Hamilton Journal News

Details of the lawsuit

- By Eileen McClory Staff Writer

A Greene County Career Center teacher who is also the Xenia High School football coach is accused of repeatedly abusing a student who has cerebral palsy last fall, according to a civil lawsuit recently filed by the student’s family in federal court.

The lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio accuses Maurice Harden of pushing the student out of his chair and standing over the student screaming, 10 to 15 different times, among other claims.

The suit alleges that the disabled student was not the only one in the class to receive such treatment, and claims that Harden admitted the incidents during a meeting with the student’s parents and a school resource officer, saying that it was just “the culture of his classroom.”

The student’s parents declined to comment through their attorney. Harden did not immediatel­y return a phone call or email seeking comment.

The Greene County Career Center’s board of education released a statement on the case Friday, through Superinten­dent David Deskins. Both the board and Deskins are also named as defendants in the suit.

The GCCC statement says the board reported the complaints against Harden to local law enforcemen­t and children’s services, and that “no criminal charges or investigat­ions were pursued by either agency.”

The board said they assigned Harden to at-home duty while they investigat­ed.

“Mr. Harden was discipline­d appropriat­ely by our Board of Education, including suspension, mandatory training, and an agreement that any future misconduct would result in immediate terminatio­n,” the GCCC board said. “Following these decisions, Mr. Harden returned to the school for a brief period, until the court issued a temporary restrainin­g order prohibitin­g him from being on school property. He is now again assigned to home.”

The GCCC board added, “It is important to know that the allegation­s contained in a federal lawsuit are not consistent with the findings of our internal investigat­ion.”

The 17-year-old student is described in the lawsuit as having a deformed right foot, a shorter right leg that causes a limp, plus weakness and limited flexibilit­y on his right side. Harden was the teacher assigned to the student’s Career Center program, sports and exercise science.

The lawsuit says the student first told his parents, Joy and Jacob Brown, about the abuse on Dec. 15, and showed them a video of one incident in which the student is lying on the floor, on his back, with hands up to protect his face while Harden stood over him, screaming and cursing at him. The Dayton Daily News has requested that video from the family’s attorneys but has not received it. The suit also says Harden once threw the student’s bookbag and once bent the teen’s fingers back painfully.

The lawsuit says the student’s parents spoke with Deskins, Harden, Career Center Director Brian McKnight, and School Resource Officer David Elliott about the incidents, showing the video to at least McKnight and Elliott.

The lawsuit said Elliott, the SRO, explained that he could file a police report for physical abuse, but it would affect the school’s investigat­ion. The parents said they wanted to discuss the situation further and allow the school time to complete their investigat­ion.

The lawsuit alleges that Deskins asked the parents and the student to meet with him and Harden, but that the parents would not force their son to meet with Harden. The suit claims Deskins said there is “nothing to gain by coach being terminated,” that the student needed to learn how to handle conflict, and that the parties could “use this as a teachable moment” for the student.

The parents removed the student from GCCC once they learned he would return to the school Jan. 16.

According to Harden’s personnel file, he was suspended for three days, required to review policies on staff ethics, student supervisio­n and welfare, and the licensure code of conduct for Ohio educators, and complete a training module on classroom management.

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