A former Pima Community College student who said she was wrongly suspended for complaining when students spoke Spanish in class has lost her lawsuit against the school.

After two years and a two-week trial, a jury took less than three hours last week to reject Terri Bennettโ€™s claim that PCC failed to protect her rights as an English-speaker.

The jury sided with PCC officials who said Bennett was suspended not because she complained but because she threatened and antagonized Spanish-speaking students.

The verdict in the collegeโ€™s favor came down Monday, Aug. 24 in Pima County Superior Court.

Bennett, 52, a former nursing student, filed suit against PCC in 2013 with backing from ProEnglish, a Washington, D.C.-based group said to have ties to the white supremacist movement.

Bennett attended PCCโ€™s Desert Vista campus in a part of the city with many native Spanish speakers. She claimed she couldnโ€™t study properly because fellow students chatted incessantly in Spanish and translated aloud for each other during class.

Evidence at the trial showed Bennett was hostile to Spanish-speakers, according to a synopsis of the case posted on the website jdsupra.com and confirmed by one of PCCโ€™s attorneys.

Bennett โ€œconfronted a student stating: โ€˜This is America. Youโ€™re not in Mexico. Speak English.โ€™ She also referred to the Spanish language as โ€˜gibberish,โ€™ โ€ the synopsis said.

Bennett โ€œbecame increasingly antagonistic, referring to Hispanic students as โ€˜spics, beaners and illegals.โ€™ She also threatened a Hispanic student stating that she had a black belt and could โ€˜kick her (expletive),โ€™ โ€ and intimidated two college employees, it said.

The jury found Bennettโ€™s right to use English in class was not infringed upon. There was no evidence that anyone spoke Spanish to her, and all teaching, exams and materials were in English, the synopsis said.

PCC spokeswoman Libby Howell said college officials โ€œare pleased that this outcome confirms that (Bennett) was treated fairly and appropriately.โ€

Bennettโ€™s attorney, John Munger of Tucson, couldnโ€™t be reached for comment.

ProEnglish spokesman Phil Kent called the jury decision โ€œan especially sad day for those of us who believe that English is the special tie that should bind us all as Americans.โ€

โ€œWe believe that Arizonaโ€™s official English law is being undermined and that Terri Bennett has not received justice,โ€ Kent said, adding his group will โ€œassess what the next legal steps should be.โ€

Some ProEnglish board members are linked to organizations that promote racial hatred, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a national watchdog group based in Alabama that battles racism and other discrimination.

Kent, for example, also is the executive director of the Virginia-based American Immigration Control Foundation, which is listed as an โ€œactive U.S. hate groupโ€ on the law centerโ€™s website. Kent disputes that the organization is a hate group.


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Contact Carol Ann Alaimo at calaimo@tucson.com or 573-4138.