A Central Florida woman said she risked being arrested and shocked by a police officer's Taser gun in order to protect her daughter from bullies on the school bus.Laura Booker said that her 13-year-old daughter was bullied by students and the bus driver. She said nobody would help stop the ongoing problem. On Thursday, Booker stepped onto her daughter's bus and confronted the bus driver, Sanford police said."There's nothing worse than knowing that something is happening to your child and the very people that are supposed to help are not helping," said Booker, who explained she ran out of options after she was not able to get help from Seminole County school administrators.She said things never should have gotten this far."I'm coming to you, adult to adult, and you're treating me like this? How have you really been treating my 13-year-old daughter," said Booker.In a report, police paint a very different picture of Booker. The arresting officer said Booker yelled at the driver and would not get off the bus even when threatened with a Taser gun. Police charged Booker with trespassing on school grounds and resisting an officer without violence.Kaila Booker said students on the bus had been calling her names since August, and when she tried to get help from the bus driver, he blamed her. She said the bus driver even implied she was "ghetto.""Anytime someone is picking on someone consistently to where the person is feeling targeted, they're feeling harassed, they're feeling frustrated, they're feeling they don't know what to do. To me, that's a form of bullying," said Booker. "When a grown man is bullying a 13-year-old child, it's time for a mother to step in if the people who should be stepping in don't step in.""We knew it was coming. This isn't the last time," said James Jones, the father who made national headlines for storming onto a Seminole County school bus last year in an attempt to confront his disabled daughter's bullies. "This lady was doing what was necessary for her kid. I have been there."The school district said it is against school policy for parents to get onto a bus, but it is investigating the bullying allegations and looking into the bus driver's actions.