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If the teacher cant control the students, they should be fired also. What kind of adult gets bested by a six year old...? As for the cop... Maybe time for a desk job. View Quote |
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Nope. The parents filed, the school failed and the cop got the dirty stick. He did what he was supposed to do. You certainly don't want him to spank the kid in this day's litigation environment. The school administrator should have at the least removed the kid from the classroom, call the parent to immediately come in an administer the corporal punishment. If they refuse, have the parent find another school for their precious spawn. The problem with that is the school has had their hands tied for way too long and the kids know it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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If the teacher cant control the students, they should be fired also. What kind of adult gets bested by a six year old...? As for the cop... Maybe time for a desk job. |
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Next time you LE have to go to an elementary school... Toss the principal the keys to your cruiser & tell them to go do your job while you do theirs. Shitty situation to be in
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My wife works at a local elementary school. The stories she brings home, I wouldn't blame a cop for putting handcuffs on some of those little bastards
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Cop was retired and worked as a reserve working the school as an off duty detail due to then Gov. Rick Scott's gun control bill. Part of it requires a cop on every campus. Most schools hire cops as an off duty detail to comply with the law. View Quote |
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teachers do not deserve to be hit However, being hit by a 6 year old is something that's going to happen. Being arrested is NOT an appropriate response when a 6 year old hits a teacher. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Based on just the limited info I have, I say good arrest. That might change if the teacher was/is a complete asshole & so forth. Believe it or not, not all 6 year old kids are well behaved and normal. This cop may well have saved that kid's life down the road. We don' know yet. Nor do teachers deserve to be hit. However, being hit by a 6 year old is something that's going to happen. Being arrested is NOT an appropriate response when a 6 year old hits a teacher. ETA-my nephew is one of those who is bound to be arrested at a young age. No discipline whatsoever the first couple years of his life when he lived with his mom. Now that my brother has custody when the kid doesn't get his way the threats and hits start. My daughter is terrified of him because he tells other kids he's going to cut them into little pieces, cook them in the microwave and eat them. God help you if you eat one of his snack cakes too. I told my mom that even 15 years ago, my grandpa would have had his attitude sorted out within 6 weeks. |
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If you want to act like an adult you get to face the adult consequences.
Good arrest, have them spend some time in jail with the rest of the convicts, like that scared straight show. |
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Throw in poor parenting, an IEP (individual education plan )-says can't be kicked out for behavior, coaching by combative parents looking for a payday from the school district, and you've got a serious party.
I'm sure that kind of thing never happens, and SROs, teachers, and admins, aren't left sitting there going what now? |
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Jesus christ, bunch of snowflakes in here...
Officer didn’t so much as raise his voice, just carted the little hellion to the station for her parents to pick up. Wasn’t his problem to begin with, the lazy ass teachers dumped it on him. But even so, that’s our tax dollars and the parents’ piss poor parenting at work. “Wah, wah, my little angel didn’t deserve this...” |
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When a minor is awarded a judgment, does it go in their name so it will be there when they are an adult...? Or do the parents get control to squander it?
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How do you handle aggressive biting, kicking, and hitting from a 6 year old as a teacher? Remember you cannot go hands on. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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teachers do not deserve to be hit However, being hit by a 6 year old is something that's going to happen. Being arrested is NOT an appropriate response when a 6 year old hits a teacher. |
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If you want the state to be the parent don't complain when the parenting is not to your liking. View Quote ETA "Charter school". Is that a school for gifted youngsters? Run of the mill private school? Or a school for future "teens"? ETA2 I can't believe he got fired for that... |
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"What are those for?" Kaia asks about the zip ties in the video.
"They're for you," Officer Dennis Turner says........ Not gonna lie, I chuckled at that part. Having seen my share of unruly little monsters that result from hands off parenting techniques I have not a single fuck to give as my field is barren. |
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Parents “can’t” and won’t discipline their children anymore and it shows.
I’m a millennial, but my father would have beat my ass if I was a shithead/ attacked a teacher. Shit, some of my teachers would have as well. |
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If it scares the kid straight that would be good.
Of course if you could turn the kid back over to his parents his dad will no doubt give him the spanking that kid has earned...imo |
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The nuns/teachers in my grammar school and the brothers/teachers in HS dealt with problems with discipline and it worked. They were not afraid to go hands on when need be.
