ACLU sues Colorado county officials for handcuffing Autistic
ASPartOfMe
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ACLU sues Colorado county officials for handcuffing child with autism
ACLU is suing for the violation of the child’s rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Fourth Amendment. Arielle Herzberg, ACLU staff attorney, said the child has “suffered both physically and emotionally” as a result of the incident.
“The Douglas County School District and Sheriff’s Office have a pattern and practice of their officers mishandling situations involving students with disabilities and unnecessarily ensnaring them in the criminal legal system,” Herzberg said.
The child, referred to as A.V., was a student at Sagewood Middle School in an affective needs classroom. On Aug. 29, 2019, A.V.’s classmate wrote on him with a marker and in response, A.V. scratched the student with a pencil, according to the lawsuit.
After A.V. scratched the student, he voluntarily left the classroom at the instruction of the classroom aide and was working with the school psychologist to calm down, ACLU said.
At this point, the school resource officers stepped in. At Sagewood Middle School, school resource officers are deputies who work for the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office.
Body camera footage shows two deputies talking to A.V. who is standing silently and not answering questions. Then, the officers grab A.V. by each arm and begin to forcibly pull him, trying to get him out of the school.
A.V. screams and cries, repeatedly asking the officers to “stop” and saying “you’re hurting me.” The deputies then handcuff A.V. behind his back, at one point aggressively grabbing onto the back of his neck to stop him from moving.
Deputies eventually put A.V. in a patrol car where he was left for hours while still handcuffed, according to the lawsuit. While locked in the patrol car, A.V. was in significant distress and banged his head against the plexiglass repeatedly, sustaining injuries.
Without receiving any medical attention, A.V. was then taken to a juvenile detention center and held in custody for hours until his parents were able to post a $25,000 bond.
This isn’t the first time DCSD’s practices regarding students with disabilities have been called into question.
In the 2018-19 school year, DCSD restrained and secluded more students than any other district in the state, according to a report by Chalkbeat Colorado.
In addition, Latinx students were more than five times as likely to be referred to law enforcement than non-Latinx students. A.V. is Hispanic.
None of the involved deputies were disciplined following the incident with A.V. According to ACLU, Deputy Sidney Nicholson was promoted to solo status days after the incident and months later, handcuffed another student with disabilities.
ACLU said Nicholson this time handcuffed a 12-year-old student who became escalated, left the student handcuffed for several hours and resulted in criminal charges against the child.
I think the article speaks for itself.
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“Self Acceptance is a process not a performance”
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.
I wonder why the deputy stepped in. The article doesn't say.
At the schools I work with and where my autistic son studies, a law enforcement officer would only step in using force to remove a child from the school when requested by the school psychologist and approved by the principal. Unless there was some immediate threat of violence, parents would also be notified first.
Sweetleaf
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Why were the police handling this anyways? Its dumb to bring law enforcement into schools to handle childhood conflicts.
The officers involved should be charged with abuse and endangerment and fired, and unable to work with law enforcement again...but I know that won't happen.
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The officers involved should be charged with abuse and endangerment and fired, and unable to work with law enforcement again...but I know that won't happen.
It's a good point. It's rare but there are instances when law enforcement must be brought into a school to deal with a student issue. School resource officers main responsibility is to protect the school from outside trespassers providing a visual deterrent to anyone who might want to harm students or school property.
ASPartOfMe
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The officers involved should be charged with abuse and endangerment and fired, and unable to work with law enforcement again...but I know that won't happen.
Schools are letting law enforcement handle what they used to handle out of fear of lawsuits. This time it did not work.
_________________
“Self Acceptance is a process not a performance”
“You are autistic enough. And you always have been”
Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.
This is just horrible.
I used to think Florida was bad. But I have had autistic kids do much worse, and require, say, four teachers to work with him to keep him and others safe, but have never had a kid arrested.
Actually, Florida is worse. Recently police handcuffed a six year old black girl who had caused trouble in class, but was, by the time the officer arrived, calm. She was arrested and charged. She was not autistic, at least as far as known.
I am so glad I am not a parent of school age children these days. I would be afraid to send my child to school.
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