By John W. Whitehead
“Mommy,
am I gonna die?”— 4-year-old Ava Ellis after
being inadvertently shot in the leg by a police
officer who was aiming for the girl’s
boxer-terrier dog, Patches
“‘Am
I going to get shot again.’”—2-year-old
survivor of a police shooting that left his
three siblings, ages 1, 4 and 5, with a bullet
in the brain, a fractured skull and gun wounds
to the face
Children learn what they live.
October 15, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - As family counselor
Dorothy Law Nolte wisely observed, “If children live
with criticism, they learn to condemn.
If children live with hostility, they learn to
fight. If children live with fear, they learn to
be apprehensive.”
And if children live with terror, trauma and
violence—forced to watch helplessly as their loved
ones are executed by police officers who shoot first
and ask questions later—will they in turn learn to
terrorize, traumatize and inflict violence on the
world around them?
I’m not willing to risk it. Are you?
It’s difficult enough raising a child in a world
ravaged by war, disease, poverty and hate, but when
you add the toxic stress of the police state into
the mix, it becomes near impossible to protect
children from the growing unease that some of the
monsters of our age come dressed in government
uniforms.
Case in point: in Hugo, Oklahoma, plain clothes
police officers opened fire on a pickup truck parked
in front of a food bank, heedless of the damage such
a hail of bullets—26 shots were fired—could have on
those in the vicinity.
Three of the four children inside the parked vehicle
were shot: a 4-year-old girl was shot in the
head and ended up with a bullet in the brain; a
5-year-old boy received a skull fracture; and a
1-year-old girl had deep cuts on her face from
gunfire or shattered window glass. Only the
2-year-old was spared any physical harm,
although the terror will likely linger for a long
time. “They are terrified to go anywhere or hear
anything,” the family attorney said. “The
two-year-old keeps asking about ‘Am
I going to get shot again.’”
The reason for the use of such excessive force?
Police were searching for a suspect in a
weeks-old robbery of a pizza parlor that netted $400.
While the two officers involved in the shooting
are pulling paid leave at taxpayer expense, the
children’s mother is struggling to figure out how to
care for her wounded family and pay the medical
expenses, including the cost to transport each child
in a separate medical helicopter to a nearby
hospital:
$75,000 for one child’s transport alone.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
This may be the worst use of
excessive force on innocent children to
date. Unfortunately, it is one of many
in a steady stream of cases that speak
to the need for police to de-escalate
their tactics and stop resorting to
excessive force when less lethal means
are available to them.
For instance, in
Cleveland, police shot and killed 12-year-old
Tamir Rice who was seen playing on a playground with
a pellet gun. Surveillance footage shows police
shooting the boy
two seconds after getting out of a
moving patrol car. Incredibly, the shooting was
deemed “reasonable” and “justified” by two law
enforcement experts who concluded that the police
use of force “did
not violate Tamir's constitutional rights.”
In Detroit,
7-year-old Aiyana Jones was killed after a
Detroit SWAT team launched a flash-bang grenade into
her family’s apartment, broke through the door and
opened fire, hitting the little girl who was asleep
on the living room couch. The cops were in the wrong
apartment.
In Georgia, a SWAT team launched a flash-bang
grenade into the house in which Baby Bou Bou, his
three sisters and his parents were staying. The
grenade landed in the 2-year-old’s crib, burning
a hole in his chest and leaving the child with
scarring that a lifetime of surgeries will not be
able to easily undo.
Also in Georgia,
10-year-old Dakota Corbitt was shot by a police
officer who aimed for an inquisitive dog,
missed, and hit the young boy instead.
In Ohio,
police shot 4-year-old Ava Ellis in the leg,
shattering the bone, after being dispatched to
assist the girl’s mother, who had cut her arm and
was in need of a paramedic. Cops claimed that the
family pet charged the officer who was approaching
the house, causing him to fire his gun and
accidentally hit the little girl.