ETA: There's one little Johnny at my wife's school who is a frequent flier in the principal's office. He will destroy whatever office they put him in while waiting for the parent. Then he starts dialing 911. Mom or grandpa picks him up, back in school the next day, cycle repeats. |
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Quoted: First people wanted the state to provide an education. Then they wanted the state to also provide disciplinary action, free breakfast and lunch, and organized sports. Then they took away the ability for teachers and administrators to discipline children. The end result is that it is now a LE matter when a child misbehaves. It's what they wanted, it's what they get. View Quote |
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School calls cop because six year old is combative. Cop can only do A. Nothing or B. Arrest Kid. School now sounds like your typical DV Spouse after calling the cops and bitching that her man is being cuffed and stuffed into the back of a marked unit. They wanted the cop to scare the kid, not actually take action. View Quote |
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This. If you don't want a typical police officer response, don't call a police officer. What do you expect him to do? Paddle him? Ground him? Take away his Xbox? What do you expect a police officer to do when you call a police officer because someone physically assaulted someone else? ETA "Charter school". Is that a school for gifted youngsters? Run of the mill private school? Or a school for future "teens"? ETA2 I can't believe he got fired for that... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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If you want the state to be the parent don't complain when the parenting is not to your liking. ETA "Charter school". Is that a school for gifted youngsters? Run of the mill private school? Or a school for future "teens"? ETA2 I can't believe he got fired for that... In Florida, Charter Schools are privately run schools that are publicly funded. Literally they are "Tax Payer Funded For Profit Schools" just like the for profit prisons. They have to abide by School Board Policy and Procedures. |
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ARFCOM continues its legendary status of being a place where people comment and debate without reading the original article or watching the attached video.
This child was so out of control and violent that she was calmly sitting in a chair in the principal's office when the officer arrived. From the moment the officer arrives, the child is repeatedly apologizing, begging, and showing remorse. But, yeah, this situation is 100% analogous to an eight year old with a gun committing armed robbery; or a violent homicide by a ten year old. Maybe, just maybe, this officer has a problem in how he interacts with juveniles and the decisions he makes in regards to their health and well-being. He repeatedly bragged on video about all the young juveniles he's arrested, and tried to arrest a different six year old that same day. He also arrested a seven year old for shoplifting when the child didn't cry like his friends did when the police arrived (the others were not arrested; just the child who didn't cry). Over the course of Turner’s 23-year tenure at OPD prior to retiring last year, he was disciplined seven times for violations of department policy that ranged from unsafe driving to a child-abuse arrest in which he was accused of injuring his 7-year-old son, record released Tuesday showed. He was also accused of sending threatening text messages to his ex-wife in 2009 and racial profiling, records show. View Quote Gee, why might this officer be SPECIFICALLY choosing to arrest children aged 6-8? It's almost as if he has a point to prove. An Orlando police officer was charged Thursday with aggravated child abuse after officials found welts and bruises on his 7-year-old son's arms and chest, Apopka police said.
In an interview Thursday night, Turner said he was surprised at being arrested and denied severely beating the child. "Don't let this stop you from disciplining your children," said Turner. Turner received oral reprimands after two internal affairs investigations by Orlando police. In 1996, he was cited for "substandard performance" after he lost the wallet of a suspect he arrested. Investigators from the Orange County Sheriff's Office and the state Department of Children & Families found the injuries during a visit to the boy's school, Lovell Elementary School, near Apopka. View Quote It absolutely can't be that this guy has a chip on his shoulder and a point to prove. He's really just out there trying to protect us all from the evil six year olds. At least he's not beating the shit out of them anymore. That's a pretty major improvement. I think a medal, a ceremony, and a hefty pay raise are in order. |
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My wife works at a local elementary school. The stories she brings home, I wouldn't blame a cop for putting handcuffs on some of those little bastards View Quote Never underestimate mental illness. |
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Lol he tried to arrest another 6 year old the same day. View Quote |
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That's a school administration issue and not a police issue. The police issue is that the reservist did not contact the watch commander prior to the arrest, but since he failed to do so we will never know if it would have been approved or not. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Wtf? A six year old, and the parents were never called. Nothing is beyond defense. |
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Yup. The police officer is the real victim here. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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School calls cop because six year old is combative. Cop can only do A. Nothing or B. Arrest Kid. School now sounds like your typical DV Spouse after calling the cops and bitching that her man is being cuffed and stuffed into the back of a marked unit. They wanted the cop to scare the kid, not actually take action. |
