Teacher claims she's victim of reverse discrimination after allegedly standing on black students' backs for slavery lesson
A Bronx middle school teacher has filed a claim against New York City and says that she is the victim of reverse discrimination after she was suspended following her lesson on slavery. According to her lawyer, the lawsuit could be worth $1 billion.
Patricia Cummings, who taught at MS 118 in the Bronx, allegedly forced black students to lie on the floor and then stood on their backs to illustrate what slaves were subjected to, according to News 12. Students and a staff member reportedly complained after the lesson earlier this year.
Cummings was suspended, and the Department of Education initially reassigned the teacher. Following an investigation that included a review of her overall performance as an educator, Cummings was officially terminated, reports the New York Post.
Cummings claims she had no malicious intent and denied that she stood on the students’ backs.
According to Mack Rosenberg, a reporter for WCBS radio, Cummings’s attorney, Tom Liotti, said there was an African-American teacher in the classroom during the lesson who saw no issues with the lesson.
Patricia Cummings' attorney tells me there was another teacher in the classroom, who is African American, and who saw no problems with the lesson. She plans to sue the city for $120 million. https://t.co/IZTtGqjzFL
— Mack Rosenberg (@MackRosenberg) October 19, 2018
“It’s a scandal,” Liotti said. “There is blatant racism and reverse discrimination in the public schools of New York City. This is why white parents do not want to send their children there.”
Liotti went on to comment that white people are now the victims of discrimination, saying, “It’s no longer the blacks and minorities who are being discriminated against. It is discrimination against white teachers who are making great sacrifices to be there.”
“We are not going to let them ruin our client’s life and career,” Liotti said. “If anything, this will add to our damage claim against the City of New York. This firing is completely unfounded and without any merit.”
While Cummings did not have tenure, the teachers union will pursue an appeal of her termination.
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