http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/12/05/christmaspresent.arrest.ap/index.html
I think the police have better things to do.
I think the police have better things to do.
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"My grandmother went out of her way to lay away a toy and paid on this thing for months," said the boy's mother, Brandi Ervin. "It was only to teach my son a lesson. He's been going through life doing things ... and getting away with it."
The mother said that her son was found in the last year to have attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, but that his medicine does not seem to help.
You would be surprized at the number of UNRULY JUVENILE calls that depts get...
Now, I'm not a doctor, I was not present in the house for any of this behavior, so as always the best we can do is speculate. But I have to wonder...did the mother see behavior that should have been corrected, right then and there, and did nothing, or did she attempt to correct the bahavior, but had no luck?
MJS said:One would think that if something (the meds) were not working, she'd see if there was something else she could do. Again, maybe she did, maybe she didn't, I really don't know.
It sounds to me like she's desparate.She said he faces an expulsion hearing at his school Wednesday. Rock Hill Police Capt. Mark Bollinger said the boy took a swing at a police officer assigned to the school last month. He has been suspended from school since then.
This is a very sad story indeed, a child who goes into a government run institution is not a recipee for success on any level
This is probably the best thing that could've happened, though, for all concerned. If the mother was this frustrated, and felt this helpless, then who knows what she might have done if she hadn't called the authorities on him (and, in essence, for herself)? Yes, it's a misuse of calling the cops, but I'd guess that next week's paper would have had a much worse story about the ending of this if she hadn't cried out for help like this. Now child services will get involved and the child will be protected from the possibility of his mother losing control while she is protected from the much worse legal ramifications of doing so.
I see this as a sad story, but I suspect that at the time she called it was the best possible outcome.
The only problem I have with your post is that it's very assuming that the mother is to blame for all this kid's actions. While I agree that most of the parenting we see today leaves MUCH to be desired, I also believe it's misguided to automatically blame parents for a child's bad behavior 100% of the time.SIGH!
First off I think the police should've walked back out to their cruisers and drove away and go chasing after real criminals... after telling the mother to buck up and start disciplining the child like a mother should... and maybe taking a few moments to "pretend to arrest" the kid by handcuffing him and putting him in the back of the cruiser and talking with the mother. There are very few as disconcerting things as being locked up with your hands cuffed behind your back and sitting in the back of a police car. Mebbe that'll scare the kid enough to straighten up and start listening. The officers could (in view of the kid) be talking to the mother and then decide to let him go "this time!" But of course the officers have their jobs to do and can't be telling the mother to "buck up" and how to raise a child... because I don't think that's part of their job description in the first place.
But I've said it half a dozen times before (here on MT) that it's up to the parents. It is the parent's responsibility. It's a poor decision on the mother's part NOT to discipline the child through out it's young life in the sense that when she says NO it means N-O! But then that is if the parent wants to have that responsibility! This mother wants to give up cusody of her own child.
Well, ok, fine... in the mean time she needs to have her tubes tied so she can't have any more children if she's not wanting to assume the responsibility and all that comes with it when she gets pregnant.
again I breathe a heavy SIGH!
Aye, that we can't... and I'll grant that I might be wrong about the whole situation in this particular affair. But how many children are MIS-diagnosed with ADD or other problems, simply because they're just very hyper-active (not to the extreme) and so on?If he is mentally unstable or has a biochemical imbalance, even the most impeccable parent cannot interfere with natural order if this kid's issues are not being adequately addressed therapeutically and/or medically.
If you've never had a child with a biochemical disorder, you cannot understand the treadmill this woman is on. If this kid isn't being diagnosed until 12, he's likely been having problems all his life which have been tossed off by the medical community as "being a boy."
Well, as I said, we can't possibly know the whole truth.
He might be on probation after hitting a cop .... But I wonder if they got him on entering? They got him on larceny, which is an appropriation of property (and the trickery towards it) for a person's own use. Sounds like something my kids do every day in my house, but ... well, perhaps because the kid went into another home?I am all for teaching kids a lesson, but how in the world did she get the police to arrest him? From my experience with the juvenile justice system in our little corner. They do not play... From what I read of this incident. There did'nt seem to be a real criminal offense. Unless he is on probation? If the kid is on probation around here. They can get locked up for just about anything. I hope things turn for the young guy.
1stJohn1:9