Undocumented Fairfax High Student Israel Ortiz Gets 360 Days For Groping Classmates
Undocumented Fairfax High School student Israel Ortiz was sentenced to 360 days in jail for groping female classmates.
A judge in Fairfax County gave Ortiz 360 days but court calculations mean he has about 135 days left after time served and misdemeanor credits. Prosecutors say he was convicted in nine cases, acquitted in three, and had one charge dismissed after accusations from 13 female classmates.
Judge Melinda Vanlowe called the behavior a targeted pattern and "deplorable," saying the case was "very difficult" for the court. Defense lawyers had asked for a nine-day sentence and argued Ortiz' conduct was an immature joke or prank rather than sexually motivated. An attorney for one of the victims publicly rejected efforts to politicize the case as attention shifted online after the court decision. Virginia's Department of Education said on X that it opened a Title IX investigation and framed the case amid worries about "radical gender ideology" and discrimination in schools.
Early reports in the same outlet had said Ortiz received 180 days, but later reporting corrected that to 360 days and added details about convictions and credits. That update changed public understanding of the punishment's length and the case's complexity, highlighting uneven early coverage and the need to wait for final court calculations.
đ Key Facts
- Israel Flores Ortiz was sentenced to 360 days in jail; after time served and misdemeanor credit calculations, roughly 135 days remain.
- Ortiz was convicted in nine cases, acquitted in three, and had one charge dismissed after accusations involving 13 female classmates.
- Judge Melinda Vanlowe called the case "very difficult," describing Ortiz's conduct as a "targeted" pattern of "deplorable" behavior.
- The defense asked for a nine-day sentence, arguing the conduct was an immature "joke or prank" rather than sexually motivated.
- An attorney for one victim publicly rejected efforts to politicize the case.
- Virginia's Department of Education announced a Title IX investigation on X, tying the matter to broader concerns about "radical gender ideology" and discrimination in Virginia schools.
đ° Source Timeline (2)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Sentence is 360 days with roughly 135 days remaining after time-served and misdemeanor credit calculations.
- Judge Melinda Vanlowe called the case 'very difficult' and the conduct a 'targeted' 'pattern' of 'deplorable' behavior.
- Ortiz was convicted in nine cases, acquitted in three, and had one charge dismissed after accusations involving 13 female classmates.
- Defense asked for a nine-day sentence and argued his conduct was an immature 'joke or prank' rather than sexually motivated.
- An attorney for one victim publicly rejected efforts to politicize the case.
- Virginia's Education Department announced a Title IX investigation on X, tying the case to broader concerns about 'radical gender ideology' and discrimination in Virginia schools.