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Jesus christ, bunch of snowflakes in here... Officer didn’t so much as raise his voice, just carted the little hellion to the station for her parents to pick up. Wasn’t his problem to begin with, the lazy ass teachers dumped it on him. But even so, that’s our tax dollars and the parents’ piss poor parenting at work. “Wah, wah, my little angel didn’t deserve this...” View Quote An adult with two brain cells would have laughed and said “you want me to do what?” I guess the self control to hold back on the “stop resisting” and taser action was good. |
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If the officer didn't take action. He'd be shitcanned too. He was in a no win situation. You should stick to flying. I'll stick to policing. I've actually been a SRO. I don't tell you how to work the stick of your bird. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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School calls cop because six year old is combative. Cop can only do A. Nothing or B. Arrest Kid. School now sounds like your typical DV Spouse after calling the cops and bitching that her man is being cuffed and stuffed into the back of a marked unit. They wanted the cop to scare the kid, not actually take action. What about a 3 year old? What is your line where you would refuse to arrest? 6 months? Is there a line? Baby threw a toy at me = assault = arrest? Serious questions. Not being a dick. |
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Throw in poor parenting, an IEP (individual education plan )-says can't be kicked out for behavior, coaching by combative parents looking for a payday from the school district, and you've got a serious party. I'm sure that kind of thing never happens, and SROs, teachers, and admins, aren't left sitting there going what now? View Quote There are options in between "nothing" and "arrest" for the cop. Take a report and let parents go to juvenile court intake or CPS with it. Protective orders would be another one - at least in my state, the cop can even seek one on behalf of a victim. It forces the school to put the problem kid into a special program or special school for delinquents because he literally isn't allowed in the school anymore, when they otherwise wouldn't do anything because "inclusion" and "mainstreaming." Everything I said above is based on first hand experience, by the way. |
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What age do we draw the line? 14 month old in diapers at daycare ok to cuff and stuff? An adult with two brain cells would have laughed and said "you want me to do what?" I guess the self control to hold back on the "stop resisting" and taser action was good. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Jesus christ, bunch of snowflakes in here... Officer didn't so much as raise his voice, just carted the little hellion to the station for her parents to pick up. Wasn't his problem to begin with, the lazy ass teachers dumped it on him. But even so, that's our tax dollars and the parents' piss poor parenting at work. "Wah, wah, my little angel didn't deserve this..." An adult with two brain cells would have laughed and said "you want me to do what?" I guess the self control to hold back on the "stop resisting" and taser action was good. 1. Teachers cannot go hands on. 2. Schools cannot punish unruly kids. 3. They divert everything to LE. 4. LE is instructed to no have discretion when it comes to enforcement. 5. Parents don't discipline their kids. 6. Since kids are disciplined at home, they are unruly at school. 7. It becomes a perfect storm. |
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teachers do not deserve to be hit However, being hit by a 6 year old is something that's going to happen. Being arrested is NOT an appropriate response when a 6 year old hits a teacher. View Quote If the school didn't want the cops to arrest the kid, why did the school call the cops? |
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If the officer didn't take action. He'd be shitcanned too. He was in a no win situation. You should stick to flying. I'll stick to policing. I've actually been a SRO. I don't tell you how to work the stick of your bird. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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School calls cop because six year old is combative. Cop can only do A. Nothing or B. Arrest Kid. School now sounds like your typical DV Spouse after calling the cops and bitching that her man is being cuffed and stuffed into the back of a marked unit. They wanted the cop to scare the kid, not actually take action. |
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Common sense ended long ago with Mandatory Minimums and Zero Tolerance Policies pushed by Susie Soccer Mom and Johnny No Balls Blue Jeans. The entirety of the school system is fucked up in how they handle disciplinary issues. 1. Teachers cannot go hands on. 2. Schools cannot punish unruly kids. 3. They divert everything to LE. 4. LE is instructed to no have discretion when it comes to enforcement. 5. Parents don't discipline their kids. 6. Since kids are disciplined at home, they are unruly at school. 7. It becomes a perfect storm. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Jesus christ, bunch of snowflakes in here... Officer didn't so much as raise his voice, just carted the little hellion to the station for her parents to pick up. Wasn't his problem to begin with, the lazy ass teachers dumped it on him. But even so, that's our tax dollars and the parents' piss poor parenting at work. "Wah, wah, my little angel didn't deserve this..." An adult with two brain cells would have laughed and said "you want me to do what?" I guess the self control to hold back on the "stop resisting" and taser action was good. 1. Teachers cannot go hands on. 2. Schools cannot punish unruly kids. 3. They divert everything to LE. 4. LE is instructed to no have discretion when it comes to enforcement. 5. Parents don't discipline their kids. 6. Since kids are disciplined at home, they are unruly at school. 7. It becomes a perfect storm. |
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Quoted: I just have to wonder then.... If the school didn't want the cops to arrest the kid, why did the school call the cops? View Quote TL;DR - Some kids just need an ass-whooping, and there are fewer people these days willing to do it. |
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When I was young if you hit a teacher you went to the principle. Who pulled out a big ass wooden paddle and wore your ass out.
