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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Girl, 6, Handcuffed, Committed Because Of Classroom Behavior
2010-02-13
A Port St. Lucie first-grade student was handcuffed and committed to a mental health facility because of her classroom behavior, and her parents are furious that the school took such extreme measures.
I know we don't spank children anymore, but wouldn't a spanking have done the job better, quicker, and cheaper?
Mickey Shalansky explained Wednesday what he said happened to his 6-year-old daughter at Parkway Elementary. "She couldn't put her in two handcuffs because her wrists are that small, so she put them both in the same handcuff and left marks on my daughter's arms," Shalansky told WPBF 25 News' Bob Kaple.
Sounds like the Mickey's one of those who doesn't believe in spanking...
But a St. Lucie County Sheriff's Office report paints a much different picture.
Of a six-year-old desperado?
Deputies said his daughter, Haley, got upset and stormed out her classroom when her teacher asked her to do something. The report said it then escalated into a temper tantrum in the principal's office.
Whoa! That's never happened before, has it? That's not the sort of thing you could train teachers and principals to deal with!
According to the incident report, a deputy said Haley was out of control.
A six-year-old going out of control isn't a long trip.
It said she "kicked the wall, went over to the desk and threw the calculator, electric pencil sharpener, telephone, container of writing utensils and other objects across the desk."
And they let her do that. Nobody even took her firmly by the arm and told her to stop it. Nobody picked her up and parked her butt in a chair and hollered "knock it off!" loud enough to get her attention...
Nobody hugged her firmly from behind, controlling her arms so she couldn't move, quietly and calmly saying, "Shhh, honey, shhh... I'll let go when you are quiet... Shhhh"
She was then handcuffed.
A smack on the wrist would have resulted in a lawsuit. A bruise would have guaranteed a multimillion dollar settlement. A crack on the butt would have resulted in hard time with the Amiraults...
"I don't think it should have had to come to this -- you know, to put a little girl, 6 years old, 37 pounds in handcuffs and take her away in a police car," Shalansky said.
If you take away all reasonable responses to childish temper tantrums then all that's left are the unreasonable responses...
Even worse is what happened the next day, Haley's parents said.
Mom and Pop didn't come to the school to ask what was up with their darling getting hauled off in cuffs?
A deputy was called to the school again after Haley had another tantrum in the classroom and principal's office.
The child doesn't learn very well, does she? Mom must have forgotten to say "be a good girl" when she dropped her off.
The child was probably terrified the handcuff/police thing would happen again, and nobody bothered to reassure her.
The sheriff's report said she was yelling, throwing things and hit the principal, who is eight months pregnant.
No one was legally able to crack her butt to get her attention and holler "Siddown, y'little brat!" It's too bad there wasn't a grown-up in the room.
Anyone was legally able to smack the desk, making a startlingly loud sound, and shout, "Be quiet! Sit!" It is too bad there wasn't a single grown-up in the room.
This time, she wasn't handcuffed. She was committed to a mental facility.
They put a six-year-old in the nut house. Likely she was transported by ambulance, strapped down on a gurney...
"I was terrified," mother Kathy Franklin said. "I left work crying, terrified.
Who cares if you are terrified, Mother? You need to think about your child's feelings at this moment.
Where is my baby? What are they doing with my baby?"
Not spanking her, obviously. It's better for them if you give them a sedative and an IV and keep them strapped. Anybody can see that.
Haley's parents said their daughter has a temper problem, but has no history of mental illness.
Bullies her Mom and Dad and all around her, but that's not mental illness. That's just doing what she's allowed to do.
Her mother said the school should have called her so she could pick up her daughter rather than have her committed.
"Hello? Is this Haley's Mom?... Come and get your pride and joy or it's off to the nut house with her!"
"They have looked at her here," Franklin said of the New Horizons mental health facility. "There is absolutely nothing wrong with my child. I work in daycare. I know what a child that has problems -- you know, I know how to deal with them. I know what they act like."
Does she projectile vomit before or after her head spins around 360 degrees?
Shalansky said to have his daughter committed is "just wrong."
As is shrieking, hollering, kicking the walls, throwing things, and peeing yourself.
The report also said the school has contacted Haley's parents several times about setting up a meeting to discuss her behavior, but they have never shown up.
"A meeting? Hmph. Nuttin' wrong wid my girl! Whudda we need a meeting fer?"
Franklin said she was supposed to meet with school officials Tuesday but had to cancel because she had car problems. Meanwhile, her parents have kept Haley and her sister home from school.
Good idea. School's all the better for it.
Probably so are the children. It's hard to focus on learning when one might be hauled off to the loony bin at any moment.
Posted by:Fred

