Posts tagged ‘Stafford County Schools’
Colonial Forge’s Banana-Republic Dictator Has Record of Public Intoxication
The recent “Banana Man” incident at Colonial Forge High School has brought to light some serious past actions regarding Principal Karen Spillman. LeavingMyMarc.com has uncovered that Prince William County police charged “Karen C. Spillman” with Public Intoxication in July 2007 (click to enlarge photo):
It now appears that this may be the “health reasons” on why Spillman resigned (was pushed out) her post at Strasburg High School in 2008 – 15 days after being hired.
Given Spillman’s checkered past, how on earth did the Stafford County School Board hire this woman in the first place? It’s clear to me that their “hiring standards” need some serious updating!
I have quite a bit of respect for our school board members, but their silence through this whole ordeal has been very disappointing. They need to IMMEDIATELY remove Spillman from her post as Colonial Forge’s Principal.
I also believe that we need to revise the “hiring standards” for senior positions in our school system. We need even wider community involvement and input!
We need leadership from our elected officials NOW and not more deafening silence. If I were on the school board, I would have shown some decisive leadership. Letting the “Banana Man” incident fester for a whole week and still not dealing with the issues surrounding Spillman is a complete failure by our elected officials (and those currently seeking office) and has allowed this situation to get so out of control. Stafford County is now the laughing stock of the entire world (check out our petition – and continue signing it to send a message that Spillman should be removed).
We need strong leadership NOW!
Banana Man’s Suspension Suspended
UPDATE 2: Stafford County Schools Superintendent Randy Bridges has just issued a lengthy apology:
“My staff, under my direction, has reviewed the recent actions at Colonial Forge High School relating to the wearing of yellow tee shirts and other activities in support of a student who had been recently disciplined. We have concluded that many of the actions that were taken by the school were inappropriate. We are sorry for any embarrassment or inconvenience incurred by the students who were appropriately exercising their freedom of speech and by the families of those students. This administration and the School Board fully support the First Amendment rights of our students.”
Very nice apology from Randy Bridges!
Given the inappropriate actions by the school, I can’t see how Spillman is allowed to continue in her current capacity – not to mention the serious revelations about her past.
UPDATE: It’s important not to forget about all the other student’s who have been punished for peacefully demonstrating, whether it was wearing a t-shirt, painting words of support on their car or bringing a bag full of bananas to school. Have their punishments been dropped? If you have any information on this, please use the contact form here. If you’re a parent of one of the children who have been punished and are willing to share some details, you can also use that same contact form. The School Board needs to intervene for these children too, since they were only exercising their constitutional right of free space!
NBC Washington is reporting that “the final five days of Banana Man Bryan Thompson’s 10-day suspension have been suspended.” He isn’t able to attend tonight’s Colonial Forge’s football game, but after that he may return to class.
I guess the pressure from the public was too much for the School Board to take, rightfully so. I still believe that the School Board should immediately fire Principal Spillman. Her conduct throughout this entire process and revelations about a past incident in Prince William County clearly shows that she should have never been hired in the first place. The school system has a lot to explain. Do they not check past references?
I’m told from folks up in Prince William County that there is a lot more to her leaving her post up there, although I don’t want to publish anything until I’m able to confirm some additional facts.
Long live Banana Man!
Chuck Feldbush Calls Out Sheriff Jett for Unnecessary Roughing in “Banana Man” Prank
Chuck Feldbush (I-Stafford), who is running for Sheriff in Stafford County, has just issued a press release on the “Banana Man” incident:
STAFFORD, VA — Citing police overreach and overreaction to high school high jinx, Stafford Sheriff Candidate Chuck Feldbush today condemned the response of Stafford County Sheriff’s Department to Colonial Forge High School’s “Banana Man” incident.
“This is the latest example of a department going bananas over harmless kid stuff while real crime – violent crime – is threatening the peace and safety of Stafford County,” said Mr. Feldbush.
“Slapping cuffs on a kid — who has a disability — for running down the sidelines at a high school football game in a banana suit is a complete overreach of the authority of the sheriff’s department.” Mr. Feldbush continued, “It’s a disturbing sign that Sheriff Jett has lost control of his deputies – and this is placing our kids at risk.”
Citing that under Sheriff Jett’s watch, violent crime is up 66% in Stafford County, Feldbush declared that he would focus more on reducing violence in our community, put more resources into clearing unsolved cases, and work on real solutions to make Stafford a safer place to live, work and play.
