The older sister of TikTok personality and “Baywatch” star Noah Beck, is facing termination from her teaching position after an internal investigation found she had an inappropriate relationship with a student.
On April 1, the Peoria Unified School District confirmed it conducted a “comprehensive internal investigation under the provisions of Title IX” into Haley Beck, a teacher at Centennial High School, according to People magazine.
A designated “decision maker” reportedly concluded that “Ms. Beck groomed a student, which resulted in her having a sexual relationship with that student,” and recommended her termination.
According to a statement of charges obtained by the magazine, Beck allegedly sent $630, exchanged more than 4,000 text messages, and offered oral sex to an 18-year-old student over several weeks, between June 21 and Aug. 2, 2025.
The investigation also claims she offered to buy the student tequila during the exchanges. On March 26, the district’s governing board formally adopted a statement of charges seeking to terminate Beck’s employment.
The California Post has reached out to the Beck family for comment. According to 12News, a phone number linked to Beck requested not to be contacted again.
“Since grooming did occur, any sexual conduct after the date of consent is unwelcome,” the decision maker wrote in the statement of charges.
The 27-year-old has until April 8 — 10 days after the board adopted the statement of charges — to request a hearing before the termination is finalized, the district said.
Her TikTok and Instagram accounts, which have tens of thousands of followers, are now set to private. Her Facebook page remains public and includes a photo with her brother Noah, taken six years ago, and lists her as a Centennial High School teacher.
Beck has appeared alongside her brother on social media multiple times, including in an August 2020 TikTok that garnered more than 3 million likes, a May 2022 appearance on his Put a Sock in It podcast with their sibling Tatum, and a December 2024 Christmas-themed TikTok shared by Tatum.
The district also said the Peoria Police Department has submitted its findings to the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office “to determine if criminal charges are supported,” according to People.
A spokesperson confirmed police initially recommended a single charge of pandering, but the case was returned for “additional investigation.”