From: AlterNet
May 7, 2013
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A student who was arrested and beaten for falling asleep at school is
now suing an Alabama city, its police department and some school
employees for civil rights violation, battery and negligent supervision
and hiring. The Courthouse News Service reports
that after the diabetic student fell asleep while in a room reserved
for “in school suspensions,” a school police officer slammed her face
into a cabinet and then arrested her. The incident occurred at a high
school in Hoover, Alabama.
Ashlynn Avery, who has diabetes, asthma and sleep apnea,
was suspended for cutting class, and had to sit in the in-school
suspension room. While she was reading “Huckleberry Finn,” she dozed
off. First, the in-school suspension supervisor walked over to her
cubicle and struck it, which caused the cubicle to hit Avery’s head,
according to the lawsuit. She woke up, but soon fell back asleep. The
supervisor, Joshua Whited, then took the book from her and slammed it on
on, which caused the book to hit the student in the chest.
Avery was then told to leave the room, according to the
complaint, and police officer Christopher Bryant followed her. Bryant
slapped her backpack, and then “proceeded to shove Ashlynn face first
into a file cabinet and handcuff her,” the complaint states. While in
the car, Avery vomited. She was taken to a hospital and had to wear a
cast as a result of her injuries.
“Ashlynn required follow-up care to her shoulder, arm, and
wrist, Ashlynn also required extended mental counseling for trauma
caused by the defendants,” the lawsuit states. The Averys are seeking
"compensatory and punitive damages for civil rights violations, battery
and negligent supervision and hiring," the Courthouse News Service reports.
The case is another example of abuses committed by school
police officers. Activists have long decried the “school to prison
pipeline” which disproportionately affects communities of color. A PBS
factsheet, as the Courthouse News Service notes, states that “70 percent
of students involved in 'in-school' arrests or referred to law
enforcement are black or Latino.”
“When police (or ‘school resource officers’ as these
sheriff’s deputies are often known) spend time in a school, they often
deal with disorder like proper cops -- by slapping cuffs on the little
perps and dragging them to the precinct,” wrote Chase Madar for TomDispatch
in the wake of the Newtown massacre. The school shooting in Connecticut
has sparked more calls--from both Democrats and the National Rifle
Association--for more police officers in schools.
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