“We need law enforcement officers to protect our kids and keep them safe, not hassle them and rough them for silly pranks that injure no one,” Mr. Feldbush concluded.
Nice job by Chuck! I’ll say it again, it’s all about accountability and results. Sheriff Jett may be a likeable guy, but to me it’s all about the results – which just aren’t there. Keep Stafford safe by voting for Chuck Feldbush (I-Stafford) for Sheriff on November 8th.
UMW Communication Professor Anand Rao on Colonial Forge High School Free Speech Controversy
Anand Rao, Professor of Communication at UMWIt is unfortunate that the school administration appears to be teaching the students that to disagree means to disrespect.
Professor Rao isn’t the only one speaking out about the violation of student’s free speech rights in the wake of the Banana Man controversy. His daughter, Tizrah Rao, is a Colonial Forge High School student who became engulfed in the controversy when she wore a yellow t-shirt that read “Free the banana man” in support of her classmate. An assistant principal confiscated the t-shirt.
Of Brian Thompson (a.k.a. Banana Man), Tizrah explains her support by saying “he’s a nice kid” and that the suspension was unfair and “didn’t match the crime.”
In response to her t-shirt being confiscated on Wednesday, she wore a yellow t-shirt that read “Free Speech” on Thursday. The result was that the same assistant principal asked her to take it off.
ACLU of Virginia Legal Director Rebecca Glenberg supports Tizrah’s constitutional right of free speech. On Thursday, she sent a letter to Colonial Forge High School Principal Karen Spillman that supported her right, “Based on our understanding of the facts, it appears that some students at your school have strong feelings about the discipline of a fellow student, and that they have chosen to express those feelings in a passive, non-disruptive manner. We ask that you respect their constitutional right to free speech.”
If all of this wasn’t enough already, we learned last night about Principal Spellman’s heavy-handed past in Prince William County. Given her checkered past, it is certainly fair to question her judgment (and the judgment of our school system who hired her).
It also appears that the Sheriff Jett is in damage control and is now claiming that Brian cursed at deputies, which is why he was handcuffed and thrown into a squad car. Another boy has already come forward and admitted to being the one who cursed. With violent crime up 66% in Stafford County, Jett is so focused on bananas and not on the real criminals. With him facing re-election this year, his prospects of re-election continue to plummet.
Please don’t forget to sign our online petition to Free Banana Man here. Over 200 signatures strong already!
[Image via Free-Lance Star.]
Breaking News: Colonial Forge Principal’s Heavy-Handed Past
UPDATE: In addition to what appears below, apparently Principal Spillman was hired for a job at Strasburg High School and resigned 15 days later. What happened? What did they find? The plot thickens.
Karen Spillman is no stranger to controversy. Or for that matter effecting heavy-handed responses to benign, innocent situations—like when a reporter for a community newspaper stopped to write a feature story on…baby ducks.
Ten years ago, the current Colonial Forge High School Principal ran Woodbridge High School in Prince William County. From FreedomForum.org:
Reporter Kelly Campbell went to [Woodbridge High School] last week to finish up a feature on baby ducks and wound up in handcuffs and cooling her heels at a police station.
Students no doubt will be heartened to see someone besides themselves suffer under “zero-tolerance” policies afflicting the nation’s schools these days. But the reporter’s arrest raises legitimate questions about the ability of the press to perform its constitutional role and about the dismissive attitude of many government officials toward public accountability.
It all started when a photographer for the Potomac News in Prince William County, Va., saw a young person with a duckling at a baseball game last week and took a photo. She found out that the duck was part of a class assignment at Woodbridge High School.
In reporting a story to go with the photo, Campbell learned that biology teacher Douglas Pinion had 100 students take home two-day-old ducklings in an experiment about how they might “imprint” on the humans. She also encountered wildlife experts and some students and parents who expressed concerns about the welfare of the ducks. Her calls to the school to get further information were not returned. So she went to the school, where Principal Karen Spillman invited her into her office for an interview.
Shortly after the interview began, Spillman suddenly called it to a halt. The reporter wanted to know why. During the back and forth between the principal and the reporter, a man wearing a high school marching band jacket entered the principal’s office to say he was leaving for the day. The principal asked him to wait because she might need help removing the reporter, even though she had not asked Campbell directly to leave. Before Campbell could leave willingly, the man took her by the arm and started ushering her out.
