Girl arrested during Spring Valley incident says she told classmates to film
Some people can't see a ******* setup coming. This *****....before the cop even spoke to her....told her friends "Get yall phones out because something is about to happen".
SHE PLANNED IT. She knew damn well that she was going to resist and become a ghetto YouTube superstar. She knew NOTHING the cop did was she going to cooperate with.
She knew "something is gonna happen" because she was determined to MAKE SOMETHING HAPPEN. Had she followed directions....NOTHING would happen.
Do we call this "premeditated oppression"?? Planning your own victimhood!!!
We used to have a name for people like that. We called them juvenile delinquents.
You....you realize that the OP's entire narrative is ignorant bullshit, right? that the girl who said 'take out your cameras' wasn't the girl that was dragged out of the room by her throat?
No matter how many excuses you people make, the simple fact remains. If she would have done what she was told, none of this would have happened. That doesn't excuse what the cop did, assuming he was even in the wrong. It was her fault for misbehaving. Period.
If the officer had done what he was told this would have never happened.
I was at a party last night watching Scandal and HTGAWM. We had a cop there. She has been with the New Mexico State Police for about 5 years and has worked at schools as an extra side job. All together she has worked as a police officer in 4 or 5 jurisdictions over 20 years or so.. She had an interesting take on the incident. Her take; the cop over-reacted, should be in prison. However, the one qualifier she gives is that the police on campus are there to enforce the law of the community; not the school rules. Like if someone was wearing a garment that was out of dress code or was cheating on an exam; the police officer working security would not be called for that. Nor would they be called for disciplinary measures such as this. She does say that there is some varying from one District to another but in the 20 years combined that she has been in law enforcement working these jobs; she would never have been involved in anything happening inside a classroom unless you had a Kleibold/Harris scenario.
I asked her if she was even allowed to physically apprehend a student. She said "Sure" but they have to be suspected of breaking the law; not the school policies.
It was good to have a cop who "gets it" even though I think the District probably liked the idea of cops coming into the classroom as a show of force to other students.
Thank you for that story.
The National Association of School Resource Officers agree.
NASRO tells CNN police should stay out of school discipline
“If there were an assault involved or a weapon involved, or the student were threatening the teacher, that would prompt law enforcement involvement, or should. If it was an incident where the student is just refusing to comply with the teacher, or not wanting to participate, that’s a school discipline incident and not necessarily a place for law enforcement.”
That’s one of the statements NASRO executive director Mo Canady made today during CNN’s “Legal View” with Ashleigh Banfield. CNN invited Mo to participate in its coverage of the videotaped arrest of a Columbia, South Carolina high school student by a school resource officer.
Mo also pointed out that the State of South Carolina does not allow NASRO to provide its nationally recognized school resource officer training anywhere in the state.
NASRO SRO training: Avoid student arrests
“Most SROs, certainly the ones that come through our training and are part of our membership, are consistently about reducing arrests. I wish everyone came through us for training, because that’s one of our big messages: don’t go in and try to see how many kids you can arrest. The idea is to be in the building, helping to keep it safe, not constantly hauling kids to jail.”
That’s one of many comments NASRO executive director Mo Canady made this morning on a nationally broadcast Canadian radio talk show, “The Current.”
Mo also pointed out that “The number-one goal of a school-based police officer should be to bridge the gap between law enforcement and youth, in other words, by building positive relationships.” In addition, he told show host Anna Maria Tremonti that NASRO’s SRO training includes advice about emptying a classroom of non-participants before a confrontation with a student, because that often makes incident deescalation easier.
Further, Mo emphasized that NASRO trains school resource officers to stay out of matters of school discipline. NASRO recommends that educators and administrators handle non-criminal behavior issues, such as student defiance, code of conduct violations, etc. without calling in law enforcement.