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Is Public Humiliation a Valid Punishment for a 13-Year-Old Who Stole Cash?

by Daniel Garcia
January 28, 2026
in Social Issues

Parenting is often described as a delicate balancing act. We all want to raise children who are kind and forgiving, but we also want to raise children who know how to stand up for themselves. Finding that middle ground between justice and mercy can be incredibly tricky.

Recently, a father shared a story that highlights this exact struggle. After his son became the victim of a theft at school, this dad decided to turn the moment into a firm lesson on accountability. However, the way he handled the confrontation left many wondering if he took things a step too far. It raises a tough question: when does teaching a lesson cross the line into humiliation?

The Story

Is Public Humiliation a Valid Punishment for a 13-Year-Old Who Stole Cash?
Not the actual photo

AITA for intimidating/embarrassing a child in front of his peers for stealing from my son?

My sons school releases some annual merch for the different houses and it's an extra cost that we have to pay cash to pre order.

I gave my son $50 to get the hoodie and the change would be his to do whatever. That day my son came back

and told us his wallet had disappeared from his bag. I gave him more money just for the hoodie and we reported the missing wallet

to the school but nothing turned up. On Monday I was waiting to pick up my son when this lady came and introduced herself as 'Bob's' mother.

She handed me my son's wallet (it has his name on it) and apologized and said she found it in Bob's room and he confessed

that he'd stolen the wallet to pay for his own hoodie since she couldn't afford it and gave the change to her as money he found on the street.

She reimbursed me half and promised to give the rest at a later stage but I told her to just keep it. The money wasn't the problem,

it was the disrespect of digging through someone else's s__t with the intention to steal I was raised to own up to my s__t and apologise directly myself.

Not to hide behind my mother's skirt so I asked where Bob was. She went and brought the kid over and he started apologising. I stopped him

and told him that he didn't steal from me so he was apologizing to the wrong person. We waited a few minutes until my son came out

with his friends. He restarted his apology but you could barely hear anything from the softness and stuttering so I told him we couldn't hear

and that he should speak up. He raised his voice but all he said was sorry. My son asked what he was sorry for

and Bob went quiet so again I jumped in again to tell him we had to get back home so he should hurry up. Bob started

tearing up so his mother explained everything to my son, apologized again, he accepted it and we went our separate ways. When we got home,

I naturally told my wife and she scolded me for intimidating and embarrassing the boy(he's 13) in front of his peers just for wanting to fit in.

The merch isn't something that everyone gets so I don't get the whole fitting in narrative that strong as if he'd stand out when that's frankly not the case.

I wasn't overly mad or shouting at him. But I see how I could be an a__hole so aita?

This is one of those stories that makes your stomach turn just a little bit. You can absolutely feel the father’s frustration. Having your child stolen from violates a sense of safety, and it is natural to want to protect them and ensure it doesn’t happen again.

However, the image of a thirteen-year-old boy, clearly embarrassed by his family’s financial situation, stuttering through an apology in a public parking lot is heart-wrenching. While accountability is so important, there is a softness that was missing here. It feels like an opportunity for connection was missed in favor of a power play.

Expert Opinion

Psychologists often differentiate between “shame” and “guilt” when it comes to discipline. Guilt tells a child, “I did a bad thing,” which can lead to growth and repair. Shame tells a child, “I am a bad person,” which often leads to withdrawal and resentment.

According to research cited in Psychology Today, public reprimands are rarely effective for teenagers. Adolescents are biologically wired to be hyper-sensitive to social status and peer perception. When a correction happens in front of an audience, the brain often goes into “fight or flight” mode, blocking the actual lesson being taught.

Dr. Laura Markham, a clinical psychologist and parenting author, suggests that “discipline” comes from the root word “disciple,” meaning to guide or teach. True guidance usually happens in private, where defenses are down. By forcing a performance of apology, the focus shifts from the harm done to the thief’s own humiliation.

Furthermore, the socioeconomic element here is crucial. The boy stole to “fit in” with a hoodie he couldn’t afford. Empathy in this moment could have addressed the root cause, the desire for belonging, rather than just punishing the symptom. A gentler approach might have turned a thief into a friend, rather than an enemy.

Community Opinions

The community response was a mix of understanding the dad’s principles but condemning his methods. Most felt that while the theft was wrong, the adult’s reaction lacked grace.

This group felt the adult misused his power to enjoy the boy’s suffering.

olagorie - YTA How you treated this boy is far worse than him stealing the wallet. Yes, he is 13 and should know better.

But hell, you aren’t 13, you are an adult and you didn’t do this bullying to teach him, you enjoyed intimating him in front of his friends.

You should have handled this calmly and in a private setting. I hope your son has learned a lesson.

Not the stealing bit, but he lesson that his father is a bully and to become a person better than you.

