It started like any other school pickup. Terrance Wadley pulled up outside Kennedy Elementary in Mankato, Minnesota, waiting for his daughter. That’s when things got tense. A white teacher approached, accusing him of scratching her car with his passenger door. She called the police. What happened next? Wadley filmed the encounter. His video went viral on TikTok.
The teacher later changed her story. Now, Wadley, a Black father, is speaking out, and he is not just about the teacher’s actions but also about how the officer handled the situation. Black families know these situations can spiral fast. Wadley refused to let that happen. His response has sparked wider discussions about racial bias and who gets held accountable when accusations fly.
The teacher told police that Wadley’s car door had hit her vehicle, leaving a scratch. Though the mark wasn’t clear, she gestured toward her car as proof. Officers arrived prepared to document the incident. Wadley stayed calm. He walked to the cars and showed how his door couldn’t physically reach hers, and that it was simply impossible considering the angles the cars were at.
A TikTok video recorded the moment, revealing how fast the claim fell apart.
@terrance.wadley Went to pick my daughter up from school and a lying white TEACHER who works for KENNEDY ELEMENTARY came out and TRIED to play the white Karen victim card😂 and told the police that we hit her door! Until I once again had to prove I was innocent. She told them she saw us hit her door with my door. Look how these pagan white people use their white supremacy to lie! These are the ones that are TEACHING your black sons and daughters! Look at how these PEGAN white people lie and try to protect each other. I cant WAIT for the day God judges these wicked people! I DON’T FEAR THE DEVIL!! IM JUDAH💯 MANKATO POLICE STOP PLAYING WITH ME IM NOT ONE OF THEM ONES🤎YOU PAGANS ARE NOT SMART ENOUGH😉 NO WEAPON FORMED AGAINST ME SHALL PROSPER ..means NO WEAPON🙏🏾TRY AGAIN SATAN😉😘 #mankatopolice #kennedyelementaryschool #fyp #foryoupage
The teacher suddenly felt like acknowledging that the scratch might have “been [there] from another time.” A simple mix-up? Hardly. She’d already reported it to the police and named Wadley a suspect for an incident that never occurred.
You’d think this might end with an apology. But, guess what? It didn’t.
Wadley, clearly frustrated, called the whole thing “ridiculous.” Instead of de-escalating, the officer turned it back on him and said he was the one being ridiculous. “I’m glad I tested it out,” Wadley replied. “[Otherwise] she would have driven away, and you would have run a whole statement.” He had a point. Without his quick action, the officer’s account might’ve stayed on the record as truth, not a mistake.
The officer mentioned checking the security cameras in the lot, but Wadley noted that the cameras were too far away to spot a scratch on a car door. The cop dismissed his concerns anyway, treating Wadley’s push to set things straight as unnecessary fuss.
Same with police shootings vs race circa 2014-2023. Mainstream legitimization of hyperbole around single incidents portrayed with racist intent while suppressing/omitting overall statistics. That delusion inspired years of riots/violence and now the tribalism we see. pic.twitter.com/M5NsadHYAv
— snacks (@snackbeam) September 7, 2025
If this feels like something you’ve heard before, that’s because it is!
Time and again, Black Americans face false accusations at alarming rates. Data from the National Registry of Exonerations shows they’re seven times more likely than white Americans to be wrongly convicted of significant crimes.
Wadley’s case wasn’t about a murder trial or a high-profile crime, either; it started over a parking spot. But his encounter with the officer lays bare a harsh truth: even minor, everyday conflicts can quickly turn dangerous when bias takes hold.
In a later TikTok video on September 12, Wadley approached the same officer. “You don’t have the right,” he told the officer firmly. “You work for me. I pay taxes.” Atlanta Black Star reports that the officer replied bluntly, “I don’t work for you.”
Police use-of-force incidents by race:
White: 76 per 100,000
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🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔Black: 273 per 100,000
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🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔🚔— Ro Khanna (@RoKhanna) June 19, 2020
Wadley now says he’s taking formal action by filing a complaint with Mankato police. What began over a minor scratch has exploded into a viral moment as everyday people challenge the authority they believe is misleading them.
NEXT UP: This Teacher Became A Student For Two Days: What She Learned Will Shock You!












This repeat of the story leaves out the most telling part. The teacher said she saw the incident happen. It is bad enough that the teacher does not see any harm in her actions, but to have the police officer tell this man his concerns are ridiculous shows us that his feelings are more than justified.