Schools
Hackettstown Student Suspended For Calling Fictional Cop ‘Pig’
A lawsuit filed against the school says the student was suspended after calling a police officer in a play a "pig" during English class.

HACKETTSTOWN, NJ — A Hackettstown High School student was suspended after calling a fictional police officer a pig, and clashing with an assistant principal over the Black Lives Matter movement, a lawsuit filed against the district says.
The student, identified as K.C. in the court documents, says she was targeted based on her political beliefs, race, and sexual orientation by the school administration after calling a fictional police officer in a book a “pig” in English class. During the investigation, administrators allegedly used racial and sexual slurs, the lawsuit claims. K.C. is gay and biracial, the lawsuit adds.
K.C., who is 17, has voluntarily not attended school since May 2017 because of the administrators' alleged remarks. She served a one-day in-school suspension in March 2017.
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Hackettstown superintendent David Mango did not respond to Patch’s request for comment by press time Wednesday morning.
“It is hard to determine what is more outrageous: a 17-year-old student being suspended for using the word ‘pig’ in the middle of an English class discussion about a fictional cop, or the slurs allegedly uttered by school personnel while ‘investigating’’ her use of that word,” John Rue, an attorney representing K.C., told Patch. “Being a 17-year-old is hard enough, let alone being one who is gay and biracial. No student, regardless of sexual preference or race, should be subjected to the inexcusable conduct as alleged in the complaint.”
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The suit stems from a series of meetings K.C. had with administration in March 2017.
During a March 13, 2017, English class at Hackettstown High School, students were picking parts to read from Willy Russell’s play about a corrupt police officer, “Blood Brothers.” K.C. volunteered to read the part of the officer, calling him “the pig.”
English teacher Kathleen Matlack scolded K.C., who apologized, the lawsuit says (you can read the full complaint below).
Later that day, the school called K.C.’s mother to say K.C. would undergo a HIB (harassment, intimidation and bullying) investigation for her “pig” remark. Officials said a fellow classmate, who was a member of the class but not in the room at the time, could be offended by the comment because their parent is a police officer.
During a meeting to address the comment, O’Leary and HIB specialist Jennifer Spukes allegedly compared calling an officer “pig” to the “casual use” of slurs to describe blacks or homosexuals. Officials asked how she would feel if those words were used to describe her, the lawsuit says.
J.G., the student's mother who filed the suit on her behalf, was not allowed in the room during the investigation, the lawsuit says. J.G. instructed her daughter to record the meeting, unbeknownst to investigators. Patch has not reviewed those recordings.
K.C. was given a one-day in-school suspension for committing an “unintentional HIB offense.”
New Jersey’s HIB law covers anything that could reasonably be perceived as targeting someone at school based on their “race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, or a mental, physical or sensory [handicap] disability, or by any other distinguishing characteristic.”
After she served the suspension, a letter was sent home saying no violation had been found. Then, J.G. was told the letter was sent in error and a HIB offense had actually been committed, the lawsuit says.
The lawsuit says no report was ever given to J.G., and that there was little documentation of the incident in K.C.’s student records.
This was not the first time K.C. had clashed with administrators, the suit says.
During a March 8, 2017, meeting between K.C. and assistant principal Kevin O’Leary to discuss a conversations between students about guns and violence, O’Leary allegedly told K.C. “all lives matter” in reference to the Black Lives Matter movement.
When K.C. disagreed with the statement as a misunderstanding of the movement, O’Leary allegedly made comments about some people having light enough skin to “pass,” the lawsuit says.
The lawsuit says K.C. thought the remarks were in reference to her own skin-color, as a biracial woman. She took the conversation to mean she shouldn’t talk about Black Lives Matter in school, but not that she was in trouble.
According to the lawsuit, the comments made by O’Leary, Matlack and Spukes have prevented K.C. from attending school.
“K.C. has shown signs of school avoidance since the incident, has dropped out of
extracurricular activities, and her grades have declined. As a direct consequence of the above described incidents, K.C. is no longer able to access the benefit of a public-school education in Hackettstown,” the suit says.
K.C. and her mother are seeking compensatory and punitive damages as well as court costs and attorney fees during a jury trial.
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