In California, 13-year-old Andy Lopez Cruz was
shot 7 times in 10 seconds by a police officer
who mistook the boy’s toy gun for an assault rifle.
Christopher Roupe, 17, was
shot and killed after opening the door to a police
officer. The officer, mistaking the remote
control in Roupe’s hand for a gun, shot him in the
chest.
These children are more than grim statistics on a
police blotter. They are the heartbreaking
casualties of the government’s endless, deadly wars
on terror, on drugs, and on the American people
themselves.
Then you have the growing number of incidents
involving children who are forced to watch
helplessly as trigger-happy police open fire on
loved ones and community members alike.
In Texas, an 8-year-old boy watched as
police—dispatched to do a welfare check on a home
with its windows open—shot
and killed his aunt through her bedroom window
while she was playing video games with him.
In Minnesota, a 4-year-old girl watched from the
backseat of a car as
cops shot and killed her mother’s boyfriend,
Philando Castile, a school cafeteria supervisor,
during a routine traffic stop merely because
Castile disclosed that he had a gun in his
possession, for which he had a
lawful conceal-and-carry permit. That’s
all it took for police to shoot Castile four times as
he was reaching for his license and registration.
In Arizona, a 7-year-old girl watched
panic-stricken as a state trooper pointed his gun at
her and her father during a traffic stop and
reportedly
threated to shoot her father in the back (twice)
based on the mistaken belief that they were
driving a stolen rental car.
In Oklahoma, a 5-year-old boy watched as a
police officer used a high-powered rifle to shoot
his dog Opie multiple times in his family’s
backyard while other children were also present. The
police officer was mistakenly attempting to
deliver a warrant on a 10-year-old case for someone
who hadn’t lived at that address in a decade.
A Minnesota SWAT team actually burst into one
family’s house, shot the family’s dog, handcuffed
the children and forced them to “sit
next to the carcass of their dead and bloody pet for
more than an hour.” They later claimed it was
the wrong house.
More than
80% of American communities have their own SWAT
teams, with more than 80,000 of these
paramilitary raids are carried out every year. That
translates to more than 200 SWAT team raids every
day in which police crash through doors, damage
private property, terrorize adults and children
alike, kill family pets, assault or shoot anyone
that is perceived as threatening—and all in the
pursuit of someone merely suspected of a
crime,
usually some small amount of drugs.
A child doesn’t even have to be directly exposed
to a police shooting to learn the police state’s
lessons in compliance and terror, which are being
meted out with every SWAT team raid, roadside strip
search, and school drill.
Indeed, there can be no avoiding the hands-on
lessons being taught in the schools about the role
of police in our lives, ranging from active shooter
drills and school-wide lockdowns to incidents in
which children engaging in typically childlike
behavior are suspended (for
shooting an imaginary “arrow” at a fellow
classmate), handcuffed (for
being disruptive at school), arrested (for
throwing water balloons as part of a school
prank), and even tasered (for
not obeying instructions).
For example, a middle school in Washington State
went on
lockdown after a student brought a toy gun to class.
A Boston high school went into
lockdown for four hours after a bullet was
discovered in a classroom. A North Carolina
elementary school locked down and called in police
after a
fifth grader reported seeing an unfamiliar man in
the school (it turned out to be a parent).
Cops have even gone so far as to fire blanks
during school active shooter drills around the
country. Teachers at one elementary school in
Indiana were actually
shot “execution style” with plastic pellets.
Students at a high school in Florida were so
terrified after administrators tricked them into
believing that a shooter drill was, in fact, an
actual attack that some of them began texting their
parents “goodbye.”
Better safe than sorry is the rationale offered
to those who worry that these drills are terrorizing
and traumatizing young children. As journalist
Dahlia Lithwick points out: “I don’t recall any
serious national public dialogue about lockdown
protocols or how they became the norm. It seems
simply to have begun,
modeling itself on the lockdowns that occur during
prison riots, and then spread until school
lockdowns and lockdown drills are as common for our
children as fire drills, and as routine as
duck-and-cover drills were in the 1950s.”
