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Dunlap
(all photos by Radok) |
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Charlotte-Mecklenburg
School
Board
member
Kaye
McGarry
is so
afraid
of
fellow
school
board
member
George
Dunlap
that she
says she
wants a
security
guard
stationed
in the
room
during
closed
session
meetings.
To some
people,
that
seems a
bit
extreme,
but to
former
school
board
member
Lyndalyn
Kakadelis,
it makes
sense.
Kakadelis
says
she,
too,
feared
Dunlap
when she
was a
member
of the
school
board.
After a
particularly
heated,
racially
oriented
debate
over the
school
desegregation
lawsuit
in 1997,
Dunlap
came
after
her and
had to
be
restrained,
she
says.
It's
part of
a long
pattern
of
alleged
personal
and
racial
harassment
among
black
and
white
school
board
members
with
clashing
views,
those
involved
say.
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McGarry |
Until
now,
both
sides
claim,
these
clashes
have
largely
taken
place at
meetings
closed
to the
public.
Kakadelis
says she
had no
intention
of
publicly
sharing
the
details
of her
1997
incident
with
Dunlap
until
McGarry
told her
story.
McGarry
claims
that in
April,
Dunlap
got
aggressive
after a
debate
on
school
discipline,
pointing
his
finger
at her
and
yelling
in a
physically
menacing
way with
his face
a few
inches
from
hers.
Larry
Gauvreau
was the
only
other
school
board
member
in the
room
with
them at
the
time.
"I saw
George
inches
away
from
Kaye's
face
with his
finger
in the
air,"
says
Gauvreau.
"It was
threatening.
He kept
going at
it. I
started
to go
over
there
because
I
thought
he was
going to
do
something.
Then she
walked
away."
McGarry
claims
that in
April,
Dunlap
got
aggressive
after a
debate
on
school
discipline,
pointing
his
finger
at her
and
yelling
in a
physically
menacing
way with
his face
a few
inches
from
hers.
McGarry's
story is
similar
to
Kakadelis'.
Kakadelis
says she
was
pounding
her fist
on the
desk for
emphasis
while
she
spoke,
and
Dunlap
told her
to stop.
When she
refused,
Kakadelis
says,
Dunlap
lunged
at her,
knocking
his
chair
over in
the
process
and
towered
over
her,
yelling.
"Normally
when a
man gets
that
close to
my face,
it's to
kiss
me," she
says.
Former
school
board
chairperson
Arthur
Griffin
had to
restrain
Dunlap
and pull
him
away,
Kakadelis
says.
Former
school
board
member
John
Lassiter,
who now
serves
on city
council,
was at
the
meeting,
which
was
closed
to the
public.
"I
witnessed
it,"
Lassiter
says.
"It was
one of
many
tough
discussions
we had.
She was
trying
to get
her
point
across
and
George
didn't
want to
hear it.
He
looked
clearly
to be
physically
intimidating
and I
think if
Arthur
had not
interfered,
there
could
have
been
physical
contact."
McGarry
initially
chose
not to
go
public
about
the
April
incident
and
instead
wrote
Dunlap a
letter.
"I will
absolutely
not
tolerate
this
type of
behavior
in the
future,"
McGarry
wrote.
But
after
another
heated
debate
last
month,
McGarry
exploded
in a
meeting,
claiming
Dunlap
had
called
her
"sweetheart"
while
making a
snide
comment.
The
audio
tape of
the
meeting
didn't
pick up
Dunlap's
alleged
comment.
All that
can be
heard is
McGarry's
reaction.
On the
tape,
another
school
board
member
is
speaking
when
McGarry
yells,
"That
was
harassment.
Board
attorney,
Mr.
Greene,
will you
please
take
note of
that? No
one
calls me
'sweetheart'
in an
open
public
meeting."
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White |
Board
chairperson
Joe
White
can then
be heard
chastising
McGarry
for
speaking
out of
order.
White
then
said he
hadn't
heard
Dunlap's
remark.
"That's
because
you have
a
hearing
aid,"
McGarry
fired
back.
White,
who is
70, took
offense
to that.
"I'm
going to
ignore
that,"
he said.
"I might
consider
that age
discrimination,
but I
won't go
there."
The
school
board
later
voted
against
McGarry's
request
to have
a
security
guard in
closed
session
meetings.
In a
recent
meeting,
McGarry
says,
she kept
a
canister
of tear
gas on
her desk
for
protection.
She has
said
that she
would
not
attend
another
closed
session
board
meeting
until
she
feels
she is
safe.
At a
meeting
last
week,
Dunlap
had a
few
words
for her,
too.
"No one,
regardless
of whose
district
they are
in, is
going to
challenge
my
manhood,"
he said.
"Truth
has a
way of
rising
above
the
lies."
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Leake |
Gauvreau
says
both he
and
McGarry,
who are
white
and
often
advocates
for the
suburbs,
have
been
racially
harassed
for
years by
the
board's
African
American
members
in
closed
session
meetings,
which
are not
tape-recorded.
At one
point a
few
years
ago,
Gauvreau
claims,
the
board's
other
African
American
member,
Vilma
Leake,
threatened
to "cut"
him. He
didn't
take her
seriously,
he says.
"Vilma's
remarks
to me
are
constant,"
says
Gauvreau.
"What
George
and
Vilma
have
done to
Kaye
McGarry
and I is
way over
the
line.
She has
called
me names
I would
punish
my
children
for. I
tolerated
it. Kaye
had the
courage
to say I
am not
going to
put up
with it
any
more.
The
public
wouldn't
believe
what has
gone on
when it
is
buried
in back
offices."
Because
of this,
Gauvreau
says he
has made
motions
to get
what is
said in
closed
session
recorded,
but the
motions
were
defeated
by other
school
board
members.
Leake
says
Gauvreau
and
McGarry
are
lying
and that
no one
else
heard
Dunlap
call
McGarry
"sweetheart."
"I don't
know if
it is
something
she is
imagining,"
Leake
says.
Leake is
outraged
by
Gauvreau's
claim
she
threatened
to "cut"
him.
"Oh God,
I'm
scared
of him
the way
he calls
me a
pig,"
says
Leake.
"I'm
appalled
that he
said
that. I
don't
care
when it
was, he
should
have
brought
charges
against
me. I
feel
like
bringing
charges
against
him for
lying."
Leake
says the
recent
accusations
against
Dunlap
have
reminded
her of
the
infamous
lynching
of
Emmett
Till, a
14-year-old
boy who
was
brutally
murdered
for
flirting
with a
white
woman in
Mississippi.
"These
are some
of the
most
racist
people I
have
ever
seen,"
Leake
says. "I
guess he
didn't
tell you
he told
me I was
crazy
and
stupid.
I'm sick
of them
because
they are
notorious
liars
and they
intend
to
destroy
education
in this
community.
I've
done
nothing
to hurt
anybody."
Gauvreu
says it
was
Leake
who
called
him
crazy
and
stupid,
but that
he has
never
taken
her too
seriously
because
he can
"usually
have her
laughing
with me
a few
minutes
later." |