Friday, January 28, 2022

North Carolina school laptops were stolen, lost and sold at a pawn shop, according to the I-Team

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WTVD/WTVD/WTVD/WTVD/WTVD/WTVD/WTVD/WTVD/WTVD/W Throughout the pandemic, laptops and hotspots were essential for students. Across North Carolina, school districts spent millions of dollars to provide devices to families who might otherwise go without. The ABC11 I-Team discovered that gadgets are not always returned more than a year later. Despite the expenditure, several computers and hotspots were broken, lost, or recovered in pawn shops. The Wake County Public School System issued over 500 Chromebooks, which have been reported misplaced or not returned. Another 2,500 laptops were not returned and were given to children who were no longer in the district. Only about 2% of all gadgets are of this type.

The district said it made multiple attempts to get the Chromebooks back and only have 11 laptops missing. Eight percent of the district’s 1,710 laptops were broken. Ten percent of the WiFi hotspots distributed were broken or lost. Bill Dawson, the president and CEO of Picasso Pawn, told the I-Team that his stores do not take school laptops. “We don’t want school systems’ laptops, and we do everything that we can to not take them and it’s also a training issue on our part and we’re revamping our training to make sure that all of our people understand that,” Dawson said.

Around 4% of the laptops were tested by the district’s Break Fix Team. Forty-five percent of the Wi-Fi hotspots distributed to Wake County students are lost, broken or unaccounted for. Wake County isn’t the only school district reporting lost and broken devices. The I-Team even found two Warren County School District laptops on sale at a Picasso pawn shop in Raleigh. The Chromebooks–originally valued for close to $300–were marked down to $40. A spokesperson for the Warren County School District said both laptops were issued to one student who is no longer enrolled at the district.

Dawson said generally employees check who laptops are registered to but admitted it can be difficult to figure out if the students were allowed to keep the devices following graduation. All transactions at pawn shops are also put into a system that local police departments have access to. He said he didn’t know about the sale of the laptops until ABC11 reached out and is looking into how they wound up on store shelves.

“It’s really important that we do the right thing by the communities in which we serve. As an association, as an industry, we’re not in the business of doing, marketing other property that doesn’t belong to the people that bring it,” Dawson said. ABC11 also requested data on devices from Durham Public Schools but has not been provided the data yet.

News Summary:

  • North Carolina school laptops were stolen, lost and sold at a pawn shop, according to the I-Team
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