Police handcuffing 5-year-old

Nice backpedalling...have you been taking lessons?

And how did you move the little girl being discussed throughout this entire thread to Australian schools with their magical time out rooms so quickly?

"The police, all five of them as per "procedure", handcuffed the five year old girl to remove her."
The same way you came up with 2 more imaginary police officers?

"A video shows three police officers.."
http://www.nbc6.net/news/4411488/detail.html?rss=ami&psp=news

"Three officers rushed to the scene, handcuffing the screaming girl by pinning her arms behind her back.
They then drove her to her mother in the back of a police car"
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/050423/140/fgy44.html

"Then it shows the child appearing to calm down before three officers approach"
http://newscenter.ninn.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=10035
:rolleyes:

And what do you mean by '..."procedure"...'?
Does your copy of the FDLE manual say something different than the one I posted? Do share.
:rolleyes:


Save the woo tactics for an appreciative audience Zep...

In case you hadn't noticed, some folks around here are becoming quite bored with empty opinions and logical flip flops dressed up in attack dog rhetoric like your's.

As always, you are welcome to bring some facts with you, and engage in useful discourse, if you should ever get tired of the histrionics.
 
crimresearch said:
...In case you hadn't noticed, some folks around here are becoming quite bored with empty opinions and logical flip flops dressed up in attack dog rhetoric like your's.
Do tell.
As always, you are welcome to bring some facts with you, and engage in useful discourse, if you should ever get tired of the histrionics.
:i:
 
crimresearch said:
Anyone can have a website, and put up other people's skeptical articles...

If they were peer reviewed and even edited for basic typos and mistakes, that would be one thing..
 
Zep said:


I think you will find that most parents here will confirm that you can't "reason" with little children like you can with adults.... So, no attention, no tantrum. Remove the audience, isolate, contain - as I have been saying.

The only think that this parent will disagree with is the certainty of the result. Before I was a parent, I had a lot of thoughts along the lines of, "If kids do X, parents ought to do Y.", and sometimes a related corollary, "If parents did X, kids would do Y."

Now I know that under no circumstances can you ever make statements like the latter one, and even the former statement is pushing it. Interactions with children are an excellent case where fuzzy logic comes in real handy. You just don't know what will really happen.

Nevertheless, your approach to the problem is extraordinarily sensible, even though it would not work in every single situation. It really is the best approach, in my humble opinion. The fact that in America, the person who takes the best approach might end up as a defendant is a sign of a sick society.
 
Regnad Kcin said:

Yeah Nick, that applies to you..any time you want to drop the teenage debate club act, and actually provide facts, instead of engaging in puerile games like pretending that 'plural' means 3 or more, not 2, do let us know...it would be a refreshing change.
 
Meadmaker said:
The only think that this parent will disagree with is the certainty of the result. Before I was a parent, I had a lot of thoughts along the lines of, "If kids do X, parents ought to do Y.", and sometimes a related corollary, "If parents did X, kids would do Y."

Now I know that under no circumstances can you ever make statements like the latter one, and even the former statement is pushing it. Interactions with children are an excellent case where fuzzy logic comes in real handy. You just don't know what will really happen.

Nevertheless, your approach to the problem is extraordinarily sensible, even though it would not work in every single situation. It really is the best approach, in my humble opinion. The fact that in America, the person who takes the best approach might end up as a defendant is a sign of a sick society.
I don't know about it being a "sick society" so much as one that, in this particular case, seems to have lost sight of the real problem - in this case, a 5yo tantrum at school. Nowhere did there seem to be a reality check involved...
 
This is reminding me of nothing so much as one of Jedi Knight's old threads... his "gravity" thread or the one where he said no women were ever physically abused by men.

Claus has three options here...

1. Provide SOMETHING to back up his claim.
2. Admit that he overstated his claim and move on.
3. Abandon the thread and never admit to a mistake.

Sadly, I think he's chosen option 3. Which reveals astounding hypocrisy after hounding other people around the board to answer questions.
 
crimresearch said:
Nice backpedalling...have you been taking lessons?
I don't think my stance on this has changed throughout. But let me see... Aaah, here it is - an extract from my first post on this thread:
The best resolution of such negative attention-seeking behaviour (aka, a tantrum) is to remove the intended audience completely. The child will rapidly learn that the behaviour gains nothing, and will stop soon enough (unless there are more serious problems involved). At home, this is the "time-out" method, and as has been mentioned before in this thread, it can be used equally effectively at school.

