The
Blaze
Parent
manhandled, arrested while speaking out against common core
Sep.
20, 2013
A
parent in Towson, Md., was arrested Thursday night at a public forum
after vocally expressing his concerns about the Baltimore County
School District’s plan to use Common Core standards in its
curriculum.
Robert
Small, a concerned father, was forcefully removed from the meeting by
a police officer after he interrupted Baltimore County Schools
Superintendent Dallas Dance during the question-and-answer portion of
the forum.
The
meeting apparently didn’t allow parents to stand up and ask
questions or comment. Parents and other attendants were instead asked
to write their questions on a piece of paper and officials would read
them.
However,
Small began speaking out against the district’s use of Common Core,
prompting a security guard, who was also a police officer, to
approach him and order him to leave. “Let’s go!” he said
sternly.
When
Small didn’t immediately comply, the officer began pulling his arm
and pushing him towards the exit. Some audience members gasped at the
cop’s use of force.
“Don’t
stand for this,” the father said as he was dragged out. “You are
sitting here like cattle! Is this America?”
Small
also urged other parents to demand answers on Common Core and the
curriculum being used to educate their children.
As
the Baltimore Sun reports, the officer then “pushed Small and then
escorted him into the hall, handcuffed him and had him sit on the
curb in front of the school.”
Small
was charged with second-degree assault of a police officer and faces
a $2,500 fine and up to 10 years in prison. He was also charged with
disturbing a school operation, which carries an additional $2,500 and
up to six months in jail.
Small
attempted to push the officer away when he first approached him, the
police report claims. Watch the video and decide for yourself if
Small assaulted the officer:
Despite
some opposition from parents, the Maryland State Department of
Education reportedly plans to go forward with its implementation of
Common Core standards, joining 45 other states and Washington, D.C.,
in adopting the standards for the first time this year.
“Look,
I am being manhandled and shut down because I asked inconvenient
questions,” Small told the Baltimore Sun after the incident. “Why
won’t they allow an open forum where there can be a debate? We are
told to sit there and be lectured to about how great common core is.”
See
the video at The Blaze
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