Anyone who has survived high school knows pranks can get ugly. But this one could have killed a child. A Texas football player with a life‑threatening peanut allergy opened his locker to find his teammates had filled it with peanuts—after he’d warned them it could stop his heart. The school’s response? Not what his parents expe… Continues…
Carter Mannon had spent his whole life learning how to live around a danger most people casually snack on. Diagnosed as a baby, he grew into a strong varsity football player who knew one careless bite or touch could send him into anaphylactic shock. His teammates knew it too. They’d even asked him directly if contact with peanuts could kill him, and he’d answered with chilling honesty: yes. The very next day, they scattered peanuts in his locker, on his jersey, and inside his cleats. Carter broke out in hives on the spot.
The boys were briefly benched and made to run extra drills. The district later concluded the act didn’t legally qualify as bullying. Carter, meanwhile, endured retaliation and another peanut product slipped into his backpack. Feeling abandoned and unsafe, he transferred schools. His mother is left with a haunting question many parents now share: when a “prank” gambles with a child’s life, who will finally draw the line?