To Protect and to Serve II

I drove through that area years ago and it is scary. I agree, it should be a minimum of 2 people responding to that area.

A good friend works that area. The projects are a case study for mob mentality. Individually, most of the people there have some semblance of reason about them, or at the very least understand what reason is but, when incidents like that happen, they turn quickly and then people get hurt.

It's a different world. Truly.
 
Why is it so hard for cops to realize that civilians don't have to give them an ID? Then he wanted to get sassy and try to give the guy a ticket for smoking 50ft from an door entrance.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=am9FcUo6kc0[/youtube]
 
I'm not a cop hater, more of just leery of them but if this would have happened to my kid I would have used every resource available to destroy the person who thought this was a good idea. If there isn't a whole lot more to this story several people need to be punished.

More than 150 people called for action Sunday after parents said at least five students, ages 6 to 10, were handcuffed at Hobgood Elementary School on Friday.

A video was taken of the incident and officers later obtained arrest warrants for students who did not break up the disturbance, McConnell said in an interview before the Sunday meeting. Information about who took the video and how the police obtained it were not made clear Sunday.

Parents: Hobgood Elementary students handcuffed, detained
 
Cannot read without subscription

MURFREESBORO — More than 150 people called for action Sunday after parents said at least five students, ages 6 to 10, were handcuffed at Hobgood Elementary School on Friday.

The students were arrested, accused of not stopping a fight that happened earlier off-campus and later released from the juvenile center on Friday, said the Rev. James McCarroll, pastor of First Baptist Church on East Castle Street in Murfreesboro. The church hosted a community meeting Sunday afternoon about the incident. In addition to angry parents and supporters, Murfreesboro Police Chief Karl Durr and City Manager Rob Lyons were in the crowd.

"There are innocent kids that have been arrested that have been entered in a system they have no business in," said Zacchaeus Crawford, who said three of his children were handcuffed at the school.

"If something needs to be corrected, it will be," Lyons told the crowd."Out of this, we want to learn and make things better so they don't happen again," Durr said. Durr said the city's police department will review the situation, though he did not go into specifics in front of the standing-room-only crowd at the First Baptist Church fellowship hall.

Parents and community members sharply criticized the arrests of the students. They were taken into custody after they did not intervene in an incident that took place in their neighborhood, the parents said.

"This is nonsense, and it is nonsense in the fullest definition," Crawford said.
Karl Durr

A video was taken of the incident and officers later obtained arrest warrants for students who did not break up the disturbance, McConnell said in an interview before the Sunday meeting. Information about who took the video and how the police obtained it were not made clear Sunday.

Director of Schools Linda Gilbert and a Murfreesboro City Schools spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment about the incident over the weekend.

Christopher Williams, the school safety and education officer at Hobgood on the day of the incident, said that the Hobgood administration and office staff "handled the situation as wonderfully and as good as they could have."

Nationally, the number of cases where students were arrested for incidents on campus are plentiful.

One such case in Baltimore parallels the one in Murfreesboro, where four students under the age of 10 were arrested at school for an incident that occurred off campus.

In the 2012 case, Baltimore City police charged four elementary school students with aggravated assault after a fight and were arrested on the Morrell Park Elementary/Middle School campus, according to WBALTV 11.

The American Civil Liberties Union said they were outraged by actions of the officers involved, according to reports. The police department, however, defended their actions saying when there is an arrest that it’s their policy to arrest the individual, regardless of the age, according to Baltimore’s WJZ TV.

In Tennessee, the practices and policies for detaining a student are held at the local police level, according to Maggi Duncan, executive director of the Tennessee Association of Chiefs of Police.

Williams, a First Baptist youth pastor who did not speak for the Murfreesboro Police Department, apologized for what happened and said he still gets emotional about the arrests as the father of a 9-year-old girl.

"I hope we're not setting a precedent where there's a fight and we send everyone and their mom to jail," he said.

Crawford told an almost entirely African-American audience that the incident added fuel to tension already present in the community.

Those who spoke at the meeting vowed to follow up on the police investigation. Murfreesboro School Board candidate David Settles said "hell is about to break loose" if the situation isn't handled correctly.

