72-year-old Susan Sands-Joseph, who was watching the news, knew Glenelg well. She was one of the first black students to attend the school after desegregation. Susans old memories of going to Glenelg reappeared in her mind. She herself received hate when she attended the high school. She would get things thrown at her and she would get called racial slurs just for being black. The students re-invited hateful and unsafe feelings that Susan and other past students would have wished to be obliterated in the span of sixty years. After the event, the four persecutors were brought to court and sentenced to various amounts of weekends in prison. After “acting well” while serving time in prison, their sentences were soon cut short, which meant they would only serve about a third of their original sentences. The students received lenient and light punishment in response to the crimes and hate they committed and caused. The anti-Semitism, racism, homophobia and bullying that went on at the time of the crime was fully disregarded after a couple of