Former teacher Pamela Nelson conducted an exclusive interview with 5NEWS on Friday (Oct. 18), addressing her misdemeanor harassment conviction this week in Benton County Circuit Court.
A Benton County jury found Nelson, accused of hitting a 12-year-old student last year, guilty on Oct. 16 of a misdemeanor harassment charge.
The two-day trial, which ended late Wednesday night after jury deliberations, also resulted in an acquittal on a misdemeanor second-degree battery charge. She was fined $150 but received no jail time.
The misdemeanor charges were reduced from the felony charge of second-degree battery that the prosecutor previously filed against her, records show. The misdemeanor changes were added on Oct. 11, she said.
Nelson has denied hitting the student.
“I would never strike a child. I’ve been a teacher for over 30 years,” she said. “I have children, and I would never strike a child.”
Nelson’s jury trial had been scheduled to begin July 9 but was pushed back because three child-rape trials that week had priority, officials said.
The two-day jury trial was held in the Division 2 courtroom of Benton County Circuit Judge Brad Karren.
At an arraignment on Nov. 13, Nelson, 58, pleaded not guilty to striking a student on Oct. 1 at the Benton County School of the Arts in Rogers while she was a middle school choir and computer keyboarding teacher there, officials said. Not guilty pleas are standard at arraignments to allow the case to proceed in the legal system.
Nelson was arrested in October 2012 and was fired from the school after a 12-year-old male student said she hit him on the back. She was released from the Benton County Jail on a $5,000 bond on Oct. 3, 2012, one day after being booked into jail, records show.
The school board’s decision in early October to fire Nelson, who was making $33,000 annually in her first year teaching at that school, came at the recommendation of Superintendent Paul Hines.
According to an affidavit of probable cause filed Oct. 3, 2012, Nelson and the school’s principal, Julia Rice, had warned a computer keyboarding class to quiet down. After the principal left, the 12-year-old student told a friend to stop playing a game on the computer or they would get in trouble.
At that point, Nelson appeared behind the 12-year-old student and struck him on the upper left side of his back, the affidavit states. His friend said, “She just hit you.”
A few moments later, the student asked to go to the principal’s office and called his mother, the affidavit states. The boy’s mother then called the principal, who confirmed the student had a raised red hand print on his back, the court document states.
About seven hours after the incident, a police officer who had seen an earlier photograph of the red mark looked at the 12-year-old student’s back and noticed the mark had faded but was still barely visible, the affidavit states.