Campbell recounted later: “I said, ‘What are you doing?’ and he said, ‘Arresting you.’ I said, ‘Who are you?’ ” At that point, the man pulled up his band jacket to reveal a county police logo on his knit shirt. John Chapman, a Prince William County police officer, was on duty at the school, wearing what a department spokesperson termed “a relaxed uniform.”
Officer Chapman handcuffed the reporter and took her to the police station, where she spent two hours before being charged with misdemeanor criminal trespass and driven back to her car at the school. Her editor and publisher had come to the station but were not allowed to see her.
“Our reporter was caught off guard by the principal ending the interview,” said Campbell’s editor, Susan Svihlik. “Expressing surprise and hesitation is not against the law, nor is it trespass.”
After the arrest, Kelly Campbell went back to the newsroom and wrote her baby ducks article, which was published in the Potomac News on June 8. The next day, a story about her arrest, written by a newsroom colleague, appeared in the newspaper.
Campbell is scheduled to appear in court July 31 on trespass charges carrying a penalty of up to a year in jail and $2,500 fine.
Leaders of state and national press organizations quickly issued statements of concern about the arrest.
Louise Seals, president of the Virginia pro chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and managing editor of the Richmond Times-Dispatch, noted that press relations with education and police officials in Virginia are usually quite good. She expressed hope that this issue could be resolved without going to court. The state SPJ will support the Potomac News reporter in her legal fight if necessary, Seals added. “A reporter has to be able to ask questions without fear of being arrested.”
“We hope that this was a one-time error of judgment that won’t be repeated,” said Ray Marcano, SPJ’s national president and assistant managing editor at the Dayton (Ohio) Daily News.
“Reporters simply should not be arrested for doing their job,” said Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. “Apparently, Ms. Campbell was arrested for doing what all good reporters are trained to do. She was thrown in jail for asking: ‘Why?’ ”
The arrest of Kelly Campbell while interviewing a high school principal for a relatively innocuous story is just one more in a string of recent examples of public officials’ hostility toward journalists trying to keep the people informed about their own government.
Dr. Spillman later served as Associate Superintendent for Prince William Schools. She left the system in 2004.
It appears she is still (ducking) questions. Dr. Spillman has yet to respond to a letter sent earlier today by the legal director of the Virginia ACLU. Stafford County Schools spokesperson Valerie Cottengim told the Free Lance-Star that [they} are reviewing the ACLU letter.
So…if it walks like a duck, if it quacks like a duck, it must be a high school principal with the leadership style of a banana-republic dictator.
What else is there about Principal Karen Spillman that we don’t know?
Don’t forget to sign the petition to Free Banana Man here.
ACLU: Colonial Forge Violating Student’s Right to Free Speech, Banana Man Controversy Grows

The controversy surrounding Banana Man and the reaction by Colonial Forge High School and the Stafford County Sheriff’s Office is growing ever louder by the minute.
Students across the area, in a show of solidarity, have been wearing yellow t-shirts or other apparel in support of Brian Thompson (a.k.a. Banana Man) – you know the student who was handcuffed and placed in a police car for running down the sidelines during halftime of a high school football game in a banana suit.
The ACLU of Virginia believes that “the school’s actions appear to violate the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.”
Based on our understanding of the facts, it appears that some students at your school have strong feelings about the discipline of a fellow student, and that they have chosen to express those feelings in a passive, non-disruptive manner. We ask that you respect their constitutional right to free speech.
You can view the full letter here.
The Free-Lance Star spoke to a Colonial Forge Student, Tizrah Rao, who had her t-shirt confiscated yesterday by an assistant principal and her First Amendment rights violated. The shirt simply read, “Free the banana man.”
So today she wore a t-shirt that simply read, “Free speech.” The result was somewhat similar, although it appears that she was able to keep her shirt and just had to change into a different one.
The way she and many others have been treated by the school is outrageous and illegal!
Wearing t-shirts isn’t the only way that students and community members are showing their support. I caught up with a recent graduate of Stafford High School today who was riding around town on a scooter in a banana costume. He believes that the treatment of this student is outrageous and has joined a growing majority in Stafford County who want Banana Man freed!
To help free Banana Man, sign our online petition here.







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