Mom's OnlyFans Page Gets Her Banned From Volunteering at Kids' School (UPDATE)

Victoria “Snooks” Triece said she was told she could no longer volunteer at her children's elementary school after an anonymous letter revealed her NSFW page.

A picture taken on October 5, 2021 in Toulouse shows the logo of Onlyfans social media displayed by a tablet.
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Image via Getty/Lionel Bonaventure/AFP

A picture taken on October 5, 2021 in Toulouse shows the logo of Onlyfans social media displayed by a tablet.

UPDATED 11/1/21, 10:15 p.m.: Victoria Triece has formally filed a lawsuit against the Orange County Public School District and is seeking $1 million in damages. Triece also wishes to be reinstated into the volunteer program, WSET reports

Triece said she had the OnlyFans account for more than two years, and wasn’t secretive about its existence, promoting her page on a public Twitter account by posting less explicit content. “It doesn’t validate, like it’s not my whole life,” she said of her page. “That’s a part of my life, but it’s not my life of being a mom or being a parent.”

See original story below. 

A Florida mother has been barred from volunteering at her children’s elementary school after district officials became aware of her OnlyFans account.

According to the Orlando Sentinel, 30-year-old Victoria “Snooks” Triece was booted from the Orange County Public Schools’ ADDition volunteer program after an anonymous parent informed officials about her NSFW subscription page. Triece has reportedly volunteered in the district for the past five years. 

“It affected a parent who went and paid to see my content, but then they had to go send in these photos of me to the school and make me not be allowed to be around children anymore, which I’ve done and dedicated my life to for pretty much five years‚” Triece told reporters Thursday. “I don’t know who was told what I do. And now I’m supposed to walk into the building and I don’t know what was said to my son’s teacher … I don’t know what’s been said about me to anyone at that school.”

The mother-of-two said she was kicked off campus on Oct. 13 and informed she would no longer be allowed to volunteer at Sand Lake Elementary school, where her two children—ages 5 and 10—are currently enrolled. Triece’s legal team says she never received a formal letter about the alleged dismissal, and said the district’s guidelines did not state what volunteers can and can’t do when off campus.

“She understands that there’s going to be a percentage of parents who are going to be get up into their moral arms and wag their discriminating finger at her and say, ‘We don’t want you around our children,’” her attorney Mark NeJame told the press. “Well, they wouldn’t have known about it because she kept it away from the children. You can’t access her unless you’re an adult.”

A spokesperson for OCPS declined to comment on the matter.

Triece is now preparing to sue the district over the alleged ban, and is reportedly seeking $1 million damages.

“One minute of my job a day is not my whole life, it’s not my life of being a mom or being a parent,” the mother said. “I think everybody’s just floored because they’re like, ‘We know you, we know who you are.’”

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