Zero Tolerance Taken to Insanity

 

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We have a Constitution and our Bill of Rights (the first 10 amendments) that
makes us free.  Right?  Then visit:
http://www.trimonline.org  http://www.getusout.org
http://www.thenewamerican.com  http://www.givemeliberty.org
 http://nca.mybravenet.com    http://www.jbs.org
Then take a look at these sites:       http://www.dixierising.com
http://www.dixienet.org  http://www.palmetto.org
http://www.southerncaucus.org   http://www.spofga.org
http://www.southern-style.com
 Zero Tolerance Taken to Insanity and Further.
Zero tolerance strikes again. Clark County School District: Expel first,
questions later....By Joe Schoenmann    schoenmann@vegas.com
 In his fourth-hour class at Woodbury Middle School the day after April
Fool's, Joseph K was doing the work of any 14-year-old Clark County School
District student when Principal Joseph Murphy summoned him to the hallway.
 Joseph K., not his real name, had no idea what was up. Maybe the A/B
student was being recognized for his outstanding grades? Maybe he'd received
another award for his devotion to the Boy Scouts?
 Before his teen-aged mind had time to process the fact that the principal
wasn't alone, three school police officers turned him around and slapped on
the handcuffs.
 It would be three more days before Joseph K. or his grandparents would
learn specifically why he'd been arrested, and 10 more days before he'd be
allowed to return home.
 Now, more than two months later, Joseph K. and his grandparents are all in
professional counseling--his grandmother broke down in tears during an
interview two weeks ago--to deal with the recurring nightmares and sleepless
nights. Joseph K. has never been allowed back into school, and was formally
expelled recently.
 But that's not the worst of it, his grandparents say. What's worse is that
the school district has forever labeled their grandson. During his expulsion
hearing, district officials said Joseph K. fits the "profile" of a
potentially violent student: He's well-groomed, gets good grades and is well
liked.
 In other words, a menace to society.
 WATCH WHAT YOU SAY
 Days after Joseph K. was kicked out of the eighth grade, one of his
teachers addressed his former classmates, looking at the empty desk Joseph
K. usually occupied. "Be careful what you say, or someone you know might not
be here anymore."
 But neither Joseph K. nor his grandparents understand how something he said
at home to a couple of flirtatious girls could have led to his arrest,
jailing and expulsion from school.
 It was March 30, about 11:30 p.m., when Joseph K. got the phone call that
changed his young life. Two girls from Chaparral High School, one of them an
acquaintance, called to ask him out on a date, of sorts: Would he escort
them to the 7-Eleven to hang out? It didn't take him long to answer: "I
didn't want to hang out," he recalls, "It was late."
 The girls then put him on hold. He waited patiently. Some 15 minutes later,
they got back on the phone, and Joseph K. was a little steamed.
 "I said, 'It's people like you who get on the Columbine lists,'" he
recalls. His reference was to the now-infamous April 1999 killing of 13 at
Columbine High School in Colorado by students Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris.
 He had no idea that the school-shooting reference would stir police to
action.
 NO STONE UNTURNED
 To learn about the type of investigation school police conducted to justify
Joseph K.'s arrest, Las Vegas Weekly made an Open Records request for police
reports. To protect the identities of juveniles involved, the paper asked
that their names be blackened out. Sgt. Ken Young, school police spokesman,
said school lawyers had not finished reviewing the reports before the
Weekly's deadline. Young offered a synopsis of the police investigation.
 "The kids started reporting to administration, and we started getting
information from administrators at Chaparral and Woodbury," Young said. "And
(Joseph K.) had some other issues he was dealing with."
 Those "issues" might have had something to do with the fact that Joseph K.
has Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, a condition treated with
prescription drugs. Since being treated, his grandparents say, his grades
have skyrocketed from Fs and Ds to As and Bs. And after a court ruling 13
years ago, Joseph K.'s grandparents became his legal guardians.
 But Joseph K.'s medical condition isn't what sealed his fate with police.
Columbine did. Young was very open about the state of mind of the Clark
County School District and its police department during the month of April.
 "This was leading up to the Columbine time," Young said, referring to April
20, the two-year anniversary of the Colorado shooting. "So any type of
rumor, any kinds of threats of joking, jestering or kidding, we were
following up on. This was one of those cases. If the kid makes any type of
threat with a weapon, and he has access, whether (it) belongs to the parent
in the home or not, they are automatically taken into custody."
 School police also found in Joseph K.'s locker and backpack more
"evidence:" a class report he'd been writing about the Holocaust, which
included sketches of Nazi symbols. Also taken was an essay he'd written for
another class, answering the question: What's the biggest problem facing
schools today? Joseph K.'s essay focused on school violence.
 After questioning the teen--Is he depressed? Did he have a "list?" Did he
hate anyone?--police took him to his grandparent's house, grandpa signed a
consent form specifically letting them search Joseph K.'s room, according to
the grandfather. They not only searched the kid's room, including his
computer files and email, they also went through grandpa's closet, where
