The original poster (OP) recounts an interaction with his 7-year-old daughter regarding a classmate with special needs who had a crush on her. When the daughter first mentioned it, the OP advised her to be kind but to only consider the boy a friend, noting the difficulties the boy might face growing up.
Two years later, the daughter reported that the same boy had been touching her inappropriately at school. The OP immediately decided to contact the school office to address the serious issue, which then led to a confrontation with his ex-wife, Kayla, who was upset that he had not contacted her first, raising the central dilemma over communication protocols in co-parenting.

Daughter got sexually harassed at school and ex-wife didn’t tell me about it






















As renowned family therapist and author Lois Kennedy explains, “In high-stakes situations concerning a child’s safety, the protocol shifts immediately from procedural fairness between co-parents to urgent child protection; safety overrides courtesy.”
The OP’s decision to contact the school immediately after learning about the inappropriate touching aligns with the ethical priority of child safety. When a child reports physical boundary violations, parental instinct dictates rapid intervention to halt the behavior, which the OP executed effectively by engaging the administration. However, the subsequent argument with the ex-wife highlights a critical breakdown in co-parenting communication. The ex-wife’s claim that she didn’t inform the OP because “you didn’t ask” suggests an adversarial relationship where communication is weaponized rather than collaborative. This pattern indicates poor boundary management in the post-divorce relationship, leading the OP to seek alternative communication channels (the daughter’s phone) to bypass the conflict.
The OP’s outburst, while understandable given his frustration over perceived secrecy and hostility, was counterproductive. While his initial action regarding the school was appropriate for immediate protection, future interactions should focus on establishing clear, non-negotiable safety protocols with the ex-wife—preferably in writing—that mandate immediate disclosure of all safety concerns, regardless of personal feelings or prior history. Moving forward, the OP should aim for strictly factual, concise communication with his ex-wife regarding the child’s well-being, limiting emotional engagement.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.







































The OP is facing conflict regarding his immediate response to a serious safety concern, prioritizing swift action with the school over consulting his ex-wife, who claims prior knowledge and exclusive communication rights regarding the matter. The OP’s emotional reaction to his ex-wife’s perceived withholding of crucial information escalated the conflict significantly.
The core question is whether the OP was wrong (AITAH) for contacting the school immediately upon learning of the inappropriate touching without first notifying his ex-wife, especially given her prior awareness, or if his unilateral action was justified to protect their daughter from immediate harm, despite the breach of their co-parenting communication agreement.







