Why Do Convicted Pedophiles Still Have NC Teaching Licenses?
Superintendent Catherine Truitt is giving more protection to criminal teachers than to children.
We've been told during the primary that the Superintendent of Public Instruction has no power, but that's not true. Catherine Truitt's office can suspend, investigate, and revoke teachers' licenses if they have been accused of committing crimes against children.
Due to Truitt's lack of oversight, at least two convicted pedophiles hold North Carolina teaching licenses today.
Parker Ethan Brown, a fifth-grade teacher in Pender County, was arrested on September 29, 2022, for six charges of second-degree sexual exploitation of minors, one charge of third-degree sexual exploitation of minors for possessing child pornography, and one charge of possession of drug paraphernalia.
Upon his arrest, Brown immediately resigned from Pope Elementary School according to reports.
In January 2024, Brown was finally convicted after keeping his teaching license for 16 months without suspension.
Today Parker Brown has a North Carolina teaching license in good standing according to DPI’s database, even after being placed on the sex offender registry.
Shawn Hicks, former Harnett County Teacher of the Year, was fired after he was arrested on three charges of sex crimes against a student on April 6, 2022, according to a WRAL report.
Hicks used both his position as a teacher and as a pastor at a church in Bunn to lure students to his home, sources told WRAL News.
Under Catherine Truitt's supervision, this accused pedophile kept his license for two years, without suspension. He pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of child abuse and was sentenced on February 2nd, 2024.
Today Shawn Hicks has an NC teaching license in good standing according to DPI’s Licensure database:
TRUITT'S HISTORY OF IGNORING PEDOPHILES' THREAT TO CHILDREN
Last year, it was revealed that the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction's (DPI) teacher licensing and sanctioning process had serious lapses. Several school boards and principals in Lee and Onslow counties contacted Superintendent Truitt regarding teachers who had surrendered their teaching licenses after being investigated for sex abuse crimes.
However, they still had their licenses.
Truitt's official policy is to wait until a guilty verdict is handed down before acting on teachers charged with sex crimes. In reality, Truitt's predecessors had followed the suspension process for decades before DPI’s lawyer incorrectly wrote in emails to school officials that there was no legal process for suspending licenses:
Catherine Truitt's department website explains the grounds for suspending a teaching license:
Last year Catherine Truitt refused to revoke the license of another convicted pedophile and former teacher Jeremy Flock after a watchdog group brought it to her attention. Representative Tricia Cotham and Senator Amy Galey intervened and convinced Truitt to revoke the pedophile's license by state law.
Following an expose on teachers with criminal charges having their licenses renewed, lawmakers intervened to address the issue.
The email below shows that Truitt first dismissed Rep. Cotham’s concern over convicted pedophile Jeremy Flock’s license. Instead of researching Flock, Truitt responded that he was “enjoying the due process guaranteed to him by the Fourth Amendment.”
It took Truitt one month of being cajoled by school board members and the public before she took action to revoke Flock's license.
Like the other criminals mentioned in this article, Flock had been free on bail for more than a year while still maintaining an active license. Had his license been suspended, he would have been flagged for follow-up from DPI officials.
Allowing charged and convicted pedophiles to have access to schools is a feature, not a bug of Catherine Truitt’s administration. Her words and actions show she has no intention of consistently upholding teaching license regulations in North Carolina.
Michelle Morrow is the WAY.