A superintendent has recommended the firing of a middle-school teacher accused of posting a series of erroneous and disparaging comments on social media.
The comments were directed against a teen she misidentified as being a Covington Catholic school student seen in a controversial video—which was also widely misrepresented—last month.
Douglas County Superintendent Thomas Tucker has recommended the school board terminate middle-school teacher Michelle Grissom, a seventh-grade social studies teacher at Mountain Ridge Middle School in Highlands Ranch, after she wrongly claimed a Kentucky school student was involved in an incident in Washington on Jan. 18. In the post, she also called the teen a “Hitler Youth.”
The post caught the attention of the teen’s father, John Jackson, who told her that his son was not present at the rally and has never been to Washington. He said his 17-year-old son was actually at a basketball game in Kentucky.
“I hope this is dealt with appropriately and swiftly ... my son was harassed and bullied as a result of this teachers rush to judgement ..totally abhorrent behavior and inexcusable actions that need to have consequences...SHE IS TEACHING YOUR STUDENTS!!!”
Superintendent Tucker said in a lengthy statement released during a Douglas County School Board meeting on the night of Feb. 5 that he realized the incident has caused a lot of controversy in the community.
“I made a recommendation to the Douglas County School District Board of Education that Ms. Grissom be dismissed... That process begins with a recommendation being made to the Board,” he said.
“I understand that many in the community have strong opinions regarding Ms. Grissom and the circumstances giving rise to my recommendation. The District respects those opinions. However, to ensure that the process complies with Colorado law, while the dismissal process is ongoing, Douglas County School District will not provide further comment.”
According to a school board agenda dated Feb. 5, a “Notice of Recommendation for Teacher Dismissal” was included as an item for the meeting, but no details were given.
She was placed on paid leave on Jan. 23. The teacher has since apologized for her remarks and has resigned from her role on the teachers’ union board.
Covington Student Could Sue for Defamation
Nick Sandmann was the teen at the center of the the Jan. 18 incident in which Covington Catholic school students were falsely portrayed by many prominent media outlets as having been racist toward a group of native American activists.Sandmann’s lawyer, Todd McMurtry, sent letters on Feb. 1 to more than 50 people and companies, including The Washington Post, The New York Times, CNN, The Guardian, and NPR, as well as celebrities such as Bill Maher, Kathy Griffin, and Jim Carrey as well as Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).
The incident occurred after the annual anti-abortion March for Life. The group of students, who were waiting for the bus near the Lincoln Memorial, were approached by several Native American activists led by 64-year-old Nathan Phillips. A person accompanying Phillips was filming the incident.
Several short video clips, enthusiastically spread by the media and celebrities, made it appear as though the students—a number of whom were wearing President Donald Trump’s red “Make America Great Again” hats—were chanting and cheering slogans in mockery of Phillips. Some media even claimed that the students were chanting “Build the wall,” which was later proven false.
As longer videos from the scene emerged, the students were actually revealed to have been cheering and chanting their school chant to drown out racist and offensive remarks being directed at them by a small group of Black Hebrew Israelites nearby.
Many media and social-media users have retracted and corrected their initial articles and posts about the incident after reviewing the whoe video. But the initial coverage “permanently stained [Sandmann’s] reputation,” McMurtry said.
“For the mob to just go tear apart a 16-year-old boy is inexcusable,” he said. “He’ll never be able to get away from this.”