10 Hard Facts About Ukraine and NATO
We Have Some Details About the Epstein Document Dump That's Coming Tomorrow
The Liberal Meltdown Continues and Is Glorious (but Also Dangerous)
A Warning for President Trump
The Regulatory State Continues to Target Fantasy Sports
The Unmatched Bigotry of Joy Reid
The Top Task for Team Trump
Poor Europe: Denial, Decline, Demise
Trump Needs Congress to Deliver on Lower Pricesinl
Mine, Baby, Mine – Right Here in the USA!
President Trump Wants to Abolish the Department of Education. Sounds Outrageous to Some.
Prosecute Released Palestinians
The ICE-Man Cometh
Mexico’s Bid to Swipe Second Amendment Rights Explained
Moving Fast and Breaking Things Does Not Work in Washington
Tipsheet

Mother Outraged After 13-Year-Old Autistic Son Arrested, Handcuffed for Pulling Fire Alarm

(AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File)

A Detroit mother is livid because her 13-year-old autistic son was handcuffed and arrested by police officers earlier this week after the boy pulled the school's fire alarm. 

Advertisement

Angela Miller told local media that school officials really have to get their act together because this don't make sense."  Miller adds that her son, Jerel, "has high-functioning autism, and any other time her son has had trouble at school, she's been called and she's been able to help him over the phone."

The incident occurred earlier this week on Wednesday and school administrators defended the actions taken by school faculty and the police.  Chrystal Wilson, Assistant Superintendent of Communications and Marketing for Detroit Public Schools Community District issued the following statement on Friday afternoon:

A student at Thirkell Elementary/Middle School was arrested and therefore handcuffed earlier this week for pulling the fire alarm, as sounding a false alarm is a crime. The student's parent was issued a citation as a result of the false alarm according to district protocol. The district is reviewing the arrest.

Advertisement

In terms of students being arrested across America, the most recent data from the 2013-2014 school year show that "nearly 70,000 students were arrested in a small share of America's public schools — about 8,000 schools. While every state had arrests in that year, most individual schools did not report any arrests." The numbers for the state of Michigan, where Jerel attends school in Detroit, show that arrests in public schools are very rare. In the 2013-2014 school year, just 566 students out of 1,568,911 were arrested, or .036 of the state's total student population.

Video from the local news report can be seen here: 


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement