Why Matthew Schlegel’s “Not Guilty” Doesn’t Mean No Accountability

When we hear the words “not guilty,” some may assume that means the criminal case is closed and nothing further can be done. But in the context of alleged child sex abuse by former third-grade math teacher Matthew Schlegel, “not guilty” in a courtroom doesn’t necessarily mean he can walk away without accountability.

One way he can be held accountable is through Title IX—a system built not on criminal punishment, but on protecting survivors and ensuring safe educational environments.

In fact, he was initially found responsible for violating Anne Arundel County Public School’s Nondiscrimination Policy for Sexual Assault for sexual abuse allegations, as a preponderance of the evidence supported this determination. Schlegel is appealing this decision.

According to news reports from August 2025, Schlegel is not assigned to a classroom for the 2025-2026 school year but has been assigned to a location with no students.

Survivors of Sexual Abuse in Maryland contact he Yost Legal Group

Title IX Isn’t About Jail Time—It’s About Safety

Unlike a criminal trial, Title IX proceedings are not about proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Instead, schools use the preponderance of the evidence standard—meaning investigators ask: is it more likely than not that misconduct or abuse occurred?

This lower standard exists for a reason: school sexual abuse and assault are often underreported, difficult to prove in a criminal setting, and deeply disruptive to a survivor’s ability to learn.

A teacher’s harmful actions, even if not rising to the level of a criminal conviction, can create a hostile and disrupted environment for a child.

Title IX requires schools to act before that harm silences survivors or pushes them out of their education.

The Yost Legal Group handles Teacher Sexual Abuse Claims in Maryland

Why Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse Need a Different System

  • Criminal courts fail many survivors. The overwhelming majority of sexual assaults never lead to a conviction. High evidentiary standards and systemic biases often leave survivors with no legal recognition of what they endured.
  • Education is the priority. Survivors have a right to education in an environment free from intimidation, retaliation, or trauma triggers. Title IX ensures that their ability to learn isn’t treated as collateral damage.
  • Patterns of harm matter. Title IX can examine broader behaviors—unwanted touching, verbal harassment, coercion—that might not be “criminal” but still undermine a survivor’s safety and dignity.

Accountability Isn’t Always a Courtroom Verdict

For survivors, “not guilty” in a criminal matter doesn’t erase the harm done. Title IX provides another path—one that acknowledges that safety and equality in education matter more than whether something can be prosecuted as a crime.

Accountability under Title IX can lead to a wide range of accommodations for a child, ensuring they have access to education.

These aren’t punishments in the criminal sense—they’re safeguards. They ensure that survivors aren’t forced to share classrooms with someone who has caused them harm.

Matthew Schlegel’s teacher in Anne Arundel County charged with sexual abuse of minors

Centering Survivors in the Process

Shifting the focus back to survivors reminds us of the core truth: survivors should not have to carry the burden of leaving school, changing classes, or living in fear while pursuing their education.

Title IX exists to rebalance that scale.

Unreported and Unaddressed: Child Sexual Abuse in Maryland’s School System

Child sexual abuse in schools is a deeply troubling issue that affects communities across Maryland, with both national and local data highlighting its prevalence.

According to the Maryland Coalition Against Sexual Assault (MCASA), while comprehensive data on K-12 schools is limited, research shows that more than 1 in 8 students experience sexual assault during their college years.

The rates in K-12 settings are harder to quantify, but national statistics suggest that 1 in 9 girls and 1 in 53 boys under the age of 18 experience sexual abuse or assault at the hands of an adult.

In Maryland, the issue is significant enough that the state regularly updates its policies and reporting requirements for schools and youth-serving organizations.

A 2021 MCASA fact sheet notes that the vast majority of child sexual abuse goes unreported, with only about 38% of child victims disclosing the abuse, and even fewer cases leading to criminal charges or convictions.