I saw the video, and my very first thought was that the school teachers let the behaviour continue for far too long by simply "being there" and letting the girl have an audience. She was not hurting herself or the teachers in her mini-rampage, and would be highly unlikely to do so. In their situation I would have let the girl simply bash my hands and arms as I walked backwards to the time-out room (5yo kids don't hit that hard!) - easily possible because the girl was far too preoccupied in hitting stuff to see where she actually was.
Apart from your pointless jibes about time-out rooms and Australia, I seem to have been repeating and explaining my comments since then, and almost exclusively for your benefit, crim. And I can continue to do so until it sinks in, if you like.

crimresearch said:
And how did you move the little girl being discussed throughout this entire thread to Australian schools with their magical time out rooms so quickly?
Say what? :confused: Have you been channelling Kumar again?

crimresearch said:
"The police, all five of them as per "procedure", handcuffed the five year old girl to remove her."
The same way you came up with 2 more imaginary police officers?

"A video shows three police officers.."
http://www.nbc6.net/news/4411488/detail.html?rss=ami&psp=news

"Three officers rushed to the scene, handcuffing the screaming girl by pinning her arms behind her back.
They then drove her to her mother in the back of a police car"
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/050423/140/fgy44.html

"Then it shows the child appearing to calm down before three officers approach"
http://newscenter.ninn.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=10035
:rolleyes:
I stand corrected. It was THREE, not five, big burly adult police officers called in to contain a five year old girl who had a tantrum...using handcuffs. Phew - glad we sorted that out.

crimresearch said:
And what do you mean by '..."procedure"...'?
Does your copy of the FDLE manual say something different than the one I posted? Do share.
:rolleyes:
I'm going to allow that the use of handcuffs on detainees by police is "standard procedure". If you tell us it isn't then perhaps you can explain why the tiny little girl needed to be handcuffed in this case?
 
I posted the actual FDLE procedure...you post irrelevant argumentation and 'mistakes', and now want to infer that I said exactly the opposite of what I said...

On that basis, I will let other folks decide who is being a skeptic and who isn't.

Other than to take the heat off Claus, what exactly have you contributed to this thread Zep? Or to this entire forum?

Quit using it for your litterbox.
 
Hmm. Sixteen pages already ... what are y'all debunking herein (to meet the goals of the JREF forums)?
 
hammegk said:
Hmm. Sixteen pages already ... what are y'all debunking herein (to meet the goals of the JREF forums)?

In all seriousness, the mass hysteria caused by a TV video, and assurances from the media that something terrible happened.

The perception that 'if it looks bad in the media, it must be bad'.


And as a side benefit, outing a number of pseudo-skeptic posters who can't function on dry and boring old facts or legitimate questions, and don't want their keyboard commando debate club to degenerate into a skeptical forum.
 
Zep said:



I stand corrected. It was THREE, not five, big burly adult police officers called in to contain a five year old girl who had a tantrum...using handcuffs. Phew - glad we sorted that out.

" big burly adult "


Do these adjectives somehow make your point more valid ?

They might if they applied.

They don't look particularly ' big ' to me, but I 'll give you that ' burly ' can be subjective and a compliment at times.

I'm sure the female officer would be flattered.

Are you aware of a jurisdiction where the police officers are not adults?
 
I was giving the 16 page the benefit of the doubt to see if Claus would swallow his pride.

No luck, though.
 
I'm still in the dark as to what the specific physical harm to the girl was. Claus claimed there was physical harm - what was it?

Lurker
 
Why is anyone surprised that Claus has failed to answer yet another simple question about his claims?

It is as predictable as Jambo posting in support of his latest bizarre belief, Shanek posting in defence of libertarianism or Rouser2 posting about the evils of modern medicine.
 
Lurker said:
Claus claimed there was physical harm - what was it?

Lurker
I believe it's that some pieces of EuroTrash got their panties in a wad, and it chaffed, reminding them at least half are theoretically male.
 
I don't think there is any way that school officials could restrain the child given the parent's specific instructions not to touch the child.

So anyone having any ideas about moving the child as a solution, would have to do it without touching the child.

I find it hilarious, after all the gum flapping about handcuffs and harm, to learn that only plastic restraints were used on the child's wrists. Handcuffs were only put on her ankles because she was kicking.

Mr Trevena told CNN the girl's mother was "horrified" when she saw her child put into a marked police car. He said she was bound with plastic ties around her hands because the metal handcuffs were too large

So what is all of this flapdoodle about handcuffing a 5 year old and physical harm? The handcuffs didn't fit, so they weren't actually used.

It actually seems pretty common in the U.S. for children to be handcuffed for unruly behavior. Google provides no end of examples.

I have no problem with it at all.

I wonder why this particular one got so much attention? Probably the lawyer wanted a lot of attention, that's why he passed the video tape out to everybody.


They actually called the chief in to arrest this miscreant:

Bethlehem Police Chief August Bankey says he put the seven-year-old boy who is a First Grader at Bethlehem Elementary School in Ohio County in handcuffs. Chief August Bankey says the boy refused to stop kicking him after apparently running from teachers on Friday. According to reports, the school staff followed school policy and called the police after the boy started running from teachers. The chief put handcuffs on the child and sat him in a chair.
 
