Lori & Jaspen, P.C.

Lori & Jaspen, P.C. Full service law firm. Experience you can trust.

03/13/2026

A 13-year-old girl carried her lunch tray into a packed school cafeteria for two years and sat alone every single time. What she built from that silence now has children in dozens of countries walking into lunch knowing exactly where they are welcome before they ever push open the door.
Her name is Natalie Hampton. She was 16 when she changed this.
Seventh grade was when it started. Natalie had already learned what happened when you approached the wrong table. The silence that fell. The backs that turned. The laughter that followed you to the only seat left, the one against the wall, the one everyone in the room could see, the one that announced to the entire cafeteria that nobody had chosen you today.
That table was hers for two school years.
The isolation was not just social. She was bullied physically, shoved and hurt in ways that left marks. When she reported it, the school's response was to send her to counselling to examine what she might be doing to contribute to the problem. The message was clear even if no one said it out loud. She went home with bruises. She eventually went to hospital with anxiety so severe her body could no longer carry it quietly.
Then ninth grade arrived. A new school. And almost immediately, without explanation or effort, everything was different. Students welcomed her. She made friends within weeks. She learned what it felt like to walk into a room and already belong in it.
She could not stop thinking about the kids who did not have that yet.
She thought about what she had needed most during those two years of lunches. Not a programme. Not a poster on a wall about kindness. Not an adult with a clipboard. Just one person who meant it when they said: you can sit with us.
So at 16, with no coding experience and what she described as a lot of enthusiasm, Natalie built that person into an app.
She called it Sit With Us.
The design is straightforward and quietly brilliant. Students volunteer to be ambassadors, which means they register their table as open to anyone who needs a seat. Other students, the ones dreading the walk across the cafeteria, can open the app privately before they ever enter the room and see exactly which tables are welcoming them that day. They walk in already knowing where to go. They sit down already expected.
No moment of public approach. No visible rejection. No one watching to see if you get turned away.
Just a guaranteed seat, found in private, before the dread has a chance to take hold.
Within seven days of launching the app Natalie had 10,000 downloads.
Then the world found her. NPR covered it. The Washington Post covered it. CBS News covered it. Messages arrived from children in Morocco, Australia, the Philippines, and France, kids who had been eating alone for months or years, writing to tell her that something had changed for them.
The app spread to schools across multiple countries.
Natalie said in one interview that even if it helped just one person it was worth building. She said it the way people say things they genuinely mean, without performance, without the pause that comes before a line that has been said too many times.
She was not trying to become famous. She was trying to make sure that the specific, suffocating feeling of not knowing where to go did not keep happening to children who had no one to build them a solution.
She had been that child. She remembered exactly what it felt like. She decided that memory was worth something more than surviving it.
There are children sitting alone at cafeteria tables in schools right now, today, in your city and in cities you will never visit. Some of them are counting the days. Some of them have stopped counting.
Natalie Hampton counted hers and then built a door out of them.
Share this for every child still looking for a place to sit.

~Old Photo Club

Good to know."Failing to provide identification upon request by a police officer is not itself a crime or statutory offe...
12/21/2023

Good to know.

"Failing to provide identification upon request by a police officer is not itself a crime or statutory offense in Michigan. Further, no additional evidence in the record indicated that the officers had a “reasonably articulable suspicion that criminal activity [wa]s afoot[.]” Quinn, 305 Mich App at 492. Without proof that defendant had either engaged in a crime, or was imminently going to commit a crime, his failure to provide identification to police was not a lawful justification for his arrest. ...

defendant’s motion to quash should have been granted. The arrest leading to the second and third counts of resisting and obstructing against defendant was unlawful. Sergeant Johnson and Officer McLain were engaged in this unlawful arrest when defendant bit Sergeant Johnson and kicked Officer McLain. As noted herein, defendant “may use such reasonable force as is necessary to prevent an illegal attachment and to prevent an illegal arrest[.]” Id. at 47 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Defendant had every right to exercise reasonable force to resist the illegal arrest."

12/19/2021

Abstract Beginning in the 1970s, the United States began an experiment in mass imprisonment. Supporters argued that harsh punishments such as imprisonment reduce crime by deterring inmates from reoffending. Skeptics argued that imprisonment may have a criminogenic effect. The skeptics were right. Pr...

10/11/2021

This report just out from U. of Chicago tells us, w/o doubt, that incarceration, this "solution" we spend billions on, is not a solution. It is a failed experiment. And that if officials actually care about safety, they should not be supporting it.

08/15/2021
05/14/2021

Although fully vaccinated individuals may not have to wear masks indoors elsewhere, the mandate still holds for the courts. If you are appearing for court, you must wear a mask whether you are vaccinated or not.

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