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AP Police Arrest 6-Year-Old Girl
March 31, 2007
By Joe Seelig 3/30/07:
Kindergarten Girl
Handcuffed, Arrested At Fla. School
AVON
PARK — A 6-year-old girl was in the custody of her mother Friday
after the Avon Park Police Department escorted the girl in hancuffs
from Avon Elementary School to the Highlands County Jail on charges
relating to battery of a school employee.
It was 10:59 a.m. Wednesday when
police officer Tamara L. Neale reported she was called to 705
Winthrop St., on a call about a disruptive student.
The child was upset and crying and
wailing and would not leave the classroom to let the other students
study, causing a disruption of the normal class activities, Neale
noted in her report.
Lisa Elder, who is an exceptional
student education teacher, was called in to help remove the child
from the classroom, at which time the child began to hit and kick
her.
"She had to be carried to the front
office, at which time she continued to wail and cry and refused to
communicate in any way or to calm down," Neale reported.
Avon Elementary School Principal
Pam Burnham said she could not talk about the specifics of the case,
but could talk about generalities and school policies.
Burnham said any time a student is
in a crisis situation, the administration tries to get whoever they
can – guidance counselors, administrators or in this case an
exceptional student educator – to come into the room and get control
back of the classroom.
"The first thing you try to do is
to talk them down and remove them from the room," Burnham said.
"There are times when the situation continues to escalate. At the
same time we're trying to call family members first."
According to the arrest report, a
family member could not be reached.
"The very last resort is to call
law enforcement," Burnham said. "And the police don't just walk in
here and take a child away. If the child can't be calmed down then
they take it to the next step."
And it usually has to last a long
time, Burnham said.
Every time a police officer comes
to the school doesn't result in an arrest, she said. And there are
lots of times when similar situations happen that police are not
called.
After continuing to struggle, the
child was handcuffed to keep her from hitting, running away and from
possibly hurting herself, according to the report. An additional
officer, Allison Smith had to ride with the child in the back of the
police car when she was taken to the police headquarters.
She was charged with disruption of
a school function, battery on a school employee and resisting a law
enforcement officer without violence.
The parent continued to be
unreachable and the child was taken to the Highlands County Jail. A
court date has been set, but the date is listed as confidential,
according to the jail central records.
A counselor from the school
eventually tracked down a relative and the parent was contacted.
Avon Park Police Chief Frank
Mercurio could not be reached by press time for comment. A number
provided for the parent was not in service.
________________
WFT.com
Kindergarten Girl Handcuffed,
Arrested At Fla. School
March 30, 2007
AVON PARK, Fla. -- Police arrested
a 6-year-old Florida girl and even handcuffed her when she acted out
in class. Police officers said Desre'e Watson, a kindergarten
student at Avon Elementary School in Highlands County, had a violent
run-in with a teacher on Thursday.
"I was scared," the little girl
said.
Police claim the little girl got
angry and began kicking and scratching. She even hit a teacher
attempting to intervene in the disturbance.
However, the girl's mother doesn't
believe the story.
"She never fell out. She is very
respectful. If I tell her to do anything, she will do it," Lateshia
Wilson said.
School officials said they were
forced to call the local police department, who cuffed the child and
put her in a police cruiser. The little girl's mother is angry and
said her daughter is usually very respectful.
"I was very upset about that and I
feel like they violated my baby's rights," Wilson said.
The chief of police said his
officers did the right thing.
"When there is an outburst of
violence, we have a duty to protect and make that school a safe
environment for the students, staff and faculty. That's why, at this
point, the person was arrested regardless what the age," said Chief
Frank Mercurio, Avon Park Police Department.
The kindergartner was booked in the
Highland County jail and was charged with a felony and two
misdemeanors.
Copyright 2007 by wftv.com. All
rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten or redistributed.
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