Columbia Custodian: Sacking of Hamilton Hall Well-Planned, and School May Retaliate for My Speaking Out

Now, in an exclusive interview with The Free Press, Mario Torres describes the experience of being on duty as protesters stormed the building in the early hours of the morning, breaking glass and barricading the entrances. “We don’t expect to go to work and get swarmed by an angry mob with rope and duct tape and masks and gloves,” he said.

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“They came from both sides of the staircases. They came through the elevators and they were just rushing. It was just like, they had a plan.” Mario said protesters with zip ties, duct tape, and masks “just multiplied and multiplied.” ...

“Is Columbia going to retaliate and find a reason to fire me? Is someone going to come after me? So I’m taking a big risk doing this, but I think that they failed. They failed us. And I think that’s the bigger story. They failed us. They should have done more to protect us, and they didn’t.”

Ed Morrissey

Be sure to read it all. Torres tried heroically, but in vain, to defend Hamilton Hall. And now he worries that the school will throw him under the bus for it and for testifying publicly about their failure to keep staff and students safe from raging mobs. Be sure to watch the video -- it's not embeddable, and it may be subscriber-only, but give it a try anyway. 

Torres has yet to return to work. A GoFundMe project has been set up to assist Torres with legal fees should he face retaliation or wish to sue Columbia for their failure to keep him safe. One way or another, Columbia should pay for their failures -- and those disincentives should be strong enough to force changes at other schools as well. 

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