Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Former principal charged after shoving special needs student to ground

- By Caroll Alvarado CNN

A former principal in California was charged with a misdemeano­r Wednesday for “cruelty to child by endangerin­g health” after he was caught on camera aggressive­ly shoving a student with special needs to the ground, according to local authoritie­s and court documents.

Earlier this week the Fresno Unified School District released surveillan­ce video of now-former Wolters Elementary School principal, Brian Vollhardt, pushing an unidentifi­ed 11-yearold student to the ground in June while he and other staffers were working with the “upset student.” The video does not contain audio and the student's face has been blurred.

In the video the student gestures toward Vollhardt and appears to point his finger at him twice before the former principal shoves the student. It is not clear what led up to the incident.

“Instead of de-escalating the situation, which is what we expect of an educator in our system, the former principal chose to aggressive­ly shove the student down instead,” Superinten­dent Bob Nelson said during a news conference Wednesday.

The child's guardian, Ann Frank, told CNN affiliate KFSN the case lingered at police headquarte­rs until she complained about the lack of charges two weeks ago. It took the school district three months to show her the video, she added.

According to an arrest warrant affidavit obtained by KFSN, Vollhardt said the student “was yelling and getting in the principal/ suspect's face” while making threats. Citing the ongoing investigat­ion, police and the school district declined to comment on Vollhardt's comments in the affidavit.

“You cannot put force to these kids like that,” Frank said in an interview with KFSN. “My son is autistic. Any parents seeing this video, they know what I'm feeling right now. My son was pushed with force by this principal who was supposed to protect him.”

Fresno Police Chief Paco Balderama acknowledg­ed during the news conference the system failed to act quickly in this case.

“I found out about the incident two days ago. At about 3p.m. on Tuesday.” Balderrama said Thursday. “We have since gone back and looked at our process on how these types of cases are handled. I as police chief want to be notified any time there's an assault this serious occurs in any one of our schools. That didn't happen in this case.”

Both Nelson and Balderrama said the principal's actions were inexcusabl­e, with Nelson adding what the video shows is “repugnant.”

Vollhardt was put on administra­tive leave on June 8 after the district became aware of the incident, Nelson said. The district also notified Fresno Police and Child Protective Services, he added.

Vollhardt resigned before the district completed their investigat­ion, Nelson said.

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