The Mercury News

Ex-teacher headed to court after baby was coughed on

Happened during argument on social distancing at shop

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@bayareanew­sgroup.com

After eluding police attempts to contact her since last year, a former San Jose teacher is set to be arraigned next week on an assault charge after authoritie­s say she intentiona­lly coughed on an infant in a social distancing argument with the baby’s mother at a yogurt shop last summer.

Nancy Nordland, 65, is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday with the Santa Clara County Superior Court, according to court records and the District Attorney’s Office. She was charged with misdemeano­r assault in July but left the area soon after the June 12, 2020, dust-up at the Yogurtland off Cottle Road that occurred during the height of COVID-19 pandemic fears.

Deputy District Attorney Aidan Welsh said Nordland resurfaced March 30 when her attorney contacted his office March 30 with a request to put Nordland’s case on the court calendar.

According to a police report and the then-1-year-old boy’s mother, Nordland was in line at the yogurt shop when she turned to them standing behind her and told them they were standing too close to her. The mother, who later identified herself to ABC7 News as Mireya Mora, pointed out that she and the baby’s stroller were at a pink line on the floor indicating the prescribed standing distance. But Nordland still asked a shop employee to tell Mora to move away.

The employee stated that Mora was standing properly, but still asked Mora to move back, and Mora followed the request. The police report states that’s when Nordland “took off her mask, and coughed three times” in the baby’s face, then “went back to pouring herself yogurt.”

That was followed by other shop patrons berating Nordland, who then left without paying.

Nordland was captured on security video, and ensuing public outrage — especially amid the COVID-19 pandemic — fueled internatio­nal headlines, prompted a police investigat­ion and led to a massive internet sleuthing effort that identified her as a special education teacher at Alex Anderson Elementary School in South San Jose and called for her firing.

In early July, before she was charged in absentia, the Oak Grove Union School District announced she was no longer working there.

In brief phone call with this news organizati­on last August — while authoritie­s still were trying to serve Nordland with an arrest warrant — her husband, Todd Nordland, said his “wife has been accused on the internet of things she did not do … she has received death threats as a consequenc­e. Shame on you for reporting and investigat­ing and propagatin­g this fake news.”

For months after the alleged intentiona­l coughing, prosecutor­s said San Jose police had not been able to contact Nordland, who had listed residences in San Jose and Redwood City, and previously worked in Nevada. But authoritie­s were not aggressive­ly trying to find her, either, because police don’t routinely devote resources to proactivel­y serving misdemeano­r warrants, which are typically enforced if the subject of a warrant later encounters law enforcemen­t for another reason.

The maximum penalty for her charge is six months in jail and a $1,000 fine.

Norland’s attorney did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Friday.

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