A 11-year-old Queens fifth-grader was booted from her Catholic elementary school for blowing the whistle on a bizarre sex-bracelets game.
“I’m happy. I hate that school,” a defiant Megan Stecher said after learning that Holy Child Jesus School in Richmond Hill won’t let her return next year. “I only have five friends in the whole year.”
Megan said getting the boot was unfair, but her mother, Michelle, 33, was much angrier.
“I’m outraged,” she declared.
Michelle said school officials claimed she slandered Holy Child by allowing her daughter to be photographed by The Post in front of it wearing bracelets and rings that represent different sex acts.
“I didn’t slander anybody,” said Michelle, after her daughter’s expulsion was reported on Fox News. “But what they did today – throwing my daughter out of school – that’s slander.”
Megan was the subject of a Post front-page story Sunday revealing that some city kids – including girls at Holy Child – play a strange game called “Snap” where girls wear bracelets and rings of different colors and boys try to rip them off.
If a boy succeeds, he gets a coupon from the girl promising to perform whatever sex act the color stands for. Black, for example, represents sexual intercourse.
Michelle said she allowed her daughter to be interviewed because “I wanted parents to know that if it’s happening in Catholic schools, its happening in public schools and it’s happening everywhere. Half the school does it.”
Yesterday, the bracelets hit the fan.
Sister Diane Androvich, the principal, called Megan and her mother in and said the girl would be allowed to take her final exams this year, but wouldn’t be allowed back next year, the family said.
“They said I did an un-Christian thing,” Michelle said. “They said if there was a problem, I should have reported it to them first. But I feel I was right to let other parents know what their children are doing.”
School officials did not return calls for comment.