Male HS student crowned homecoming queen as crowd erupts in wild cheers: 'It was literally like a dream'
Zachary Willmore was crowned this year's homecoming queen at Rock Bridge High School in Columbia, Missouri — the first male to win the title at the school, KOMU-TV reported.
What are the details?
"It was literally like a dream," Wilmore — a senior and varsity cheerleader — told the station. "It was just really special to me."
Willmore told KOMU he posted an Instagram poll asking his followers if he should be king or queen: "They thought queen could look prettier on the sash. So I chose queen."
Here's a clip showing the moment Willmore — decked out in a sparkling gold dress — got the news:
@zachwillmoreReply to @poopacus thank you guys so much for all the support I’ve received I can’t explain how happy I am tonight💕 #fyp #queen #homecoming #gay #viral #lgbt
Moments later he celebrated his win with what appear to be supportive competitors for the queen crown.
"We look gorgeous," Willmore said in the video selfie. "Have a wonderful day, cuties."
@zachwillmoreFound my date #fyp #gay #homecoming
He told KOMU that fellow students didn't make things difficult for him, noting that his win "showed that people actually did care about me. It was the final stepping stone for me to be like, 'People like me.' I feel happy."
A giant TikTok following
While Willmore made some headlines for his homecoming queen win, the station noted that he's also a big-time TikTok user with over a million followers. KOMU said Willmore has posted videos of outfits he's worn at school that have led to dress code violations.
@zachwillmoreCredit to @QuannaQuan #fyp #viral #gay #highschool
"Teachers were allowed to make the call of what was appropriate," Willmore told the station. "Many times I did feel like they could target students, and I did feel targeted in some scenarios."
He added to KOMU that some hate followed after his homecoming queen victory: "After I won, my TikTok account was reported and banned for a couple days."
But Willmore got a lot of love as well, noting a moment when he saw his grandparents among the homecoming game attendees.
"My grandparents were there that day, and I hadn't really formally come out to them. I was really nervous about that," Willmore recalled to the station. "I saw them in the crowd, and they were crying which made me really happy when they called my name. It made the win a lot sweeter."
Assistant principal, daughter arrested for allegedly rigging high school homecoming queen election
An assistant principal in Cantonment, Florida, has been arrested along with her 17-year-old daughter over allegations that the pair used the mother's access to student records of high school students to cast false votes in the homecoming queen election that the daughter ended up winning.
What are the details?
Laura Rose Carroll, 50, is an assistant principal at Bellview Elementary School, and her daughter ran for homecoming queen last year as a senior at Tate High School. The teen was crowned queen on Oct. 31.
Both schools are in the Escambia County School District, where administrators have access to a program called FOCUS, which holds student records. In order for students to cast votes for homecoming court, they must provide their school identification numbers and birth dates, The Washington Post reported.
According to the outlet, "some time after the votes had closed" for the homecoming court elections, Election Runner — a program Tate High School uses for student voting — notified the school that a significant number of votes had been flagged as fraudulent.
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement stated in a social media post:
In October 2020, hundreds of votes for Tate High School's Homecoming Court voting were flagged as fraudulent, with 117 votes originating from the same IP address within a short period of time. Agents uncovered evidence of unauthorized access to FOCUS linked to Carroll's cell phone as well as computers associated with their residence, with a total of 246 votes cast for the Homecoming Court.
Multiple students reported that the daughter described using her mother's FOCUS account to cast votes. The investigation also found that beginning August 2019, Carroll's FOCUS account accessed 372 high school records and 339 of those were of Tate High School students.
Carroll was arrested with a bond set at $8,500 Monday, and has been suspended from her job. Her daughter was taken into custody and placed in a juvenile detention center, and has been expelled from school.
ABC News reported that the pair "now face third degree felony counts of offenses against users of computers, computer systems, computer networks, and electronic devices, unlawful use of a two-way communications device, and criminal use of personally identifiable information. They will also face a first degree misdemeanor count of conspiracy to commit these offenses."
Assistant principal, daughter charged in computer hack to steal homecoming queen vote www.youtube.com