These drills have, indeed, become routine.
As the New York Times
reports: “Most states have passed laws requiring
schools to devise safety plans, and several states,
including Michigan, Kentucky and North Dakota,
specifically require lockdown drills. Some drills
are as simple as a principal making an announcement
and students sitting quietly in a darkened
classroom. At other schools, police officers and
school officials playact a shooting, stalking
through the halls like gunmen and testing whether
doors have been locked.”
Police officers at a Florida middle school
carried out an active shooter drill in an effort to
educate students about how to respond in the event
of an actual shooting crisis. Two armed
officers, guns loaded and drawn, burst into
classrooms, terrorizing the students and placing
the school into lockdown mode.
What is particularly chilling is how effective
these lessons in compliance are in indoctrinating
young people to accept their role in the police
state, either as criminals or prison guards.
If these exercises are intended to instill fear,
paranoia and compliance into young people, they’re
working.
As Joe Pinsker writes for The Atlantic:
These lockdowns can be scarring, causing some
kids to cry and wet themselves. Others have
written letters bidding their family goodbye or
drafted wills that specify what to do with their
belongings. And 57 percent of teens worry that a
shooting will happen at their school, according
to a Pew Research Center survey from last year.
Though many children are no strangers to
violence in their homes and communities,
the pervasiveness of lockdowns and
school-shooting drills in the U.S. has created a
culture of fear that touches nearly every child
across the country.
Sociologist Alice Goffman understands how
far-reaching the impact of such “exercises” can be
on young people. For six years, Goffman lived in a
low-income urban neighborhood, documenting the
impact such an environment—a microcosm of the police
state—has on its residents. Her account of
neighborhood children playing cops and robbers
speaks volumes about how
constant exposure to pat downs, strip searches,
surveillance and arrests can result in a populace
that meekly allows itself to be prodded, poked and
stripped.
As journalist Malcolm Gladwell writing for the
New Yorker
reports:
Goffman sometimes saw young children playing
the age-old game of cops and robbers in the
street, only the child acting the part of the
robber wouldn’t even bother to run away: I saw
children give up running and simply stick their
hands behind their back, as if in handcuffs;
push their body up against a car without being
asked; or lie flat on the ground and put their
hands over their head. The children yelled, “I’m
going to lock you up! I’m going to lock you up,
and you ain’t never coming home!” I once saw a
six-year-old pull another child’s pants down to
do a “cavity search.”
Clearly, our children are getting the message,
but it’s not the message that was intended by those
who fomented a revolution and wrote our founding
documents. Their philosophy was that the police work
for us, and “we the people” are the masters, and
they are to be our servants.
Now that philosophy has been turned on its head,
fueled by our fears (some legitimate, some hyped
along by the government and its media mouthpieces)
about the terrors and terrorists that lurk among us.
What are we to tell our nation’s children about
the role of police in their lives?
Do we parrot the government line that
police officers are community helpers who are to
be trusted and obeyed at all times? Do we caution
them to steer clear of a police officer, warning
them that any interactions could have disastrous
consequences? Or is there some happy medium between
the two that, while being neither fairy tale nor
horror story, can serve as a cautionary tale for
young people who will encounter police at virtually
every turn?
Certainly, it’s getting harder by the day to
insist that we live in a nation that values freedom
and which is governed by the rule of law.
Yet unless something changes and soon, there will
soon be nothing left to teach young people about
freedom as we have known it beyond remembered
stories of the “good old days.”
For starters, as I point out in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, it’s time to take a hard look at
the greatest perpetrators of violence in our
culture—the U.S. government and its agents—and do
something about it: de-militarize the police,
prohibit the Pentagon from distributing military
weapons to domestic police agencies, train the
police in de-escalation techniques, stop insulating
police officers from charges of misconduct and
wrongdoing, and require police to take precautionary
steps before engaging in violence in the presence of
young people.
We must stop the carnage.
Constitutional attorney and author John W.
Whitehead is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People
is available at
www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be
contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
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