the school and the principal ignored the suffering of her late son for months, as he was subjected to merciless bullying."

She added, "I contacted the school administration to put an end to this bullying, but there was no improvement, and things got worse... One of the teachers spoke harshly to him in front of the students in the classroom."

And she continued, "I warn all parents that this will happen again... their children will not be protected in that school."

And the child "Nate" hanged himself last January, after rumors spread among school students that he had not taken the anti-Corona vaccine, and then his colleagues began to harass him with a repeated question about vaccination, and whether his parents were against vaccination.