The Latest: Threats prompt lockdown after teacher handcuffed
By Associated Press
Jan 10, 2018 7:43 AM CST
In this Monday, Jan. 8, 2018, image made from a video provided by KATC-TV middle-school English teacher Deyshia Hargrave is handcuffed by a city marshal after complying with a marshal's orders to leave a Vermilion Parish School Board meeting in Abbeville, La., west of New Orleans. Hargrave was removed...   (Associated Press)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The Latest on the arrest of a Louisiana teacher at a school board meeting (all times local):

7:40 a.m.

A Louisiana school board's offices were temporarily locked down amid death threats from across the world in response to widely viewed video of a teacher screaming while being handcuffed at a school board meeting.

The lockdown happened Tuesday in the school district in south-central Louisiana.

Vermilion Parish School Board President Anthony Fontana tells The Clarion-Ledger the threats have come from as far away as South America, Australia and England, as well as other U.S. states. He said they've been reported to the FBI and local police.

Middle school language arts teacher Deyshia Hargrave had spoken out about teacher pay at Monday's meeting, questioning why the school superintendent should get a pay raise when teachers have gone without raises.

The newspaper reports that Superintendent Jerome Puyau's new contract gives him $148,800 annually. The average teacher salary in the district is about $47,000.

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5:40 a.m.

A Louisiana teacher who spoke out about teacher pay at a school board meeting was handcuffed by a law officer as she screamed on the floor while the officer tried to gain control of her in a brief struggle.

In dramatic video posted by KATC-TV, the teacher yells at the officer that he'd just pushed her to the ground. The officer orders her to "stop resisting."

KATC reports that the skirmish involving Deyshia Hargrave, a middle school language arts teacher, and an Abbeville city marshal happened Monday during a meeting of the Vermilion Parish schools.

The station says the teacher had addressed the board about teacher salaries and raises, and school board president Anthony Fontana at one point ruled her "out of order."

She was then apprehended in the hallway.