Squinky75 - YTA for making it worse than it had to be. The mother was honest, gave you money she obviously didn't have, the kid owned up.

You didn't have to make such a show about it. That's just mean.

ABeerAndABook - YTA. Look, Bob was an AH for stealing the wallet no doubt.

But, the mom owned up to it, made a plan to pay back the money, and brought the kid out to be held responsible and apologize.

OP, technically an adult, used that opportunity to intimate, berate, and harrass the kid. Don't punish people for trying to do the right thing.

ArkayLeigh - YTA. Your title says it all. This wasn't about the apology, it was about intimidating and embarrassing the child.

Jarhead731 - YTA - You sound like a holier than thou s__b. "Let's get the poors to grovel so they won't do this again! ".

I wouldn't have stolen the money, but I know what it's like being the kid without any money. Telling other kids I don't like X brand of pizza

and that's why I'm not participating in pizza day, can't go on the school trip because we are already going on a family vacation,

no that's not my stomach growling, it just hurts from eating too much breakfast, etc. ... Empathy, compassion, and forgiveness go a long way.

These users believe the thief got exactly what he deserved to ensure he never does it again.

[Reddit User] - I'm going to say NTA. Not really. The kids mother should have been saying exactly what you said.

My daughter stole ONCE. I brought her back into the store, made her go up to the cashier and return it (a candy bar) and apologize.

She definitely learned her lesson and still remembers it even now.

AilingHen69 - NTA for having the kid apologize to yours. That's totally reasonable and if the kid's mom let it happen, NTA.

Armbrust11 - NTA. This is a difficult lesson to learn for the thief, but an important one and he will probably remember that moment for a long time.

Firstly, you should thank bob's mother for coming forward and being honest,

depending on how she interpreted the outcome she might be less inclined to do the right thing in the future.

guyjoe91 - NTA. He’s gonna remember this next time he tries snooping in your sons belongings or anyone else’s belongings,

and as for the money you’re a bigger man than me I would have made them pay the full stolen amount on the spot but that’s just me.

These readers agreed with the apology but hated the public audience.

risen87 - Soft YTA - you're right to ask for an apology FROM the person who actually did the stealing,

but you should have let that apology occur in private, without the other boys around.

Your need to defend your son maybe led you into being a bit too aggressive in the situation.

The boy's apology to your son could have been a letter, it could have been a one-to-one conversation,

but the family's circumstances are private and probably a great source of shame for them both

(hence the son's behaviour - not wanting to ask his mum or the school for help).

Upstairs_Account_212 - YTA for trying to force the kid to speak up and hurry up when he was already tearing up and trying to apologize.

He should not have stolen from your son and absolutely needs to apologize for it. He's old enough to know better.

On the other hand, you have no idea what the context was here. For all you know this kid has trauma history.

[Reddit User] - YTA. From the way you describe it, that child was clearly trying to apologize and you were bullying the way he did it.

Kids are still learning, and that includes learning how to give apologies. Most adults I know suck at giving apologies.

You don't bully a better apology out of someone by snapping at them. That makes it even harder for them to actually apologize.

AdLanky7082 - Probably might get downvoted but i feel YTA. May be a mild AH but definitely one.

I am not saying the kid didn't do wrong but what your wife said is correct, that a 13 year old, who got caught and probably was explained by his...

and whose mother who seems a stand up lady, if was scared/nervous/ashamed when apologizing, pressuring him or being stern

and saying speak up and we are getting late is just slightly AHish.

meghantraining - YTA just because of the fact your son was with friends. He stole from your son so the apology should’ve just been between him and your son.

Adding their peers as onlookers adds a weird public humiliation aspect to it that I’m not a fan of.

How to Navigate a Situation Like This

When dealing with a child who has wronged yours, de-escalation is your best tool.

First, keep the audience small. Humiliation shuts down the part of the brain responsible for moral reasoning.

Second, acknowledge the parent’s effort. Bob’s mother was already holding him accountable; work with her, not against her.

Third, separate the deed from the person. “You did a bad thing” is corrective. “You are a coward who hides behind skirts” is an attack on identity.

Finally, give the child time to find their words. Pressure leads to tears, not true remorse. True justice leaves the victim whole and the offender wiser, not broken.

Conclusion

Accountability shouldn’t require a pound of flesh. The OP wanted to teach a lesson, but he may have only taught the boy how to hold a grudge.

Restitution was made the moment the mother stepped forward with the wallet. Everything after that was about ego, not ethics.

Is a private apology ever enough for a public wrong, or does a thief deserve the shame of his peers?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Daniel Garcia

Daniel Garcia

Daniel is a contributing writer for DAILY HIGHLIGHT. Daniel is a New York-based author and has written for publications such as AUBTU Today, Digital Trends, Magazine, and many other media outlets.

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