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OP-ED
COLUMNIST
School to
Prison Pipeline
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Published: June 9, 2007
The latest news-as-entertainment spectacular is the Paris Hilton criminal justice fiasco. She’s in! She’s out! She’s — whatever.
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Far more disturbing
(and much less entertaining) is the way school
officials and the criminal justice system are
criminalizing children and teenagers all over
the country, arresting them and throwing them in
jail for behavior that in years past would never
have led to the intervention of law enforcement.
This is an aspect of the justice system that is
seldom seen. But the consequences of ushering young
people into the bowels of police precincts and jail
cells without a good reason for doing so are
profound.
Two months ago I wrote about a 6-year-old girl in
Florida who was handcuffed by the police and taken
off to the county jail after she threw a tantrum in
her kindergarten class.
Police in Brooklyn recently arrested more than 30
young people, ages 13 to 22, as they walked toward a
subway station, on their way to a wake for a teenage
friend who had been murdered. No evidence has been
presented that the grieving young people had
misbehaved. No drugs or weapons were found. But they
were accused by the police of gathering unlawfully
and of disorderly conduct.
In March, police in Baltimore handcuffed a 7-year-old
boy and took him into custody for riding a dirt bike
on the sidewalk. The boy tearfully told The Baltimore
Examiner, “They scared me.” Mayor Sheila
Dixon later apologized for the arrest.
Children, including some who are emotionally
disturbed, are often arrested for acting out. Some
are arrested for carrying sharp instruments that they
had planned to use in art classes, and for mouthing
off.
This is a problem that has gotten out of control.
Behavior that was once considered a normal part of
growing up is now resulting in arrest and
incarceration.
Kids who find themselves caught in this unnecessary
tour of the criminal justice system very quickly
develop malignant attitudes toward law enforcement.
Many drop out — or are forced out — of
school. In the worst cases, the experience serves as
an introductory course in behavior that is, in fact,
criminal.
There is a big difference between a child or teenager
who brings a gun to school or commits some other
serious offense and someone who swears at another
student or gets into a wrestling match or a fistfight
in the playground. Increasingly, especially as
zero-tolerance policies proliferate, children are
being treated like criminals for the most minor
offenses.
There should be no obligation to call the police if a
couple of kids get into a fight and teachers are able
to bring it under control. But now, in many cases,
youngsters caught fighting are arrested and charged
with assault.
A 2006 report on disciplinary practices in Florida
schools showed that a middle school student in Palm
Beach County who was caught throwing rocks at a soda
can was arrested and charged with a felony —
hurling a “deadly missile.”
We need to get a grip.
The Racial Justice Program at the American Civil
Liberties Union has been studying this issue.
“What we see routinely,” said Dennis
Parker, the program’s director, “is that
behavior that in my time would have resulted in a
trip to the principal’s office is now resulting
in a trip to the police station.”
He added that the evidence seems to show that white
kids are significantly less likely to be arrested for
minor infractions than black or Latino kids. The
6-year-old arrested in Florida was black. The
7-year-old arrested in Baltimore was black.
Shaquanda Cotton was black. She was the 14-year-old
high school freshman in Paris, Tex., who was arrested
for shoving a hall monitor. She was convicted in
March 2006 of “assault on a public
servant” and sentenced to a prison term of
— hold your breath — up to seven years!
Shaquanda’s outraged family noted that the
judge who sentenced her had, just three months
earlier, sentenced a 14-year-old white girl who was
convicted of arson for burning down her
family’s home. The white girl was given
probation.
Shaquanda was recently released after a public outcry
over her case and the eruption of a scandal involving
allegations of widespread sexual abuse of
incarcerated juveniles in Texas.
This issue deserves much more attention. Sending
young people into the criminal justice system
unnecessarily is a brutal form of abuse with
consequences, for the child and for society as a
whole, that can last a lifetime.