then they called your parents. Who came to school and wore you ass out. That their solved 99.9% of all problem children and kept the other .01 from even thinking about being bad. |
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Common sense ended long ago with Mandatory Minimums and Zero Tolerance Policies pushed by Susie Soccer Mom and Johnny No Balls Blue Jeans. The entirety of the school system is fucked up in how they handle disciplinary issues. 1. Teachers cannot go hands on. 2. Schools cannot punish unruly kids. 3. They divert everything to LE. 4. LE is instructed to no have discretion when it comes to enforcement. 5. Parents don't discipline their kids. 6. Since kids are disciplined at home, they are unruly at school. 7. It becomes a perfect storm. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Jesus christ, bunch of snowflakes in here... Officer didn't so much as raise his voice, just carted the little hellion to the station for her parents to pick up. Wasn't his problem to begin with, the lazy ass teachers dumped it on him. But even so, that's our tax dollars and the parents' piss poor parenting at work. "Wah, wah, my little angel didn't deserve this..." An adult with two brain cells would have laughed and said "you want me to do what?" I guess the self control to hold back on the "stop resisting" and taser action was good. 1. Teachers cannot go hands on. 2. Schools cannot punish unruly kids. 3. They divert everything to LE. 4. LE is instructed to no have discretion when it comes to enforcement. 5. Parents don't discipline their kids. 6. Since kids are disciplined at home, they are unruly at school. 7. It becomes a perfect storm. I’m asking at what age would you refuse to cuff and arrest a baby. Seriously Day care calls you and says a kid assaulted a teacher. You arrive and the kid is in a pull up diaper. You cuff and stuff? If not - what is your personal limit on this? If they are able to walk you would be ok arresting? Is kindergarten the line that makes it ok? Kids that young are not committing assault. They are yearning for attention. Attention they are not getting at home. |
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Quoted: Kids that young are not committing assault. They are yearning for attention. Attention they are not getting at home. View Quote I don't see why LE would HAVE to arrest a child in the age range we're discussing. Take a report, let prosecutor/juvenile court/DSS decide what to do. |
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Miami - you would actually arrest a 6 year old kid? What about a 3 year old? What is your line where you would refuse to arrest? 6 months? Is there a line? Baby threw a toy at me = assault = arrest? Serious questions. Not being a dick. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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School calls cop because six year old is combative. Cop can only do A. Nothing or B. Arrest Kid. School now sounds like your typical DV Spouse after calling the cops and bitching that her man is being cuffed and stuffed into the back of a marked unit. They wanted the cop to scare the kid, not actually take action. What about a 3 year old? What is your line where you would refuse to arrest? 6 months? Is there a line? Baby threw a toy at me = assault = arrest? Serious questions. Not being a dick. A six year old us old enough to understand that bad behavior results in punishment. The problem is, no one punishes the kid and they dump it on LE. LE only has so many options due to policy and law. The end result was the school called the cop because they didn't take action. Throw in Zero Tolerance Policies by the school mandating that EVERYTHING needs to be reported to LE, and you end up with these types of cluster fucks. Post Parkland, I responded to a school because of a bomb threat. A 3rd Grader was overheard talking with another student about TPing a teacher's house on Halloween. The staff member that overheard that called it in as a bomb threat. Zero Tolerance Policies in action. Youngest I ever arrested was a 8 year old. Crime? Shoplifting. Kid repeatedly tried to steal from the Walmart's video game department. He would break the glass display and run out with the game. Parents didn't give a fuck. |
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Plenty of case law that says an IEP or a "disability" is not a magical license to be disruptive or violent, nor do such things shield violent or disruptive students from discipline or legal consequences. At the school admin level they might see it that way in practice because they are overwhelmingly liberal blivets and want to save everyone, including utterly unsalvageable trainwrecks, by "mainstreaming them." Of course, this often leaves a trail of psychological and physical destruction behind with all the other kids around, and a poor learning environment as Special Timmy draws all the attention from the already overworked teacher. Schools also do not want to place problem kids in special schools, or assign aides to them, because that shit costs a lot of money - so if they can get away with dumping the kid in a regular class, they'll do it and ride that bronco until something awful happens or some parent takes legal action. There are options in between "nothing" and "arrest" for the cop. Take a report and let parents go to juvenile court intake or CPS with it. Protective orders would be another one - at least in my state, the cop can even seek one on behalf of a victim. It forces the school to put the problem kid into a special program or special school for delinquents because he literally isn't allowed in the school anymore, when they otherwise wouldn't do anything because "inclusion" and "mainstreaming." Everything I said above is based on first hand experience, by the way. