Categories: U.S.

Former Georgia police chief becomes middle school teacher following complaints of racial discrimination

close Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for August 15

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

The former police chief of Georgia’s second-largest city has become a teacher.

Freddie Blackmon, who was police chief in Columbus until the city’s council paid him $400,000 to retire in April, is teaching social studies at Fort Middle School in the Muscogee County school district, which includes Columbus, The Ledger-Enquirer reported.

Blackmon and the principal at the 500-student middle school declined requests for interviews from the newspaper.

GEORGIA CITY SETTLES LAWSUIT CLAIMING BLACK EX-POLICE CHIEF DISCRIMINATED AGAINST WHITE OFFICERS

Freddie Blackmon, the former second Black police chief of Columbus, Georgia, is now teaching social studies at Fort Middle School.

It’s unclear how Blackmon qualified to be a teacher, but Georgia lets people who have earned college degrees in other fields teach while taking education classes to earn a permanent teaching license.

The city pushed Blackmon into retirement after 37 years on the force, amid discontent over a wave of shootings in the city, including one in which nine juveniles were wounded at a gas station on Feb. 16. Columbus Mayor Skip Henderson moved to oust Blackmon the day after he presented a strategic plan

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Blackmon had been chief since November 2020, becoming the city’s second black chief. The department polices all of Muscogee County under Columbus’ consolidated city-county government structure. Before agreeing to $400,000, Blackmon had demanded $850,000 and threatened to sue Columbus for racial discrimination.

The city later paid $600,000 to settle claims that Blackmon racially discriminated against two white officers by not promoting them.

One of the officers getting money was Lt. Ralph Dowe, president of the local chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police. He had a role in Blackmon’s ouster, testifying before the Columbus City Council in 2022 that a union survey showed officers lacked confidence in Blackmon.

Share

Recent Posts

Holiday travel privacy risks and how to stay safe

Holiday travel is stressful enough with crowded airports, expensive flights and last-minute itinerary changes. But…

6 hours ago

Robot stuns crowd after shocking onstage reveal

When Xpeng unveiled its Next Gen Iron humanoid recently, the robot glided across the stage…

9 hours ago

New email scam uses hidden characters to slip past filters

Cybercriminals keep finding new angles to get your attention, and email remains one of their…

1 day ago

Save data by setting your background app refresh to Wi-Fi only

Background activity can drain your battery and use your mobile data without you seeing it…

2 days ago

Real Apple support emails used in new phishing scam

A new phishing scam is getting a lot of attention because it uses real Apple…

2 days ago

Company restores AI teddy bear sales after safety scare

FoloToy paused sales of its AI teddy bear Kumma after a safety group found the…

3 days ago