Meadmaker said:
Any time restraints are applied, of whatever sort, whether it is by hand or by handcuffs, there is a small risk of injury. It happens, especially when people, including children, resist the application of restraints. Should children never, therefore, be restrained? I think all of us would agree that such a policy would be foolish. Children must, in some cases, be restrained. If anyone disagrees, let him speak up. We need some more non-parents to ridicule.

Which suggests a strawman. The point is not whether children should be restrained, but rather by who and how they are restrained. Situations where handcuffs are necessary would be rare, or so I would imagine...


OK. So if they have to be restrained, how should they be restrained? Clearly, the prevailing opinion is that the form of restraint should minimize the risk of injury. Correct? That is the prevailing opinion, is it not?

Well, it isn't my opinion.

The chance of injuring the child by "just grabbing her" is very, very, small. It is larger than the chance of injury posed by applying handcuffs, but it is still very small.

In my opinion, the type of restraint used should be the most effective form that poses an acceptable risk of injury. In the case of dealing with small children "acceptable" is very low indeed. However, "just grabbing her" would be well within my threshold of acceptable risk. If there were a significant risk of danger from grabbing children, most of our own children would never have made it to school age.

Ahh... but there are differences here. First, this is not a parent and a child. There is general agreement that a parent can and should take such action. However, the parent generally (with some awful exceptions) will care deeply about the welfare of the child and will be very familiar with the child. The child, likewise, will be familiar with the parent...

While there are some wonderful teachers out there, there are also some stinkers who may not care much about a kid. Very few will have the familiarity with a child's physical state as a parent will.

However, none of this explains why, if a school decides to allow a teacher to grab a child, that the school should be able to dodge financial responsibility for an injury caused by a zealous teacher grabbing a kid with perhaps a physical condition. That is what removing the risk of lawsuit does.

In theory, the risks have been weighed, and the risk of injury determined significant enough to leave these situations to others. That is what tort liability does.



My outrage at this incident is not aimed at the application of handcuffs. My outrage at this situation is at the failure to apply more effective means earlier. I am outraged that an entire classroom full of kids was emptied because no one could "just grab her" and force her to stop. If she failed to stop when reasonable force was applied, then she could have been removed.

Would this have resulted in greater risk of injury? Yes it would have, but the risk would still have been very, very, small. In my youth, I saw this happen on a number of occaisions, and I can't recall any resulting injuries. I'm not saying they never happened, but they were very, very, rare.

This kid was allowed to shut down an entire classroom because there was a 0.01% chance that an injury would result from "just grabbing her". Of course, most of those injuries would be bruises. In all but bizarre cases, a dislocated shoulder would be the worst that could come about. (I obviously made up the number, but I think I could grab 10,000 kids and only hurt one of them. Maybe not. Maybe only 1,000, so 0.1%, but see below.)

Do people really care about probabilities that small? I don't think so.

Going to point out that there is a problem here. If a parent has a child with a bunch of brusies or a dislocation, the unlikelyness of the injury isn't going to carry much soap. In fact, if we apply your numbers and a bit of bayesian style analysis we may reach an ugly conclusion:

If an injury is indeed by chance when a tracher simply removes with as little force as necessary is 1 in 10000....

What do we say about the number of occasions where a teacher out of frustration simply hurts a kid? 1 in 1000?

Then an injury is 10 times more likely to be the result of a hot-head teacher being too rough than chance.

All of these numbers are just made up, but the point is that yes, chance injuries may occur, but I'll bet that more occur because some teacher is a hot-head. In fact, I'd place the level of "innocent" injuries as a lot more remote than 10000-1 against, which makes it even more likely that some level of negligence or malice is involved when it does happen.




So what are they afraid of? They are afraid of that "expert witness" testifying in court that the rash actions of a teacher created the possibility that the child could have been harmed. And schools are so afraid of this possibility that they put policies in place that prevent effective measures to stop this behavior.



Perhaps that is how most injuries occur, as per the completely fabricated analysis above, so the fear is well founded.




Furthermore, it should be emphasized that those policies don't even minimize the risk of injury. While that child is running about, breaking things, and climbing on furniture, her risk of injury is higher than if she were restrained by somebody "just grabbing her". However, what those policies minimize is the risk of injury caused by school officials. If they do nothing, they are less likely to be accused of causing her injury, or of taking an action that might have caused an injury.

The policy appeared to have allowed the teachers to remove the child from furniture, and that was reflected on the tape. I'd imagine it allowed them to also physically restrain the child in other severe circumstances on the general principle that the child's safety outweighed the interest in the protection of property, but that is speculation.

