Las Vegas Review-Journal

Board chief ’s spouse faces second lawsuit

Complaint alleges teacher injured student when he threw desk

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

A second lawsuit has been filed against the teacher-husband of the Clark County School Board president, alleging that his physical abuse and bullying in the classroom traumatize­d a 10-year-old student and caused him to contemplat­e suicide.

The complaint filed in District Court on Monday by the student’s mother, Jessica McCray, alleges that Jason Wright overturned a desk that traveled 12 feet and hit her child’s leg at Harris Elementary in October 2017 after losing his temper. The desk injured the student, identified only by the initials R.S., it said.

“Wright did not report the desk-throwing incident or R.S.’S injuries to (the Clark County School District),” the complaint said. “R.S. asked to go to the nurse’s office and Wright refused to allow R.S. to seek treatment.”

Administra­tors at the Las Vegas school promised McCray that her child’s injuries would be investigat­ed, “but upon informatio­n and belief such investigat­ion either never occurred or was swept under

WRIGHT

the rug,” the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit further claims that Wright would verbally abuse and demean his class throughout the 2017-18 school year, to the point that the child had suicidal thoughts and, at one point, entered into a suicide pact with a fellow student.

“Wright’s class became an environmen­t of teacher-on-student bullying, and which behavior was outside all possible bounds of all decency,” the lawsuit states.

“R.s.renouncedt­hesuicidep­act with the other Harris student and brought the suicide issue to Harris’s CCSD administra­tion,” the complaint states. “CCSD began to investigat­e the two fifth-graders’ suicide pact, but … such investigat­ion with respect to Wright’s involvemen­t either never occurred or was swept under the rug.”

Reached by phone on Wednesday, Jason Wright declined to comment. Deanna Wright did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment.

The lawsuit, which also lists the school district as a defendant, seeks over $50,000 in damages.

Superinten­dent Jesus Jara also declined to comment.

A statement from Mccray’s lawyer, Jason Close, said the family resorted to civil litigation after feeling abandoned by district authoritie­s.

“R.S.’S family would like you to

know they are deeply disturbed by Wright’s and CCSD’S alleged acts against their child and other students, and by the alleged lack of meaningful investigat­ion and accountabi­lity following those acts,” Close said in a statement.

It is the second lawsuit against Jason Wright and the district alleging he abused a student.

Another complaint, filed in District Court last month, alleges that Wright kicked another Harris Elementary student’s hand and shook him by the front of his collar, causing physical and emotional injury.

The lawsuits come after the district hired an outside investigat­or to determine whether the district followed proper procedure in hiring Wright, who went through an alternativ­e-teacher preparatio­n program.

Documents obtained by the Review-journal show that human resources staff planned to recommend his rejection from the program — which upon completion culminates in a teaching job with the district — but former Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky overrode the decision and allowed him into the program.

Wright has since been reassigned to Nate Mack Elementary School in Henderson, according to the district.

Contact Amelia Pak-harvey at apak-harvey@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4630. Follow @ Ameliapakh­arvey on Twitter.

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Jason Wright

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