im trying to find out who his daddy is so i can well lets just say have a “conversation”.
Serious suggestion here, assuming you do not want this to escalate and land in a concrete cell.
Ask for a meeting at the school with the boy's parents. If there is just a single mom, then this may not work well (likely with a black kid). If he has a Dad, and you confront him calmly, politely, and persuasively (be firm, but do not be aggressive), I bet his Dad handles it instantly. He probably has no idea and will take care of it. I know I would.
IF my son were bullying . . . LOL! I had one of my teenage boys accused of bullying. He had kicked another boy in the shin, hard, while wearing combat boots (the old style with steel toes). This was around that age. He left a bruise like a dinner plate. The school principal wanted to meet with me. My son told me the other kid threw a rock at him and hit him in the nut sack and thought it was hilarious. My son approached him, face to face, and demanded he apologize. The kid made a snickering sound and rolled his eyes, at which point my son kicked him hard, right in the shin. The boy was wearing shorts, and when his father picked him up, he saw the bruise and brought him back to the school and demanded my boy be punished.
I shared my boy's version of events with the principal, told the principal I was happy to meet with her, but if my son's version of events turned out to be true, that I objected to any discipline at all. She informed me that "fights" lead to suspensions, regardless of who started what. I simply told her to investigate, find out the truth, I would be happy to show up, but if my son was telling the truth, and you people unreasonable suspend him, I am going to buy him a fucking ice cream.
I never heard from the principal again.
The boy he kicked is now one of his good, close friends. Never again has he thrown a rock at my son's nut sack or otherwise attempted to cause him physical harm. They hang out together all the time.
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I hope it works out well for you, but please consider the "civilized" route. The boy's parents may be willing to handle it once they are made aware of it.