A New Jersey school district says its wrestling team will no longer compete in events officiated by a referee who told a wrestler to lose his dreadlocks or forfeit his bout. The announcement came during an emergency meeting held Wednesday evening with the Buena Regional school board and members of the community.

The groups that assign referees have already said they wouldn't assign the ref until further notice.

The wrestler, Andrew Johnson, won't take part in a wrestling meet scheduled for Thursday, said CBS Philly. The Associated Press reported an attorney for the boy's family said they won't pursue legal action.

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Johnson, who is black, had his dreadlocks cut minutes before the match on Dec. 19. He had a cover over his hair, but referee Alan Maloney, who is white, said that wouldn't do.

Maloney didn't respond to requests from the AP for comment. CBS Philly reported that emotions ran high as community members strongly backed Johnson during the meeting.

People from all across South Jersey showed up the day after Christmas for an emergency school board meeting. Those here are in support of the Buena Regional High School wrestler, Andrew Johnson. Many say the 16-year-old didn’t really have a choice in cutting his locks. @CBSPhilly pic.twitter.com/W1MMv6B5cw — Kimberly Davis CBS3 (@KimberlyDavisTV) December 26, 2018

The family’s attorney says the blame is on the referee that night. @CBSPhilly pic.twitter.com/muTiBcACVx — Kimberly Davis CBS3 (@KimberlyDavisTV) December 26, 2018

"I couldn't believe that this pig would humiliate that kid on the mat," Steve Martinelli said.

"This young man will never ever forget the physical and mental toll he took that night," Action Together New Jersey Civil Rights Director Rachel Green said. "As a mother raising children in this area, it broke my heart. It didn't matter if he was black, white, green or purple."

Many came from all across southern New Jersey for the emergency meeting.

Green and others are hoping procedures are put in place to prevent this type of incident from recurring.

"You had to have an ugly situation like this happen for them to address this," Green said. "It speaks to something tells me this isn't the first time something ugly like this has happened. I think people just thought this was OK."