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       lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial
       
       
       ARTICLE VIEW: 
       
       Minnesota school district bans officer from teaching after he reenacted
       George Floyd’s murder
       
       By Associated Press
       
       Updated: 
       
       5:06 PM EDT, Wed October 16, 2024
       
       Source: AP
       
       A Minnesota school district has banned a police officer from working as
       a substitute teacher after a series of “racially harmful” actions
       that officials say included putting a student on the ground for a
       reenactment of the by a Minneapolis officer.
       
       The staffing agency that placed him at Woodbury High School said
       Wednesday that he also no longer works for them.
       
       The man was serving as a substitute English teacher on Monday when he
       told students in four separate 10th and 12th grade classes that they
       might want to hear about his life as a police officer, school officials
       said in a letter to students, families and staff.
       
       Besides the re-enactment of the actions that led to the death of George
       Floyd, students also complained that the substitute teacher
       “repeatedly made racially harmful comments,” “told sexist
       jokes,” “spoke in disturbing detail about dead bodies he had
       seen,” said “cops would be the best criminals” because “they
       know how to get away with stuff,” and “stated that police brutality
       isn’t real,” according to the letter.
       
       The letter was signed by the principal of Woodbury High School and the
       superintendent and assistant superintendent of the South Washington
       County Schools district. It said the man is now prohibited from setting
       foot on district property. They also said they reported the incident to
       the Minnesota Department of Education, the state teacher licensing
       board and the Woodbury Police Department.
       
       Floyd died after a white officer pinned his neck to the pavement for 9
       1/2 minutes despite the Black man’s dying pleas of “I can’t
       breathe.” Children were among the concerned witnesses, including a
       teen who captured the incident on a video widely viewed on social
       media.
       
       The officer, Derek Chauvin, was convicted of murder. Floyd’s death
       touched off protests that sometimes turned violent, testing the
       leadership of Gov. Tim Walz at one of the state’s most consequential
       moments, and sparking a nationwide reckoning over racial discrimination
       and police misconduct.
       
       “I specifically want to acknowledge racial harm that occurred when
       the substitute teacher reenacted the prone restraint that resulted in
       the murder of George Floyd,” Principal Sarah Sorenson-Wanger wrote.
       
       “This reported behavior is reprehensible. I am embarrassed, and I am
       sorry this happened to our students. We will take as much time as
       students need to listen and create open space for courageous
       conversations that lead to healing, action and education. The reported
       actions are not, and will not, be tolerated at Woodbury High School or
       in South Washington County Schools,” the principal wrote.
       
       The man was not identified in the letter, but it said he is not a
       police officer in Minnesota. Woodbury is a suburb southeast of St.
       Paul, and the eastern suburbs of the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area
       extend into western Wisconsin.
       
       The substitute was hired through Teachers on Call, a staffing agency
       that’s part of the national Kelly Education employment network. The
       company said the man passed comprehensive background checks before he
       was placed.
       
       “The actions of this individual were unacceptable, and the substitute
       teacher is no longer an employee of Teachers on Call,” company
       spokesperson Danielle Nixon said in a statement. “We recognize the
       significant public trust placed in us to ensure our substitute
       educators maintain a safe learning environment. We have a
       zero-tolerance policy for any form of violent, aggressive, or harmful
       behavior.”
       
       Citing the ongoing investigation, she added that Teachers on Call is
       not releasing any additional information on its former employee.
       
       Woodbury Police Chief Jason Posel said in a statement Wednesday that
       his department is “disturbed by the preliminary information of what
       occurred” and will investigate this incident to the fullest extent,
       while showing compassion to the students impacted.”
       
       A police spokesman, Cmdr. Tom Ehrenberg, said officials didn’t know
       yet which law enforcement agency employs the substitute teacher.
       
       The principal did not immediately return a message seeking further
       details Wednesday. The superintendent’s office referred a call to the
       district spokesperson, who did not immediately return a message either.
       Messages were also left with the Department of Education and the
       teacher licensing board.
       
       The South Washington County Schools district says it serves about
       18,700 students at 25 schools in seven communities. It says 37% of its
       students identify as a race other than white.
       
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