Durr said that he would begin speaking to officers about the incident on Monday.

"I'm here to learn and listen to the needs of this community," said Durr, who received applause after his initial remarks.

Near the end of the meeting, the Rev. Tolbert Randolph, pastor of Providence Baptist Church, asked why the charges against the children could not be dismissed.

"I'm asking in good faith for you to go to the arresting officers and tell them to drop it," Randolph told city officials.

.
 
Yeah that is absolutely ridiculous

I'm glad I'm not a police officer because I would have no clue how to handle situations like this. I do though think kids need to be taught certain lessons in life that you can and can't do certain things. What would the parents do to these kids once they found out the situation?? I would bet most would tell their kids they did nothing wrong which could possibly lead to future incidents. It's a sad society that we live in when kids need to be disciplined by the police since most of their parents won't do it
 
I'm glad I'm not a police officer because I would have no clue how to handle situations like this. I do though think kids need to be taught certain lessons in life that you can and can't do certain things. What would the parents do to these kids once they found out the situation?? I would bet most would tell their kids they did nothing wrong which could possibly lead to future incidents. It's a sad society that we live in when kids need to be disciplined by the police since most of their parents won't do it

They were arrested for NOT breaking up a fight so they DIDN'T do anything wrong.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
SIAP...

I am pro law enforcement, however, with that said, I also believe that a police officer should be held too a higher standard. If found guilty of breaking the publics trust, then they should suffer 10x the penalty of a civilian convicted of the same crime.

I know this article will feed the anti law enforcement people's need to bash all law enforcement personnel.

NB4 "Why was he arrested for a PRE-CRIME?"


Knoxville police officer, 7 others charged with distributing drugs | WATE 6 On Your Side
 
I read that the city investigated the incident for 6 months before ever interviewing the police officers. This **** is so rigged. I couldn't find whether or not the cop/dispatch lost their jobs so I assume they kept them?...I can't think of any industry where $50k employees can keep their jobs after $6M errors.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 7 people
I read that the city investigated the incident for 6 months before ever interviewing the police officers. This **** is so rigged. I couldn't find whether or not the cop/dispatch lost their jobs so I assume they kept them?...I can't think of any industry where $50k employees can keep their jobs after $6M errors.


Congress?
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person

An Atlanta man falsely accused of stealing a tomato from a Walmart was beaten by an off-duty police officer working as a security guard, his lawyer said.

Yet, this cop would have probably given a handshake to Jamie Dimon, Lloyd Blankfein, Hillary Clinton, George Bush or a host of other people that rob him blind on a daily basis. But this is the guy he applies street justic to.

Amazing...
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
Yet, this cop would have probably given a handshake to Jamie Dimon, Lloyd Blankfein, Hillary Clinton, George Bush or a host of other people that rob him blind on a daily basis. But this is the guy he applies street justic to.

Amazing...
No more amazing than your post.
 
Yet, this cop would have probably given a handshake to Jamie Dimon, Lloyd Blankfein, Hillary Clinton, George Bush or a host of other people that rob him blind on a daily basis. But this is the guy he applies street justic to.

Amazing...

That SOB should be fired from the force and prosecuted. The victim will be paid on this one and rightfully so.
 
Some follow up in a thread that rarely follows up:

Ex-Oklahoma deputy Robert Bates guilty of killing unarmed suspect - CNN.com

A jury found a sheriff's deputy guilty of second-degree manslaughter Wednesday in the fatal shooting of an unarmed suspect.

Robert Bates, who was a volunteer reserve sheriff deputy for the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office last year at the time of the shooting, never denied shooting Eric Courtney Harris.

Bates, 74, said he meant to use his Taser stun gun, not his revolver, on the suspect, who had been tackled by other deputies and was being held on the ground.

The jury deliberated less than three hours and recommended Bates serve four years in prison, the maximum possible sentence. Preliminary sentencing is set for May 31. After the verdict, Bates was escorted out of the courtroom by two deputies from the department he once served.
 
Advertisement





Back
Top