If what you say is true, then there should be lawsuits where the child is hurt via negligence as the school pretty clearly has a duty to act to protect the child. These would include the the same experts and so forth as a trial for negligent action. For some reason the school has chosen to err on the side on inaction. I'd speculate that this is because experience has shown that the policy in place carries the least risk of negligent injury once all the variables (including the chance that the teacher is a hot-head) are considered...


As for "beating the crap out of her", that has never been allowed in my lifetime, unless you count paddling in that category. If a teacher "beats the crap out of"a student, in my opinion the appropriate response is to fire the teacher, and press charges if appropriate. Instead, what would probably happen, in addition to those things, would be that the school district would be sued.

Whoa!!! Hold on a sec....

How are they going to be sued if the "problem" of all these lawsuits is "fixed" by the Republicans? Is this going to be some magic bill that will allow lawsuits only in cases of actual abuse and not where some well meaning teacher grabbing a child slipped or something?

If the problem is too many lawsuits making people too careful I don't think the possibility of a lawsuit can be used to solve that problem.

Sometimes (or usually in my experience) civil liablility provides the opportunity for a party to expose wrongdoing. The criminal and school administration would rather that everything be fine and would be more likely to just push things under the rug (like with the Catholic Church), whereas a civil plaintiff has a bit more interest in discovering evidence of wrongdoing. It isn't like when a kid is abused in a school the school sends home a note saying that the kid was harmed for no reason.... There tends to be a coverup of some sort, and offically allowing physical contact by teachers can serve as a useful story...



So, an unruly child causes an unstable teacher to finally lose it, and do something he shouldn't and the consequence in America is that the classmates of the unruly child would lose some of their educational opportunities, because the money that could have been used to hire a replacement teacher went to the family of the unruly student.
Yeah. Maybe a child that gets beat up by a teacher should just take one for the team....

However, as this thread reflects, the threat will hopefully cause a school to take measures to avoid the problem, like screening teachers and removing opportuinities for abuse.

Plus, if we consider the "motivation to investigate," I can logically make the claim that absent the lawsuit the unstable teacher will simply continue to collect victims as there will be a lesser likelyhood of a real outside investigation into claims of abuse.







It makes them take these situations seriously and develop sane policies, like not having teachers physically accost small children without proper training, or not building a compact car where the gas tank is placed so it will explode if you are rear-ended...

When I was growing up, teachers were trained in such areas as math and history. They had a fairly intutive grasp of how to accost small children, without the need for specialized training. I can't see the modern situation as an improvement.

The teachers I had had a intuitive grasp of how to cause pain to small children that irritated them on the pretext of discipline. Since actual beatings were banned by school policy, the more pissed off teachers were forced into creative solutions, most of which involved grip pressure and "accidental" detours into walls and doors when taking a child to the office... or maybe I just imagine what I saw and experienced... Teachers mainly concentrated this sort of thing on "bad" kids, the ones whose parents even if they cared at all wouldn't be able to tell the difference in the injuries they caused as opposed to the ones caused by the teacher...

Maybe there is a question of priority, but I'll take all the policies in the world that look silly from the outside if it helps prevent that kind of abuse by removing obvious cover stories with the additional benefit of removing a small chance of accidental injury.
 
hammegk said:
I believe it's that some pieces of EuroTrash got their panties in a wad, and it chaffed, reminding them at least half are theoretically male.

Ah hammegk!!! At last!! Somebody I can exchange elegant and stylish "insults" with ;)

Have you seen the video? Yes you've had. Now.From what I saw and since I haven't read any evidence about the contrary this girl wasn't physically damaged.

Knowing that she wasn't physically damaged was it a nice spectacle for you.?

Clarification that I know that you don't need but this discussion isn't private: I don't imply that you were pleased by the spectacle of a handcuffed girl but how did you feel. Did this seem right to you? Did you wonder that something went wrong?
 
Cleopatra said:
Ah hammegk!!! At last!! Somebody I can exchange elegant and stylish "insults" with ;)
Me? Insult you?!? Not by design,anyway .... :)


From what I saw and since I haven't read any evidence about the contrary this girl wasn't physically damaged.
True sfaik.


Knowing that she wasn't physically damaged was it a nice spectacle for you.?
No. I'd rather have a seen a few good spankings until the little lady calmed down and sat in the corner as would then have been directed.


I don't imply that you were pleased by the spectacle of a handcuffed girl but how did you feel.
I felt anger at a school system run amock with liberal feel-good principles, to the detriment of not only the little girl, but to her classmates, teachers, parent, the cops, and all of us us treated to the spectacle.


Did this seem right to you? Did you wonder that something went wrong?
One thing that went wrong was removing corporal punishment as a school option. (Since more blacks than whites needed, and suffered, the indignity, ergo: Racist!)

FYI, our Rev. Al Sharpton is insinuating himself into this mess, so it will quickly get even uglier.
 

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