Los Angeles Times

NAACP calls for probe over social media posts

- By Charles T. Clark Clark writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — The San Diego branch of the NAACP this week asked the San Diego County supervisor­s to investigat­e a county employee who is responsibl­e for helping low-income families acquire Section 8 housing, after uncovering more than a dozen racist and Islamophob­ic posts it alleges were made by the employee on social media.

The civil rights group highlighte­d a series of Facebook posts made between 2016 and 2020 attributed to Dwight Flesher, a housing specialist with San Diego County’s Housing and Community Developmen­t Services. In the posts, Flesher appears to attack or insult blacks, Latinos, immigrants, Muslims and people who seek government assistance.

For example, one Facebook post included an image of former First Lady Michelle Obama with the caption “fluent in ghetto.”

On the same page was an altered image of Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) as a prostitute, and a photo of a truck with a bumper sticker reading, “Can’t feed ’em, don’t breed ’em. The government is not your baby’s daddy.”

He also shared a post calling for April to be celebrated as Confederat­e History Month and imploring others to “stand up for your heritage.”

Flesher declined to comment and hung up on a reporter when reached by phone Tuesday afternoon.

NAACP members displayed the images in a Power Point presentati­on at the supervisor­s’ weekly meeting Tuesday.

“The NAACP demands that you investigat­e the hiring practice that allowed a racist like Dwight to get into the county, in a position over people of color,” said Francine Maxwell, acting president of the NAACP San Diego branch. “We demand that you reevaluate all of his Section 8 cases to see if they have been entitled to the assistance they were due.”

The civil rights organizati­on also requested a broader investigat­ion be conducted into the culture of the Housing and Community Developmen­t Services department as whole, citing concerns that Flesher’s behavior may not be an isolated incident.

One of the NAACP speakers said Flesher’s supervisor had been alerted to the posts before the group went public.

In an interview after the meeting, Maxwell said the NAACP has been approached by other people who have expressed an interest in filling out complaint forms related to their experience with Housing and Community Developmen­t Services.

She added the group is concerned Flesher’s behavior may be consistent with that of the department when it comes to handling

Section 8 cases of African Americans and Latinos, and she invited any residents who have had similarly troubling experience­s with the department to reach out.

“The county needs to take steps to protect the vulnerable people .... We want you to not only look at this extremist, but all the rest of the extremists that may be employed with our tax dollars in the county service area,” Maxwell told the board.

Supervisor­s did not comment on the request and did not take action Tuesday because the issue was raised during the public comment portion of the meeting, during which the board hears testimony unrelated to items on the agenda.

Spokesman Michael Workman said the county is not waiting for a formal complaint to look into the matter. “Chief Administra­tive Officer Helen Robbins-Meyer has asked the Office of Ethics and Compliance to begin a thorough investigat­ion into the matter immediatel­y,” Workman said in an email. “That includes what we knew and when we knew it.”

 ?? Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune ?? SAN DIEGO COUNTY supervisor­s were asked to investigat­e a worker who the NAACP said posted racist content on social media. Above, the board’s chambers.
Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune SAN DIEGO COUNTY supervisor­s were asked to investigat­e a worker who the NAACP said posted racist content on social media. Above, the board’s chambers.

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