


For someone to silence her laughter without understanding - it was just laughter.”ĪMC disagreed with Schreurs’s side of the story. “She was stuck in a group home until two years ago, she was heavily medicated, stuck in a wheel chair … She is walking now, she is talking now, she is laughing now, she’s eating now. “None of these people, not a single one of them, know her story,” the emotional mother said. Schreurs, a special education teacher, adopted Destiny after meeting her while working as a substitute. She was escorted into the hall after saying she could not just put a “muzzle” on her child. The manager threatened to make her leave without giving a warning or letting her know about the complaints, she said. Though listed as a drama, the movie had bouts of humor that caused the audience - and then her daughter Destiny - to laugh, Schreurs said. The La Puente family went to AMC Puente Hills 20 in Industry on Monday evening to see “The Fault in Our Stars,” a movie about two teenagers who fall in love after meeting at a cancer support group. They would laugh and then she would laugh.” She was responding to the laughter of the other movie goers. “He said there were a couple of people that had complained that she was causing a disturbance,” Marji Schreurs said. INDUSTRY > The mother of a girl with special needs caused an uproar this week after claiming a manager at an AMC theater in Industry kicked her family out of a showing because of her 10-year-old daughter’s delayed laughter.
