These evil democrats will do anything to silence and cancel anyone who opposes their corrupt rule. Hundreds of J6 protesters remain incarcerated for baseless accusations and staged violence spearheaded by then Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.
Among the J6 victims was Jason Moorehead, a 17-year teacher of Social Studies in Allentown School District, who was unjustly suspended for attending Donald Trump’s ‘Stop the Steal’ protest in Washington D.C.
Moorehead indeed went to Washington DC but asserted that he never got closer than a mile to the Capitol and was not part of the group whom the liberals claim ‘stormed’ the building.
In fact, he was never charged with any crime related to the protest.The social studies teacher has been targeted by the school district and individual school members for his personal political preferences and organized a smear campaign against him, despite his record being ‘spotless.’
The school district attempted to get away with its transgressions and pointed to Moorehead’s “inflammatory” posts on social media, such as a meme he shared related to the J6 protest, which the district claimed that parents and concerned individuals reached out to them.
For the longtime teacher in Allentown, the attack has destroyed his reputation and ultimately ended his career.
On Friday, the jury ruled that the district should pay Moorehead $125,000 for economic damages. The school district is one of the largest in the state, with more than 16,000 students. The jurors also found that school board member Lisa Conover and former board president Nancy Wilt acted “maliciously or wantonly” and ordered Conover to pay $6,000 for punitive damages and Wilt $500.
For the social studies teacher, despite upholding Conservative Republican beliefs and being a Trump supporter, he had kept his politics to himself as a teacher in a Democrat-controlled city.
During a phone interview, Moorehead hailed the jury’s decision ‘as a good start.’
“But it’s still leaving me wanting more accountability from the school district to actually clear my name in the community. … The community needs to hear from the district that I did nothing wrong and that I’m safe to return to a teaching environment.”
Attorney Francis Malofiy, one of Moorehead’s lawyers, pledged to “really put the screws to the district, put the screws to those board members, and demand that they put out a formal apology and correct this record.”
Meanwhile, the district’s lawyer refused to apologize and retract their statements against Moorehead.