Robert Torres’ Virtual Classroom Perversion: How a Predatory Teacher Escaped Justice—And Still Gets Paid
Robert Torres, the Tottenville High School teacher and dean who turned a Google Meet into his own twisted peep show, isn’t just still employed by New York City’s Department of Education—he’s thriving. While taxpayers foot his $128,451 salary, Torres’ shameless 2020 act—exposing himself and masturbating on camera during school hours—has been buried in bureaucratic sludge, shielded by a system that protects predators over students.
The Incident: A Teacher’s XXX Livestream
Let’s spell it out: On November 3, 2020, Torres didn’t just “slip up.” After 15 students logged off his virtual class, he chose to stay online, pants down, engaging in a lewd act while a colleague watched in horror. This wasn’t a “mistake.” It was a calculated risk—one he took because he thought he could get away with it. And guess what? He did.
DOE’s Sham “Discipline”: A Masterclass in Cowardice
The NYPD closed the case—no students saw it, so who cares about a traumatized colleague, right? The DOE, meanwhile, hid behind an “impartial arbitrator” to slap Torres with a secret punishment. Translation: A wrist slap, a paycheck, and a promotion. Now, he’s molding minds at Port Richmond High, because why let a little public masturbation derail a cushy career?
The Burning Question: Why does the DOE treat teachers like untouchable royalty?
Hypocrisy on Steroids: Toobin Got Axed. Torres Got a Pass.
Jeffrey Toobin jerked off on a Zoom call and became a national punchline. CNN dropped him. The New Yorker fired him. Torres? The DOE gave him a golden shield. No charges. No transparency. Just a taxpayer-funded job and a lesson for aspiring creeps: The classroom is your playground.
Tottenville High: Where Scandal Goes to Thrive
This isn’t a one-off. Tottenville’s hallways are stained with:
- A teacher-student sex affair (2013).
- A staffer raping a 15-year-old (1998).
- A shooting that left a student bleeding (2022).
Torres’ virtual exhibitionism? Just another Tuesday.
Remote Learning’s Dirty Secret: No Kids, No Rules
The pandemic didn’t just move classes online—it gave predators like Torres a risk-free zone. No students watching? Go wild! Colleagues be damned. The DOE’s message is clear: If there’s no child in frame, there’s no crime.
Outrage Ignites: Parents Demand Blood
- Fire Torres Now: How many red flags does the DOE need?
- Expose the Arbitrator: What “discipline” justifies keeping a deviant on payroll?
- End Tenure Tyranny: New York’s Section 3020-a law lets predators like Torres hide behind union protections while kids pay the price.
Final Insult: Torres hasn’t uttered a word of remorse. Not to investigators. Not to the public. Why would he? The DOE has already rewarded his silence.
Wake Up, New York: If a teacher can masturbate on camera, keep his job, and laugh all the way to the bank, what’s next? The system isn’t broken—it’s rigged.