Addressing Sexual Abuse in Maryland’s Educational Institutions

The impacts of Child Sex Abuse are devastating and long-lasting. It contributes to mental health challenges such as depression, PTSD, and anxiety.

Recent testimony to the Maryland General Assembly recounted the experience of a survivor abused at The Heights School. The survivor developed severe depression and PTSD as a result of the abuse and institutional neglect.

Maryland has seen several high-profile cases in recent years, including lawsuits against private schools where administrators failed to act on reports of abuse.

In one case, the Key School in Annapolis faced allegations of a “wider pattern of serialized child abuse” that went unaddressed for years. This further underscores the urgent need for transparency and reform in school environments.

For more detailed statistics and survivor stories:

Final Thoughts from The Yost Legal Group in Baltimore

A “not guilty” verdict in court may end a legal battle, but it doesn’t mean there was no harm—or that survivors should have to navigate unsafe environments alone.

Title IX steps in where the criminal system falls short. It ensures that schools uphold their responsibility to:

  • protect students
  • safeguard education
  • provide survivors with the right to continue learning without fear.

The Yost Legal Group assists victims of sexual abuse in many ways. Our sexual abuse attorneys work hard to protect children. We help seek compensation through the civil justice system and Title IX proceedings.

Just as The Yost Legal Group helped children navigate the Title IX process related to Matthew Schlegel, we can help you, too.

Child Sexual Abuse Lawyers – Molestation Claims – Baltimore Abuse Attorneys – Child Sex Abuse

Baltimore Abuse Claims – Teacher Sexual Abuse Claims – Survivors of Sexual Abuse

Local Teacher Found Not Guilty of Child Sexual Abuse

Teacher Found Not Guilty of Child Sexual Abuse

In March of 2024, a courageous 8-year-old girl came forward to report the sexual abuse she was experiencing at the hands of her third-grade teacher.

That brave act led to many other girls coming forward, alleging that the same 45-year-old male teacher molested them. The sexual abuse of these young girls was investigated through hours of forensic interviews by trained professionals.

After numerous evaluations and therapy sessions with highly trained psychologists and detectives, authorities concluded that the young girls’ stories were true and factual.

During the trial, several of those elementary school girls testified that their teacher touched them inappropriately on a number of different occasions. However, in the end, the jury was deadlocked on several counts and their teacher was ultimately was found not guilty on the others.

Maryland Childhood Sexual Abuse Lawyer The Yost Legal Group

The Criminal Justice System Does Not Always Work

The Anne Arundel County State’s Attorney’s Office charged Matthew Schlegel with dozens of counts of childhood sex abuse crimes against several young girls who came forward to report their harrowing experiences. He was arrested in May 2024, and the trial took place in May and June of 2025.

Defendant Matthew Schlegel hired two defense firms to represent him, and an Anne Arundel County jury found him not guilty on 18 of the 21 charges.

The families feel incredibly defeated. The courageous young girls who came forward are heartbroken that the jurors did not find the accounts of their molestation to be credible and criminal.

Despite this outcome, we want to affirm and applaud the heroic actions of both the children and their supportive parents for having the strength to come forward and fight.

Attempting To Hold Accused Childhood Sexual Predators Criminally Accountable Is Very Difficult For Childhood Abuse Survivors

During the year between Schlegel’s arrest and the trial, many people’s lives were put on hold.

The young girls, who should have been spending their fourth-grade year with friends, enjoying school, playing sports, and simply being kids, instead faced an entirely different reality.

Their days were filled with therapy sessions, battles with panic attacks and anxiety, and other mental health challenges. They struggled to balance the return to school and extracurricular activities with the investigative process that was underway, which included numerous interactions with detectives, attorneys, and the judicial system.

Meanwhile, Matthew Schlegel hired multiple private defense attorneys to put up a defense that called into doubt the testimony of multiple 9- and 10-year-old victims and witnesses.

The accused sex offender’s attorneys argued to the jury that the families of these little girls colluded to influence their children to report their abuse.