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Throw in poor parenting, an IEP (individual education plan )-says can't be kicked out for behavior, coaching by combative parents looking for a payday from the school district, and you've got a serious party. I'm sure that kind of thing never happens, and SROs, teachers, and admins, aren't left sitting there going what now? There are options in between "nothing" and "arrest" for the cop. Take a report and let parents go to juvenile court intake or CPS with it. Protective orders would be another one - at least in my state, the cop can even seek one on behalf of a victim. It forces the school to put the problem kid into a special program or special school for delinquents because he literally isn't allowed in the school anymore, when they otherwise wouldn't do anything because "inclusion" and "mainstreaming." Everything I said above is based on first hand experience, by the way. |
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Dealing with children is literally my life. Foster parenting and parenting my adopted kids is what my whole life revolves around. We've had well over a hundred kids come and go from our home. Probably closer to two hundred. I have never encountered a child whether it be a teenager or a six year old that required me to even contemplate handcuffs/zip ties. Ever. I've been struck, spit on, and shoved. I've never needed to restrain a child with any kind of device to make myself or them 'safer.' I've always been able to deescalate and I've NEVER had training in the art of deescalation ... yet, I can still do it and no one dies. I wonder why that is. View Quote |
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I agree on most of that and it puts the LE in a bad situation I'm asking at what age would you refuse to cuff and arrest a baby. Seriously Day care calls you and says a kid assaulted a teacher. You arrive and the kid is in a pull up diaper. You cuff and stuff? If not - what is your personal limit on this? If they are able to walk you would be ok arresting? Is kindergarten the line that makes it ok? Kids that young are not committing assault. They are yearning for attention. Attention they are not getting at home. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Jesus christ, bunch of snowflakes in here... Officer didn't so much as raise his voice, just carted the little hellion to the station for her parents to pick up. Wasn't his problem to begin with, the lazy ass teachers dumped it on him. But even so, that's our tax dollars and the parents' piss poor parenting at work. "Wah, wah, my little angel didn't deserve this..." An adult with two brain cells would have laughed and said "you want me to do what?" I guess the self control to hold back on the "stop resisting" and taser action was good. 1. Teachers cannot go hands on. 2. Schools cannot punish unruly kids. 3. They divert everything to LE. 4. LE is instructed to no have discretion when it comes to enforcement. 5. Parents don't discipline their kids. 6. Since kids are disciplined at home, they are unruly at school. 7. It becomes a perfect storm. I'm asking at what age would you refuse to cuff and arrest a baby. Seriously Day care calls you and says a kid assaulted a teacher. You arrive and the kid is in a pull up diaper. You cuff and stuff? If not - what is your personal limit on this? If they are able to walk you would be ok arresting? Is kindergarten the line that makes it ok? Kids that young are not committing assault. They are yearning for attention. Attention they are not getting at home. |
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Prosecutors in my area will not charge (file delinquency petition) for assault, if the subject is under 9 or 10 or so. Their view is that kids that young can't even form the mens rea for crimes like that. I don't see why LE would HAVE to arrest a child in the age range we're discussing. Take a report, let prosecutor/juvenile court/DSS decide what to do. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: Kids that young are not committing assault. They are yearning for attention. Attention they are not getting at home. I don't see why LE would HAVE to arrest a child in the age range we're discussing. Take a report, let prosecutor/juvenile court/DSS decide what to do. The problem is, LE is not in the business of doing that. Just like the Military isn't in the business of policing. Cops aren't in the business of disciplining kids at school. Parents don't discipline kids and neither do schools anymore. They dump it to LE. Same with the homeless problem. |
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