Woman
Accused of Teen Sex Goes With Kids
By
ANTONIO GONZALEZ
NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (AP) A teacher accused of having an affair with a high school student,
and whose husband is accused of killing the young man, has disappeared with her
two children after checking out of a mental hospital.
Erin
McLean, who has legal custody of her two boys, ages 11 and 8, has been missing
since Sept. 15, according to attorneys for her and her husband.
Attorney
Gary Blackburn said his client is emotionally distraught, but he doesn't believe
she would harm her children.
"Erin's
undergoing enormous pressure," Blackburn said Friday. "She's unable
to get or keep jobs. Anything she does is interpreted in a certain way. I fear
for her. Anyone in that state, you don't know what might happen."
Eric
McLean's attorney, Bruce Poston, said family members went public with the disappearance
Friday in hopes of finding the boys.
Erin
McLean had just checked out of a mental hospital Sept. 15. The boys had been staying
with a grandmother.
Eric
McLean has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of 18-year-old
Sean Powell, who he believed was having an affair with his wife. Powell was shot
March 10 as he sat unarmed in his car in front of the McLeans' home. Erin McLean
had been his English teacher.
Eric
McLean filed for divorce from his wife, and has said the shooting was an accident.
He is free on bail awaiting a Jan. 14 trial.
Family
members think Erin McLean may be heading to California to meet someone she met
on the Internet, Poston said.
They
plan to file a petition Monday arguing that McLean is not fit to have custody
which would allow authorities to put out a missing person report.
"She's
not stable," Poston said. "These boys are in danger. For now, this is
the first time both families agree she is too unstable to have these boys."
Blackburn
said his client, who was recently fired from a Nashville school amid new allegations
of improper conduct with a student, has been frustrated trying to find a new job
and doesn't know how to handle the public attention.
"She's
a fragile person," Blackburn said. "There's two ways to deal with it
fight and flight. She chose the latter."