The Yost Legal Group’s Cara O’Brien believes that this type of defense encourages an abuse-centered culture where children will be hesitant to come forward for fear of not being believed. Studies have found that only one in five children discloses sexual abuse during their childhood, and many do not disclose for fear of not being believed.

Local Teacher, Matthew Schlegel, Found Not Guilty of Child Sexual Abuse

These Brave Girls May Have Saved Future Young Girls from Abuse

Survivors of sexual abuse do not all come forward to publicly report their childhood sexual abuse at the same time, and rarely do so while still a child and/or while still being abused. The average age at which a survivor of child sex abuse comes forward is 52. As such, childhood predators often escape scrutiny for years.

But when a brave survivor goes public, it is not unusual for many more survivors to come forward with reports of earlier sexual abuse.

These girls should be praised for their remarkable bravery, strength, and resilience as they came forward to report abuse at the ages of 8 and 9 years old, which subsequently put Severna Park Elementary school administrative officials on notice about the potential for harm to other children by their math teacher, Matthew Schlegel.

Although Matthew Schlegel was found not guilty, we applaud these children for acting selflessly and responsibly, knowing the path to going public would be hard and uncertain.

Upon information, Mr. Schlegel is not believed to be teaching third grade at Severna Park Elementary School for the 2025-2026 school year.

The Yost Legal Group Is Pursuing Holding Severna Park Elementary School Accountable to The Girls Who Were Sexually Abused at School

We believe that the criminal justice system failed these little girls and that the State’s Attorney for Anne Arundel County missed another opportunity to hold Schlegel accountable.

More victims may come forward to report that they were abused years earlier by their third-grade math teacher, Schlegel.

The determination of whether and when a child should pursue a civil claim as a result of childhood sexual abuse is very personal. The determining factor is what is in the child’s best interest. These decisions should be made after consultation with mental health professionals.

It is also advisable to speak with an experienced sex abuse attorney who is trauma-informed and trained. They can answer questions and set expectations to help the child and her parents decide if filing a civil case makes sense for them. Under the Maryland Child Victims Act, there is no time limit to file a civil claim. Families can explore Title IX proceedings, which ensure the federal right to an education free from sexual harassment.

It is essential to understand that there are other legal avenues for holding individuals accountable. Our legal system doesn’t always achieve justice on the first attempt.

Survivors of Abuse Come Forward, Your Voice Matters

If you or anyone you know suffered from childhood sexual abuse, come forward. Reclaim the power you lost as a child by confronting and holding your abusers and enablers accountable.

teacher sexual abuse claims from Severna Park Elementary School in Anne Arundel County Maryland

There Are Other Legal Remedies to Seek Justice

The Yost Legal Group is a Maryland law firm representing survivors of institutional childhood sexual abuse.

Institutional sexual abuse is when a minor is under the care and supervision of an institution, religious, government, or corporate-run entity, and is abused. Many institutions fail to protect the minors in their care.

The following is a list of institutional environments where child sex abuse claims happen frequently.

–             Clergy sexual abuse claims

–             Juvenile detention center sexual abuse claims

–             Foster care sexual abuse claims

–             Private and public school sexual abuse claims

–             Athletic coach sexual abuse claims

–             Doctor sexual abuse claims

Legally, no minor can consent to a sexual relationship with an adult. The Yost Legal Group’s child sexual abuse lawyers are committed to protecting the rights of child victims.

Standing Up for Justice for Child Abuse Survivors

If you’re a survivor of child sexual abuse in a Maryland institution, we will file a lawsuit on your behalf. The Maryland Child Victims Act allows victims of childhood abuse to seek justice, no matter how long ago the abuse happened.

To learn about your rights or discuss the possibility of making a sx, contact us for a free and confidential consultation. We accept cases on a no-win, no-fee, or expense basis.

Maryland Sex Abuse Law Firm – Juvenile Detention Sexual Abuse ClaimsChildhood Sexual Abuse Lawyer