White Referee Fired After Forcing Black Wrestler to Cut Dreadlocks

Authored by ebony.com and submitted by DragonPup

Alan Maloney, the White referee who forced, Andrew Johnson, a Black high school wrestler to cut his dreadlocks before a match, will no longer work in the Buena Regional School District. According to Good Morning America, David Cappuccio, a New Jersey superintendent decided at an emergency meeting earlier this week.

Maloney was placed on indefinite suspension after the dreadlock-cutting incident was recorded and shared on social media.

Cappuccio addressed the controversy in a letter on the high school’s website writing, “The Staff and administration within the Buena Regional School District will continue to support and stand by all of our students and student-athletes.”

Following the posting of the letter, a meeting was held at Buena High for a vote on “personnel matters.” However, Cappuccio made a decision on the viral haircut before the group addressed it.

“He’s done working with our district,” the superintendent said, according to WPVI.

Attorney for 16 y/o wrestler Andrew Johnson – Dominic A. Speziali – says family is defending coach & trainer questioning why administrators at the match did not get involved. The Johnson family wants to “resolve the matter” & to “return to normalcy” & are waiting for invex @6abc pic.twitter.com/VdrIhooh9p — Annie McCormick (@6abcAnnie) December 26, 2018

Johnson’s family was at the meeting and their lawyer Dominic A. Speziali said the wrestler was “emotionally drained” from the embarrassing incident.

Speziali wrote in a statement, “The blame here rests primarily with the referee and those that permitted him to continue in that role despite clear evidence of what should be a disqualifying race-related transgression.”

He continued, “Andrew was visibly shaken after he and his coaches made every effort to satisfy the referee short of having his hair cut. But, as captured on video, the unyielding referee gave Andrew 90 seconds to either forfeit his match or cut his hair. Under duress but without any influence from the coaching staff or the athletic trainer, Andrew decided to have his hair cut rather than forfeit the match.”

The student-athlete has also decided not to wrestle at an upcoming meet because of the media attention. According to Speziali, Johnson will return later in the season.

The New Jersey Interscholastic Athletic Association and the school district are investigating the incident. The Johnson family will hold off on any legal measure until then.

Ivypearl on December 28th, 2018 at 17:29 UTC »

Something like this happened to me, obviously not the same thing. I had skull reconstruction surgery in August before senior year of high school and had to wear a bandana for six months. It was not a part of our teams volleyball uniforms but I had a dr’s note which allowed me to wear it. I was the captain and talked to the ref several times before the game started and he didn’t say anything about it. About 10 points into the game, he blew the whistle and stopped the game and loudly instructed me, in front of an entire gymnasium of people, to remove my bandana or leave the game. My coach had my drs note and showed him and he was a giant dick and made a huge scene about it, but allowed me to continue playing. I’ll never forget it. Whoever that guy was I hope he’s miserable right now because I hate him.

bickets on December 28th, 2018 at 14:22 UTC »

“The scholastic wrestling rules clearly state that referees are to inspect wrestlers’ appearance and determine any rules violations prior to the start of the meet, typically during weigh-ins. The referee here was late to the meet and missed weigh-ins. When he did evaluate Andrew, he failed to raise any issues with the length of his hair or the need to wear a head covering.

“He added that the referee later informed Nate Johnson, Andrew’s younger brother and teammate, that they would both need to wear a head covering or face disqualification.

As Andrew took to the mat to start his match, the referee examined and rejected the head covering he was wearing. In prior matches at a tournament the weekend before, Andrew was permitted to wrestle without issue, a fact that his coaches conveyed to the referee when pleading on his behalf. Andrew then requested he be allowed to push his hair back as he did the weekend prior, but the referee again refused because ‘it wasn’t in its natural state.”

Source: https://usatodayhss.com/2018/wrestler-forced-cut-off-dreadlocks-andrew-johnson

Ahab_Ali on December 28th, 2018 at 13:46 UTC »

The referee was identified in news reports as Alan Maloney, who drew news media coverage in 2016 after a dispute with a black referee. The referee, Preston Hamilton, said at the time that Maloney, who is white, called him a racial slur during an argument, an accusation Maloney said he did not remember but did not dispute...

It looks like the ref was given the benefit of a doubt before.