A Baltimore high school principal is speaking out about an incident with a white county cop in which the officer degraded and demeaned him in front of his son.
Vance Benton, who heads up Patterson High School in East Baltimore, wrote a letter to county officials about a July incident not far from his house, reports the Baltimore Sun.
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Benton wrote he had never experienced that level of βdegradation, disrespect, and humiliationβ before, and that the copβs βinnate racial biasesβ needed to be analyzed and addressed immediately. Baltimore County Police Chief Melissa Hyatt was among the recipients of the letter.
In an interview with the Sun, Benton laid out his experience with Baltimore County police on July 29, after he had taken his son to swimming practice. On the way to the pool, Benton and his son had seen a couple arguing by the side of the road. On the return home, Benton saw the same young man, this time sitting on the side of the road with his shirt torn. He had been handcuffed, and police were at the scene.
Benton parked the car at his house and then walked back to the scene with this son to make sure the detained man was βhandled properly by the police.β Benton told the Sun he thought he could also use the moment as a teachable moment for his son.
Standing about 20 yards away from the scene, a female officer came up to Benton and his son and asked them to leave, to which Benton pointed out that he wasnβt interfering with police. According to Benton, another copβone who appeared to be in charge of the arrestββwaved at him and said he was fine to stay where he was,β writes the Sun.
Then, a third officer initiated a confrontation with Benton, the longtime principal said; thatβs when the situation escalated.
From the Sun:
A third officer, who was white, approached him and, Benton said, βrantedβ about how people try to hinder investigations. Benton said he began talking to his son, and when he turned back to face the officer, the officer shouted, βDonβt you buck up at me.β
Benton said he told his son he believed that the officer was imagining behavior that hadnβt happened, and that his view was racist. βDid you see me buck up or even raise my voice?β Benton said he asked his son. βI told him thatβs how black boys and men get killed by the police when police choose to see things that are not there.β
According to Benton, the officer continued goading him; he would later describe the officerβs behavior as trying to bait him into being arrested himself.
The officer then shone his flashlight in Bentonβs face, saying he wanted to get a good look at Benton. Benton asked for the officerβs name and tried to read the officerβs name tag through the glare in his eyes.
Benton said the officer asked, βCan you even read?β and proceeded to spell his name in an exaggerated way. Benton then said the officer asked his son, if he listened to his fatherβs advice and when he said that he did, the officer responded, βI guess I will be seeing you again.β Benton said his son, Taj Benton, is a good student at Baltimore City College and a nationally ranked swimmer.
βHe saw me as the βn-wordβ and not as a black man with his son. He saw me as another opportunity to degrade someone and he relished that opportunity to do it in front of my son,β Benton told the Sun.
Police say theyβre investigating the incident, and refused to share police body camera footage with the Baltimore Sun pending the ongoing investigation.
A spokesperson for Chief Hyatt essentially gave the incident the βall matters...matterβ treatment, telling the Sun, βWe take all matters brought to our attention seriously and the agency is investigating the matter.β
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