Current:Home > ScamsMissouri attorney general is accused of racial bias for pinning a student fight on diversity program -FundWay
Missouri attorney general is accused of racial bias for pinning a student fight on diversity program
View
Date:2025-04-16 21:17:22
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Days after Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey blamed an after-school fight on a school district’s diversity programming, a lawyer for the majority Black district in suburban St. Louis said that the state’s chief attorney is showing “obvious racial bias.”
Bailey, who is campaigning to keep his seat, said last week that he is investigating possible violations of the state’s human rights laws by the Hazelwood School District, after a March 8 fight left a girl hospitalized with severe head injuries.
Bailey blamed the school district’s diversity, equity and inclusion programming as a cause for the fight, which St. Louis County police say happened after school hours in a neighborhood about two blocks from Hazelwood East High School. He said were it not for the programs, a school resource officer would have been present at the school.
“I am launching an investigation into Hazelwood School District after a student was senselessly assaulted by another student in broad daylight,” Bailey said in a statement. “The entire community deserves answers on how Hazelwood’s radical DEI programs resulted in such despicable safety failures that has resulted in a student fighting for her life.”
Hazelwood School District lawyer Cindy Reeds Ormsby said in a Tuesday letter to Bailey that his “obvious racial bias against majority minority school districts is clear.”
“Do you honestly believe, again, without any official verification or specific knowledge, that the fight on March 8th was a result of a racial issue between the female students that was caused by the HSD belief in the importance of diversity, equity and inclusion for all?” Ormsby wrote. “What community do you represent as the Missouri Attorney General? Do you represent all citizens of Missouri? Or only the white citizens?”
Ormsby also questioned Bailey’s interest in the Hazelwood assault, but not several other cases of violence against students from nearby districts.
Hazelwood School District is about 95% Black and less than 2% white, according to state education department data. The races of the victim and a 15-year-old girl who was arrested for assault have not been released.
Associated Press calls and emails to the family attorney of the hospitalized girl were not immediately returned. The 15-year-old has not been named by police because she is a juvenile.
Issues with school resource officers in Hazelwood schools began in 2021, when the district tried to require police to attend 10 hours of diversity, equity and inclusion training to work at the schools.
Police chiefs from St. Louis County, Florissant and Hazelwood sent a letter to the school board in June of that year saying police “receive training that is more than adequate and addresses the critical matters of diversity, equity, and inclusion.”
No deal was reached between police and the schools, prompting the district to hire 60 private security guards to replace the school resource officers.
Hazelwood police later returned to some of the district’s buildings as school resource officers. But Florissant and St. Louis County police never reached an agreement with the school district.
In a letter requesting documents from Hazelwood about the student fight, Bailey wrote that “the absence of SROs on the scene is directly attributable to Hazelwood’s insistence on prioritizing race-based policies over basic student safety.”
Ormsby said school resource officers “would not have prevented a fight from occurring off school property and outside of the school day.”
A spokesperson for Bailey did not immediately comment on Ormsby’s letter Tuesday.
Hazelwood spokeswoman Jordyn Elston said in a statement that the school district “does not prioritize DEI initiatives at the expense of student safety” and believes the programs help student safety and learning.
“These values are not negotiable,” Elston said, “and we will continue to prioritize them in all aspects of our work as community leaders.”
veryGood! (31667)
Related
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Psst! Sam Edelman Is Offering 50% Off Their Coveted Ballet Flats for Two Days Only
- Putin-Kim Jong Un summit sees North Korean and Russian leaders cement ties in an anti-U.S. show of solidarity
- Jenna Dewan Gives Birth, Welcomes Her 2nd Baby With Fiancé Steve Kazee
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- Orange County judge can stand trial in wife’s shooting death, judge says
- Wife of Toronto gunman says two victims allegedly defrauded family of life savings
- 4 suspects arrested in fatal drive-by shooting of University of Arizona student
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- The Supreme Court upholds a tax on foreign income over a challenge backed by business interests
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Pregnant Ashley Tisdale Details Horrible Nighttime Symptoms
- A US veteran died at a nursing home, abandoned. Hundreds of strangers came to say goodbye
- Day care van slams into semi head on in Des Moines; 7 children, 2 adults hospitalized
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Traveler from Missouri stabbed to death and his wife critically injured in attack at Nebraska highway rest area
- Roller coaster strikes and critically injures man in restricted area of Ohio theme park
- A DA kept Black women off a jury. California’s Supreme Court says that wasn’t racial bias
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Michael Strahan Praises Superwoman Daughter Isabella Strahan Amid End of Chemotherapy
Gigi Hadid Gives Rare Look Into Life at Home With Daughter Khai
Sabrina Carpenter announces Short n' Sweet North American tour: How to get tickets
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Rivian owners are unknowingly doing a dumb thing and killing their tires. They should stop.
IRS says ‘vast majority’ of 1 million pandemic-era credit claims show a risk of being improper
More than 300 Egyptians die from heat during Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia, diplomats say