'Snitch line': Republicans assail U.S. effort to protect school boards
from violent threats
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[October 22, 2021]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans in
Congress blasted a U.S. Justice Department initiative to protect local
school board officials from threats of violence by people angry at
anti-racism curriculum and masking mandates, with one calling the policy
a "snitch line" to report parents.
At a House Judiciary Committee hearing, they assailed Attorney General
Merrick Garland about his Oct. 4 memo telling the FBI and federal
prosecutors to address, with local law enforcement, a rising number of
violent threats directed at members of school boards, fueled by claims
that school curricula addressing racism are attacks on America.
"They're going to open up a snitch line on parents. Think about this,"
said Republican Representative Jim Jordan. He said the Justice
Department was "going to go after parents who object to some racist hate
America curriculum."
In his testimony Garland rejected the charge, saying the department
aimed to prevent violent threats against members of school boards -
typically low-profile and sometimes volunteer posts.
"We are only concerned about violence," Garland told lawmakers
repeatedly. "The Justice Department supports and defends the First
Amendment right of parents to complain as vociferously as they wish
about the education of their children."
The National School Boards Association in a Sept. 29 letter to President
Joe Biden urged federal law enforcement to provide assistance to local
boards to deal with the threats.
The letter cited a series of incidents, including an arrest during a
board meeting in Illinois for aggravated battery and another in which
someone shouted a Nazi slogan in Michigan during a meeting to protest
the use of masks in schools to slow the spread of COVID-19.
Among the school boards across the country facing the most scrutiny is
one in Loudoun County, Virginia, located about an hour's drive from
Washington, D.C.
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U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland testifies during the House
Judiciary Committee oversight hearing of the Department of Justice
on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., October 21, 2021. Greg
Nash/Pool via REUTERS
One board member there recently resigned, after
months of accusations the school was teaching "critical race
theory," an academic doctrine that maintains racism is ingrained in
U.S. law and institutions and that legacies of slavery and
segregation have created an uneven playing field for Black
Americans.
Critics argue there is no evidence the theory, developed in law
schools, is being taught in most - if any - primary schools.
Members of the Loudoun County School Board have received thousands
of "derogatory and threatening" messages since May, a spokesman
said.
A June 23 email used a racist slur against Black Americans, adding:
"Not in my school, not with my kids, keep your dirty ... hands away
from my kids."
Democratic Representative Jamie Raskin accused Republicans of
deliberately misconstruing Garland's memo.
"Not a single member of this committee has recited a single sentence
from your memo as violating anyone's rights," Raskin said.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, additional reporting by Mark
Hosenball; Editing by Scott Malone and Howard Goller)
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