they found his shotgun. They took it and the boy's BB-gun.
 "We're thinking at the time that he did something real stupid in school,
and they're going to punish him somehow," grandpa says, explaining why he
didn't oppose the search
 When grandpa asked what the boy was being charged with, police replied:
"You'll get a call," and took the teen away.
 KANGAROO COURT
 During a family court hearing the next day, Joseph K. and his grandparents
were only told that the teen was being charged with "harassment." They
received no paperwork detailing what prompted the charges: They weren't even
allowed to have a copy of the paper that listed "harassment" as the charge.
 Sgt. Young says the boy was deemed a "habitual disciplinary problem," a
term defined by the state Legislature two years ago to mean anyone who
"threatened or extorted, or attempted to threaten or extort, another pupil
or (school employee)" in a year's time. By state law, a student who has
never had a problem before can be deemed a "habitual" troublemaker with one
erroneous act (Las Vegas Weekly, May 17, "Caught in the Crosshairs").
 None of that came up in court. Sylvia Beller, the juvenile special hearing
master, refused to release Joseph K. to his grandparents until he'd been
evaluated by county psychologists. The teen got out a week later. He
couldn't return to Woodbury--he first had to wait for the district's Pupil
Personnel Services to schedule an expulsion hearing. But in the meantime,
Woodbury gave him an award for being a good student: He got a "Smart Card"
for his efforts. He appreciated it almost as much as the one he got while
taking classes in the juvenile jail.
 To say Joseph K. got an education during his 10 days in jail would be a
grave understatement. He says he saw teens strapped in chairs, as
punishment, for what seemed like days on end. And every time his
grandparents visited, he was strip-searched--anally and under his scrotum.
"I was trying to make the best of it," he says, sheepishly recalling the
searches.
 His grandparents weren't so calm. "You think it's going to go away, because
it's so ridiculous," says Grandpa, his face turning red. "You expect any day
a call from the police saying it was a big mistake. They never did."
 Some of it went away June 6, when Beller dismissed all charges. (The teen's
grandparents marveled at Beller's decision, especially since Mike Gardner,
Joseph K.'s Clark County public defender, told them he wanted Joseph K. to
plead to lesser charges.)
 Despite the court's dismissal, the school district went ahead and formally
kicked Joseph K. out of school for one quarter on June 13. It was during his
expulsion hearing that Joseph K. and his grandparents were told that his
"type"--well-groomed, good students who are well liked--fit the profile of
kids who shoot up schools. No one from Pupil Personnel Services returned
calls for comment from Las Vegas Weekly.
 Last week, Joseph K. enrolled at the so-called Washington Opportunity
School, a series of prison-like trailers at Lake Mead Boulevard and White
Drive.
 OUT OF CONTROL
 Though juvenile crime rates had been falling long before Columbine (the
percentage of students reporting that they were victims of crime fell from
10 percent in '95 to 8 percent in '99), school paranoia, here and around the
country, is on the rise. During April alone, Young said, there were more
than 20 arrests in the school district.
 "We were chasing down rumors for what seemed like the whole month," said
the sergeant. "It was ridiculous."
 It's all part of what Allen Lichtenstein, attorney for the American Civil
Liberties Union of Nevada, calls the district's "zero intelligence," rather
than "zero tolerance," policy.
 "We're talking about insanity and it just gets worse and worse," said
Lichtenstein. "What it's really all about is insurance and liability and the
school district saying, 'hey, no one can ever accuse us of anything.' So
zero tolerance equalling zero intelligence is really the key."
 A block from Woodbury Middle School at Joseph K.'s home, grandpa is still
waiting to get his shotgun back, and his grandson is facing new dangers at
Opportunity School, which his grandfather describes as situated in a
neighborhood infested with gangs.
And still, there's disbelief. "What have I learned?" grandpa says, looking
down, shaking his head, "God, this can happen to anybody's kid. Anybody's.
And how many more times is it happening that we never hear about?"
 20 Sept Update: Pg 56, The American Legion Magazine. August 2001. Article
by Cliff Kincaid. Quote: BEWARE OF GI JOE. A boy has been suspended from
school for bringing a "violent" and "upsetting" drawing of GI Joe to school.
Trey Walker, a third-grader in Monroe, La., was reported by a fellow student
who saw the drawing in his notebook. It showed a camouflaged soldier armed
with grenades and knives. The student told the teacher who told the
principal, and trey was suspended for one day.  With the help of the
Rutherford Institute, Trey's father, Releigh, has sued the Ouachita Parish
School System, alleging the boy's constitutional rights to free speech were
violated. Rutherford said the so-called "zero tolerance" anti-violence
policies have gone too far. End Quote.

 029.24.0.0   # 46   End.
"We can't be so fixated on our desire to preserve the rights of ordinary
Americans." Comrade Pres W. J. Klinton. USAToday. 11 Mar 93. Pg 2A.  "You
know the one thing that's wrong with this country? Everyone gets a chance to
have their fair say." Comrade Pres W. J. Klinton. 28 May 93. The Courtyard.
City Hall, Philadelphia.  "I'm not going to have some reporters pawing
through our papers. We are the President." Comrade Hillary Diane Klinton.

 

Part 47

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