Two Florida middle schoolers, ages 12 and 13, are facing serious juvenile charges after deputies say they caused more than $50,000 in damage to the library at Friendship Elementary in Deltona. Investigators allege the boys first entered campus on September 13 during the day, then returned at night to ransack the media center—tossing books, smashing glass, and scrawling graffiti. Deputies responding to a fire alarm found the library in ruins.
Surveillance footage released by the Volusia Sheriff’s Office showed two masked youths inside, and tips poured in once the images were shared online. The breakthrough came when both boys’ mothers recognized their children and turned them in. Identified as Felix Cohen Romero, 12, and Bentley Ryan Wehrly, 13, the boys later confessed, according to authorities.
The pair now face multiple counts, including burglary, trespassing, theft, and criminal mischief. While the case will proceed through juvenile court, the scale of the destruction means potentially steep consequences. Some observers applauded the mothers’ tough choice, calling it real accountability, while others worried about the impact of a juvenile record at such a young age.
Online discussion has also turned toward alternatives like restorative justice—supervised clean-up, reshelving books, public apologies, or service projects—meant to pair consequences with learning. Whatever the outcome, the case has spotlighted both the role of parents in accountability and the difficult balance between punishment and rehabilitation when children make destructive choices.