Sex Ed: Man Busted For Leaving Condoms, Porno at Elementary School

Parents say man has been leaving x-rated materials for months

Students at a Kendall elementary school have been receiving sex education for months -- but not in the classroom.

Police have arrested a man who is suspected of leaving condoms, naked pictures, pornographic DVDs and other lewd materials near Winston Park Elementary.

The man, identified as 62-year-old David Arnold Weitzner, was arrested late Wednesday night after a resident said he spotted Weitzner leaving condoms and pornos for kids inside a fence at the school and at a crosswalk nearby on the 13000 block of Southwest 79th St.

"I was coming down with my kids in the car, we happened to see him laying down pornographic material in the school as well as in the Winston Park homeowners property," said Jose Nieves. "He started laying down papers...and I saw him actually put a condom on a crosswalk, where you push the button to cross the street."

Nieves said that's when he decided to take matters into his own hands.
 
"I went and got an assistant manager from the clubhouse and we went and confronted him," said Nieves. "He wouldn't give us his name or his information, he kept on walking so I kept following him until a police officer came along and they took him down."

Nieves said Weitzner had come prepared with a bag full of x-rated materials.

"All kinds of pornographic materials, there were DVDs, also pamphlets for pornographic materials, there was condoms, there was cards with phone numbers for hookers, I guess, that kind of stuff," Nieves said.

Police took Weitzner into custody but haven't confirmed what materials were found on him. He has been charged trespassing in a school safety zone and was being held Thursday on $500 bond.

Nieves and other local parents hope the arrest brings an end to the unwated sex ed.

"We've been looking for this guy for awhile, he's been doing this for about six months or so," said Nieves. "I'm just glad that we were able to catch him."
 
Edgar Moscoso, who has three children at the school, said he didn't understand why anyone would do something like this.

"You don't need the kids seeing that stuff," Moscoso said. "And I walk around the school and I'll find that stuff and it's literally everyday and if I'm finding it, kids are finding it too."

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