Ex-cheerleader pleads guilty in misconduct

Associated Press photo by The Enquirer, PATRICK REDDY -- Sarah Jones, left, former Dixie Heights High School teacher and Cincinnati Ben-Gal cheerleader, and her mother, Cheryl Jones, leave Kenton Circuit Court in Covington, Ky., after a July 30 motion hearing on charges against Sarah Jones of first degree sexual abuse for allegedly having sexual contact with a 17-year-old student when she was a teacher.
Associated Press photo by The Enquirer, PATRICK REDDY -- Sarah Jones, left, former Dixie Heights High School teacher and Cincinnati Ben-Gal cheerleader, and her mother, Cheryl Jones, leave Kenton Circuit Court in Covington, Ky., after a July 30 motion hearing on charges against Sarah Jones of first degree sexual abuse for allegedly having sexual contact with a 17-year-old student when she was a teacher.

COVINGTON, Ky. — A former Cincinnati Bengals cheerleader pleaded guilty Monday to having sex with her 17-year-old former student while she was a teacher at a northern Kentucky high school, a move that will allow her to avoid jail time.

In a tearful admission in Kenton County Circuit Court in Covington, Ky., 27-year-old Sarah Jones pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct and custodial interference in place of more serious charges as part of a plea agreement with prosecutors.

“I began a romantic relationship while he was a student and I was in a position of authority,” Jones said, her voice cracking as her family members wiped their own tears.

Jones said the relationship began in February 2011 when the boy was 17, saying that the two had sex, that she sent him sexually explicit text messages and lied about the relationship to police.

The teen had been in Jones’ freshman English class in 2008, and she was his peer tutor in 2010 and 2011 before he graduated at the age of 17 this year, according to Monday’s plea agreement, signed by Jones.

In accepting the plea agreement, Judge Patricia Summe granted prosecutors’ recommendation to sentence Jones to five years of diversion but no jail time, and she won’t have to register as a sex offender. The diversion requires Jones to report to a probation officer and undergo drug tests.

Prosecutors said they were willing to make the deal because the teen, now 18, and his family were uncooperative with them and on Jones’ side.

“We feel that it is a just and it is a fair result,” prosecutor Sara Farmer said.