A Florida teacher wanted by law enforcement over an alleged child abuse incident turned himself in on Friday afternoon. His defense attorney says the law enforcement version of the events is not the whole story.
Richard Jay Harris, 41, a teacher at Oakcrest Elementary School in Pensacola, Fla. was booked and released roughly 15 minutes later by the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office after posting $5,000 bond, according to local ABC affiliate WEAR.
The television station reported that the incident in question allegedly occurred in late February of this year between Harris and a 7-year-old female student. Authorities were reportedly aware of the allegations for months but said they wanted to give the teacher time to share his side of the story. A warrant was finally issued last week.
A Thursday Facebook post by the sheriff’s office advertised the warrant and offered the victim’s and law enforcement’s side of the story:
During the investigation, it was reported the teacher called the student to his desk and asked the student why she was so bad. The student told the teacher that she didn’t know why. The teacher then told the student to go sit down and shut up ‘you punk b***h.’ The student then hit the teacher and returned to her desk.The teacher walked over to where the student was sitting, leaned down face to face, and allegedly said, ‘now it’s my turn.’ He then picked up the chair the student was sitting in, tilted the chair dropping the student, causing the child to hit their head on the floor.
“I would say, fortunately, it’s not common,” Sheriff Chip Simmons told WEAR of the allegations. “But in cases like this, I think when you look at it, we have a teacher and we have a 7-year-old student. You just don’t lift a chair and dump a 7-year-old. You don’t take that type of action against a 7-year-old student.”
In an interview with the TV station, however, Harris’s defense attorney disputed the allegations against his client.
“He’s dealt with students that have been untoward to him throughout the years[,] of course, and he knows how to handle that,” attorney Jim Barnes said while simultaneously promising that the allegations will be fought.
Barnes also took issue with the narrative about the case’s timeline — as espoused by the local sheriff.
“Here we are with a story that looks like he’s trying to run,” the attorney said. “He’s not trying to run at all.”
After a reporter pressed Barnes on that account, he insisted that his client “100 percent . . . did not know” about the warrant until the Facebook post was made the day before Harris turned himself in. Additionally, the attorney said, he had reached out to the ECSO no fewer than four times but never received a response. But WEAR reporter Olivia Iverson tweeted that the authorities told her they were struggling to locate the teacher-turned-defendant Harris.
“They love their child as I love my kids and you love your kids,” Attorney Barnes said, accounting for why his client was wanted in the first place. “So we’re going to believe our kids. And anytime that anything happens like this, there’s any allegation like this, obviously we’re going to go to the aid of our children.”
The Escambia County School District suspended Harris in February when the law enforcement investigation began but has declined to comment on the case due to the ongoing nature of that inquiry.
The case does not yet appear in an online court docket.
[image via Escambia County Sheriff’s Office]