Metro

Brooklyn school told raped girl to just ‘move on’: suit

Staffers at a Brooklyn school told a 13-year-old girl to just “move on” after she was raped by a classmate — as bullies shared video of the attack with peers, a new lawsuit charges.

The child was an eighth-grader at Spring Creek Community School in 2015 when she was raped in an alleyway two blocks from campus, her Brooklyn Supreme Court suit charges.

Now 17, the girl says in court documents that she was waiting for a bus when a fellow 13-year-old student dragged her into the alley and raped her — while filming the attack on a cell phone.

The victim, whose name is being withheld due to the nature of the charges, reported the incident to a guidance counselor at the East New York school in the following days, according to the papers.

But the counselor ignored her horrific story, allegedly saying, “If it happened, it happened — Move on with your life.”

Video of the rape circulated among students, and the police began to investigate, but the teen eventually became too overwhelmed to press charges, the suit says.

Principal Christina Koza suggested that the girl stay away at from school after the video went viral, and at one point told the traumatized child she would just “make things worse” if she were to attend classes, the suit says.

Koza later told the teen that she had seen the widely-circulated video — and appallingly said the rape “looked consensual” to her,” according to court papers.

A month after the alleged rape, the teen was moved by the NYV Department of Education to another school to finish out the year.

A spokesman with the DOE said in a statement, “Nothing is more important than the safety of all students and staff, and we have clear policies in place to ensure incidents are reported, investigated and appropriately addressed.

“These deeply troubling allegations are the subject of an investigation, and we will take appropriate follow up action based on the findings.”

Koza did not return a message.

A spokesman with the city Law Department said, “We’ll review the case.”

The girl’s attorney, Carrie Goldberg, did not respond to a request for comment.

Golberg recently won a mentally disabled teen almost $1 million after she was gang-assaulted in her Brownsville high school, and then suspended by brass when staff didn’t believe her.