A Night of Terror Abroad (Image Credits: Pixabay)
Las Vegas – A horrifying alleged sexual assault by eighth graders during a school trip to Costa Rica has exposed deep cracks in the safety net at The Alexander Dawson School at Rainbow Mountain, one of Summerlin’s premier private institutions.[1][2] The incident, which occurred in April 2025, involved four boys pinning down a 14-year-old classmate, penetrating him with objects including a ChapStick tube and a flute, and recording the attack on Snapchat.[1] As indictments mount and a lawsuit unfolds, the community grapples with shattered perceptions of privilege and protection in elite education.
A Night of Terror Abroad
The assault took place on the second night of the weeklong trip, meant to cap the students’ time at the preschool-through-eighth-grade academy where annual tuition exceeds $32,000.[1] Vaughn Griffith, then 15 and the class president, allegedly filmed the 2-minute video under his Snapchat handle “Vonissexy,” capturing the victim crying and screaming as attackers held him down.[2] One perpetrator inserted his penis, while others used improvised objects; bystanders urged the boy to “fight back,” with Griffith warning of further violence if he resisted.[1]
The victim viewed his assailants as friends and stayed silent initially to shield them. Threats escalated upon return, with the group warning him against disclosure and promising to share the footage widely, including with girls at school.[1] The video surfaced publicly in May 2025 at a welcome event at The Meadows School, prompting reports to authorities after horrified students viewed it.[1]
Pattern of Overlooked Bullying
Long before the trip, the victim’s family raised alarms about harassment by the same group, including Griffith and Dominic Kim, dating back to 2021.[3] Complaints detailed intimidation, threats, and physical abuse, yet administrators dismissed them as “boys being boys” and took no substantial action, according to a February 2026 civil lawsuit filed by the parents.[2]
The suit names the school, its board, Principal Roxanne Stansbury, and trip chaperones, alleging foreseeable escalation from unchecked bullying.[2] Even pre-trip warnings about threats went unheeded; teachers spoke to the boys but allowed them to stay. The school’s family guide promised robust anti-bullying measures, a pledge the plaintiffs claim was ignored.
- Harassment and retaliation against reporters
- Failure to enforce cellphone restrictions or send offenders home
- Victim-blaming post-incident
- Prior teacher abuse case at Colorado campus in 2021
Criminal Charges Gain Traction
Prosecutors lack jurisdiction over the Costa Rican assault, focusing instead on U.S.-based crimes like possession of child sexual abuse material.[4] A grand jury indicted Griffith in January 2026 on a felony possession count tied to his Snapchat images; Kim followed on April 3 with charges of possession and child abuse for sharing the video and tormenting victims.[5][4]
Both teens, now 15, were certified for adult court – Kim’s judge called the allegations “serious, heinous and egregious.”[1] They posted bail – $20,000 for Griffith, $30,000 for Kim – under strict conditions like electronic monitoring, no minor contact, and limited internet.[4] Griffith’s attorney recently sought Judge Christy Craig’s removal, blaming media frenzy for bias risks.[6]
| Suspect | Key Charges | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Vaughn Griffith | Possession of child sexual abuse material | Indicted Jan 2026; bail posted; hearing April 9 |
| Dominic Kim | Possession; child abuse/neglect | Indicted Apr 3 2026; bail posted; hearing April 14 |
| Two others | None (no image ties) | No charges; one in online school |
School Responds Amid Backlash
The academy notified police immediately and cooperated fully, Head of School Stansbury wrote to families: “We are deeply saddened… confidentiality does not equate to inaction.”[1] Yet enrollment inquiries shifted to rivals, summer events drew sparse crowds, and parents voiced outrage over delayed transparency.[1]
Victim’s mother expressed resolve in court: “I’m very grateful to see justice being done… we’re all hurting.”[1] Defense attorneys portrayed the boys as immature seeking acceptance, with Kim’s lawyer noting his remorse and suicidal thoughts.[1] Prosecutor Stacy Kollins rejected excuses: “Whatever the motivation is, it is not ‘boys will be boys.’”
Key Takeaways
- Unchecked bullying since 2021 allegedly paved the way for the assault.
- Criminal focus remains on video possession due to jurisdictional limits.
- School’s reputation hangs in balance as cases proceed to trial.
This saga underscores the vulnerabilities even in high-tuition havens. What steps should elite schools take to prevent such tragedies? Tell us in the comments.
