• @Everythingispenguins
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    721 year ago

    Well not a lot of details in the article but it is quite possible that they did follow policy. Which doesn’t make it better.

    • @[email protected]
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      441 year ago

      ’ “To this day, we have no information from the school or from the Precinct 3, the Constable,” Aaliyah’s father, Mark Zarate, said. "No type of paperwork as to what she was charged with. ’

      If this quote is true I’d expect a citation for the charges pretty soon after if not immediately when picking up my child from Juvenile Detention. Otherwise it would seem like they illegally held my child with no official wrong doing.

      • @Everythingispenguins
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        1 year ago

        So again the article is not detailed but, at this time it doesn’t appear that she has been charged with anything. The police are not the ones that issue criminal charges, that is the DA. The police are responsible for arrests and citations.

        It appears that she was arrested, processed and released pending charges. The child was definitely not held illegally as there is usually some period of time that someone can be held without charges. Again this feels like overkill in this case, but is protocol.

        This is not an issue of police overreach but one of the design of the system.

        • Doug HollandOP
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          161 year ago

          People who enforce a wretched system become the system. Without them, there is no system. This is an other instance of police cruelty and stupidity, regardless of whether it’s ‘protocol’.

          At my school in a saner era, kids who pulled false alarms were sent to detention, not the police station and juvenile hall for fingerprints.

    • @madcaesar
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      171 year ago

      We were just following orders!

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      -91 year ago

      It’s the policy. It happened to me too as a kid. On one hand, it can prevent future criminals, giving kids a dose of reality. It’s obviously a bit excessive, but it’s not terrible either.

      • @Viking_Hippie
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        131 year ago

        On one hand, it can prevent future criminals, giving kids a dose of reality

        Though it’s conventional “wisdom”, it hasn’t been proven that excessive punishment lowers recidivism.

        In fact, it’s been proven to cause trauma, which RAISES the risk of recidivism and acceleration from mischief to more serious trouble.

        it’s not terrible either.

        Wrong. It’s abusive and likely to traumatize that poor girl as well as poison her future relationships with all authority figures, including positive ones.

        • Refurbished Refurbisher
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          1 year ago

          Not to mention that anyone is more likely to learn how to be a better criminal in US prisons than be rehabilitated, regardless of age.

          Wrong. It’s abusive and likely to traumatize that poor girl as well as poison her future relationships with all authority figures, including positive ones.

          This is a shame, but all kids should be taught to question authority as well, even if they’ve only had positive experiences with authority.

      • Bo7a
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        51 year ago

        it’s not terrible

        Agree to disagree.

      • @CADmonkey
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        41 year ago

        Yeah it used to be some people’s “policy” to own other people. Do you defend them?

  • @Viking_Hippie
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    261 year ago

    Even if true, sometimes specific rules are bad and following them makes you a bastard.

    • @EatYouWell
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      -191 year ago

      I mean, breaking the law has consequences. People could die in a false alarm situation, or the FD might not be able to respond to an actual fire.

      So far the kid hasn’t been charged with anything, so being arrested is probably a good motivation to not do that again.

      • @Viking_Hippie
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        71 year ago

        breaking the law has consequences

        So does obeying unjust laws

        People could die in a false alarm situation

        People could also die choking on food. Do you want 11 year olds arrested for cooking?

        Seriously though, the severity of the ACTUAL reaction should never be based on unlikely hypotheticals.

        FD might not be able to respond to an actual fire.

        Another hypothetical. Also something that could happen for other reasons, such as for example road work. Do you want people arrested for doing their job at inopportune moments too?

        So far the kid hasn’t been charged with anything

        Making it an unnecessary and overzealous arrest

        being arrested is probably a good motivation to not do that again.

        Or to (rightfully) despise and fear cops for the rest of her life. If she’s ever in trouble or sees someone else in trouble, do you think her first instinct is to reach out to her abusers for help?

        TL;DR: NO it wasn’t justified and NO, nothing good will come from it.

    • @Something_Complex
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      -201 year ago

      Chaotic good. People trying to cause the most chaos possible by following the rules to the line

      • @Viking_Hippie
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        241 year ago

        Quite the opposite: Lawful Evil cops being evil by following, enforcing and demanding unjust rules.

        Chaotic Good is more like people doing as much good as they can by trying to change the rules into just ones or simply doing something right that’s against the rules.

    • @yesman
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      21 year ago

      This is called the Nuremberg defense bc of the famous Nazi war crimes trial. Many will still use this to excuse German armed forces even today, but it’s a myth.

      While many, many German soldiers and citizens were executed during the war, not a single one was killed for refusing to participate in war crimes. Many soldiers did refuse and the consequences was shit like being assigned undesirable duties and social reprisals from the other men.

  • @PwnTra1n
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    41 year ago

    Surely officer Gunt has nothing to prove.

  • @LemmyIsFantastic
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    -21 year ago

    Who the fuck cares? Water they hurt? No? Well I bet they stunt pull another fire alarm.