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Staff at an Arizona high school have been attacked and attacked online, and received several death threats, after a spokesperson said… Turning point USA A group of teachers were inaccurately accused of wearing Halloween costumes that allegedly made fun of the school Assassination of TPUSA co-founder Charlie Kirk.
On Friday, members of the Cienega High School math department wore identical white, blood-stained T-shirts with the words “Problem Solved” written in black letters across the front. A photo of the group was posted on the Vail School of Education’s Facebook page. District Superintendent John Carruth said in a statement that no student or parent complained about the costumes during the school day.
Then, on Saturday, Andrew Colvet, who was the executive producer of Charlie Kirk’s show, posted the photo on “They deserve to be famous and get fired.”
Colvet hinted that the white shirts bear a resemblance to the “Freedom” shirts that Kirk wore when he was… He was assassinated as he spoke at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on Sept. 10.
Colvet’s post went viral and was viewed nearly 10 million times before it was deleted on Tuesday after WIRED contacted him.
Immediately after Kolvet’s post was published, Cienega High School was bombarded with social media posts, comments, direct messages, emails, and at least one voicemail containing racial slurs, calls to fire teachers, personal information of school employees, and explicit threats of violence. The school shared these letters with WIRED.
The school district immediately responded to the accusations, explaining on Facebook that the costumes were not a reference to Kirk’s assassination and that the math department had in fact worn the same costumes a year earlier.
“We want to make it clear that these shirts were part of a math-themed Halloween costume meant to represent solving difficult math problems,” Carruth, the superintendent, wrote. “The shirts were never intended to target any person, event or political issue.” The Vail School District provided WIRED with a copy of an email dated Oct. 31, 2024, that included a photo of the same costumes.
While Colvet acknowledged Carruth’s statement and admitted in an X post later Saturday that the costumes had been worn the previous year, he did not remove his original post.
“It’s a very strange uniform for teachers in general, but after what happened to Charlie, I’m absolutely shocked that they’re wearing it again,” Colvet wrote. “I do not believe for a moment that they are all innocent.”