Image credit: Madison Ruppert from WMAZ video

Madison Ruppert, Contributor

Activist Post

In yet another instance of children being criminalized for exhibiting childish behavior, a six-year-old was hauled out of school in handcuffs for allegedly throwing a temper tantrum in class.

Salecia Johnson, a kindergartener, was taken away from her small

Georgia school in steel handcuffs after being accused of tearing items

off the walls and throwing books in an outburst at Creekside Elementary in Milledgeville and now the school system and the police are both defending how they handled the incident.

According to WMAZ,

police “took the child to the police station where she was charged with

simple assault and damage to property. Because of her age, she will not

be prosecuted.”

The family of Johnson said that she was badly shaken by her treatment

while Geneva Braziel, the superintendent for Baldwin County schools,

characterized Johnson’s behavior as “violent and disruptive.”

“The Milledgeville police department was ultimately called to assist

due to safety concerns for the student, other classmates and the school

staff,” Braziel claimed in a statement.

Police refused to say what actually set off the alleged tantrum, but

they did accuse Johnson of also throwing a small shelf which hit the

principal on the leg along with jumping on a paper shredder ant

attempting to break a glass frame.

Unfortunately, Johnson’s experience is far from isolated as this

troubling trend is something that occurs across the United States.

In California, for instance, over 40% of public school suspensions are issued for dubious reasons such as “willful defiance” and disruption.

Ultimately, in many of these cases, the policies end up hurting the

students the most, as evidenced by the fact that according to Johnson’s

mother, Constance Ruff, Johnson was suspended and is not allowed to

return to school until August.

Milledgeville Chief of Police Dray Swicord defended the police’s

decision to haul Johnson out of school in cuffs by claiming that it was

standard operating procedure and that when an officer tried to calm her,

she resisted.

“Our policy is that any detainee transported to our station in a

patrol vehicle is to be handcuffed in the back. There is no age

discrimination on that rule,” Swicord said.

“She has mood swings some days, which all of us had mood swings

some days. I guess that was just one of her bad days that day,” Ruff

explained, painting a picture of a child throwing a temper tantrum, as

children are wont to do, which police responded to by treating her like a

hardened, violent offender.

According to The Washington Post,

civil rights advocates and criminal justice experts across the United

States are observing how frustrated teachers and school administrators

are calling police to resolve even the most minor conflicts.

“Kids are being arrested for being kids,” Shannon Kennedy, a civil rights attorney said.

Kennedy is currently suing the Albuquerque, New Mexico school

district due to hundreds of children being arrested over the last few

years for offenses as minor as refusing to switch seats or having cell

phones in class all the way up to the high crimes of burping and

destroying a history book.

In one case, a 14-year-old boy was actually arrested for inflating a

condom in the classroom. I don’t know about you, but I know that I would

get a kick out of reading that police report.

Other cases include another kindergartener being arrested in Florida

for an allegedly throwing a temper tantrum during a jelly bean counting

contest several years ago.

In fact, a bill was proposed just this year in Florida in an attempt

to restrict the ability for police to arrest children for minor

misdemeanors or other acts which do not pose a serious threat to safety.

Annette Montano of Albuquerque also said that her 13-year-old child

was arrested just last year for the absurd crime of burping in gym

class.

While Albuquerque school officials will not comment on the arrests in

their school system, the president of the Albuquerque teachers union,

Ellen Berstein, claims that students’ bad behavior is more extreme now

than it once was.

She claims that there are cases of sexual harassment in elementary

and middle school as well as cases of children throwing furniture.

“There is more chronic and extreme disrespect, disinterest and kids who

basically don’t care,” she added.

Thankfully, not all are blind enough to buy the flawed logic put

forth by schools and police. Darrel Stephens, a former police chief in

Charlotte, North Carolina and executive director of the Major Cities

Chief Association is one of those who does not see this trend as

promising.

“I have had some concern for a while that the schools have relied a little too heavily on police officers to handle disciplinary problems,” Stephens said.

In Texas alone, a nonprofit public interest group called Texas

Appleseed found that an estimated 100,000 children are ticketed each and

every year for misdemeanors ranging from violations of the school dress

code to truancy to swearing.

One Texas state lawmaker, Senator John Whitmire, wants to get rid of

student ticketing entirely. He says that teachers and police need to

draw more distinct lines between students who they are actually afraid

of and students who they are mad at.

“If you are afraid of someone because they bring a gun or drugs, of

course we come down hard,” Whitmire said. “It’s the kids that just make

you mad that you don’t need to make a crime.”

This seems like a wholly logical statement and yet somehow it doesn’t

seem to be shared by some administrators, teachers, police and

legislators.

If we continue to turn our children into criminals by treating them

as such, we can expect a culture of criminality and a large customer

base for the private prison industry to continue into the foreseeable

future.

I’d love to hear your opinion, take a look at your story tips, and

even your original writing if you would like to get it published. Please

email me at [email protected]

RELATED ARTICLE:

10 Disgusting Examples Of Very Young School Children Being Arrested, Handcuffed And Brutalized By Police

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This article first appeared at End the Lie.

Madison Ruppert is the Editor and Owner-Operator of the alternative news and analysis database End The Lie and has no affiliation with any NGO, political party, economic school, or other organization/cause. He is available for podcast and radio interviews. Madison also now has his own radio show on Orion Talk Radio from 8 pm — 10 pm Pacific, which you can find HERE. If you have questions, comments, or corrections feel free to contact him at [email protected]



