COLUMBUS, Ohio – A long-term Spanish substitute teacher in Columbus, Ohio was convicted yesterday of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles in a jury trial over a sexually graphic move she showed to students.

Former substitute teacher Sheila Kearns was found guilty on four out of five counts of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles Thursday for showing the move The ABCs of Death while serving as a substitute Spanish teacher at Columbus’ East High School in April 2013, The Columbus Dispatch reports.

Kearns is scheduled to be sentenced March 4, and while each of her four felony convictions is punishable by up to a year in prison and a $2,500 fine, she’s likely to receive probation, according to the news site.

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Kearns was charged with one count for each of the five Spanish classes she played the movie for on April 11, 2013. Her attorney, Geoffrey Oglesby, argued in court that Kearns did not watch the movie beforehand, was unaware of the graphic nature of the film. He said she also did not watch the movie when she showed it to students, and only played it because she thought it contained Spanish.

“Kearns’ defense focused on her claims that she was unaware of the movie’s content. Under the law, a person guilty of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles must do so ‘with knowledge of its character or content,’” The Dispatch reports.

“After jurors were excused yesterday, the jury foreman told The Dispatch that the two-hour deliberation focused primarily on the issue of Kearns’ knowledge of the content. Though the state did not prove Kearns was aware of the content when she played it during her first class of the day, the jury determined that she gained sufficient knowledge during that first viewing of the movie, Riley Gilson said.”

The ABCs of Death – which is not rated – depicts 26 ways to die, one for each letter of the alphabet. For example, students learned that “D Is for Dogfight” and “L Is for Libido,” the latter of which depicted a masturbation contest in which the looser is killed with a spike.

Student testified that Kearns did view portions of the film. They described The ABCs of Death as “disturbing” and said students “were going crazy” when she played the video, The Dispatch reports.

The movie also contained full frontal nudity. School officials eventually shut down the video during Kearns’ fifth-hour class, despite an alleged attempt to hide its content.

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Assistant Prosecutor Kacey Chappelear said Kearns attempted to fast-forward the movie when an assistant principal came to check on the situation, but accidentally paused it “with bare female breasts on the screen,” according to the news site.

It was also revealed through testimony that Kearns did not speak Spanish, at all.

“We were not able to find anyone who could teach the language at that time,” Columbus school spokesman Jeff Warner told The Dispatch. “We have very, very few substitutes who are Spanish or foreign-language specialists. There just aren’t many of them out there.”

Kearns had little to say when confronted after her conviction.

“God is good,” she told The Dispatch.

Oglesby said Kearns will appeal the verdict.

Meanwhile, a producer of The ABCs of Death said he couldn’t believe someone would show the movie to high school students.

“I agree with the prevailing sentiment that this is absolutely inappropriate for a substitute teacher to show anyone under the age of 17,” producer Tim League told The Dispatch. “It’s not a movie for children.”

Students who viewed the video were between the ages of 14 and 18.