#19  Dealing with the school dist is a painful event for both teachers and parents. The legal trap the teachers are in is a no win for them. Grab the kid and you get an assault charge. For god sake not little Jenny, her head spins because you teachers just dont understand her. Calling the police was the right call for a violent child in school nowadays. Sad but true, no longer can they yell at them, grab them, or paddle them.

I believe there is a lot more to this story. Parent meeting already set means they have had problems before. The school admin must have been tired of the lack of parent involvment.

I only wonder who made the call to send her to the psyc wards. Must have been the police, certainly not the school. Violent and out of control I believe they made the right call, concidering the legal fallout that will follow. Now they will have professional doctors saying its the parents fault.
Posted by: 49 Pan   2010-02-13 21:51  

#18  Ample doses of sarcasm, no doubt.
Posted by: Pappy   2010-02-13 17:59  

#17  Welcome back, Shipman! I missed you, my dear. How would you have handled it, really?
Posted by: trailing wife   2010-02-13 17:39  

#16  Beat the kidz till they piss blood for a week die, and then neuter their parents.
Posted by: Shipman   2010-02-13 15:29  

#15  A speedy trial and death by Theriault-Odom the Flame! (see below).
Posted by: Besoeker   2010-02-13 13:47  

#14  And what percentage of baby boomers?

And many of whom act younger than some of their offspring. Am I alone in thinking it is odd to see seventy years olds tearing up keyboards to update their facebook?
Posted by: GirlThursday   2010-02-13 13:39  

#13  My wife is a special ed. aide in Kindergarten. She works up close and personal with these situations daily, not just with the specials but with the normals too.

It is invariably parental driven. She has been accused of hitting a child because she restrained him from hitting another student with a truck. Who made the complaint? The student to the parents. Did the parents talk about it? No, they stormed the school lawyer in tow. Luckily the (most of the) school backs up the teachers on these cases. The one administrator that doesn't? The Special Needs Regional Coordinator, a bureaucrat with no real training or experience.

It's a lovely thing.
Posted by: AlanC   2010-02-13 13:25  

#12  Guess the teacher had run out of Ritalin doping up all the boys at the start of the school day.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-02-13 12:06  

#11  an estimated 98 percent of children under the age of 10 are remorseless sociopaths with little regard for anything other than their own egocentric interests and pleasures.

What's the percentage for children democrats over the age of 20?

Posted by: Goober Goobelopolous   2010-02-13 12:03  

#10  When I was teaching school I saw scenarios like this as almost a daily occurrence. And, usually, without fail the parents were the cause of the child's' actions/performance(s). The parents are too lazy/stupid/uncaring to discipline/raise their children and expect others (school/daycare/baby sitter) to do it ... until the parent feels they (school/daycare/baby sitter) cross the (unknown) line set by the parents. Until the parents grow up themselves and accept their responsibility the situation(s) will only get worse.
Posted by: WolfDog   2010-02-13 11:24  

#9  Only 98%, SteveS? I think you're an optimist. ;)
Posted by: Cornsilk Blondie   2010-02-13 10:39  

#8  Children are the larval form of human beings and as such are more closely related to badgers than to adults.

MINNEAPOLIS—A study published Monday in The Journal Of Child Psychology And Psychiatry has concluded that an estimated 98 percent of children under the age of 10 are remorseless sociopaths with little regard for anything other than their own egocentric interests and pleasures.
Posted by: SteveS   2010-02-13 10:14  

#7  I got spanked as a kid, quite a few times. And you know what - I deserved every damn one of them. Some kids don't need spanked, some do. Some kids just need a stern voice & some need a swat on the backside. In any case, all need a parent w/a spine.
Posted by: Broadhead6   2010-02-13 10:08  

#6  They probably come from the same "parenting philosophy" that says the mere act of raising your voice to your child is abuse. Somehow you are supposed to "reason" with the child in the middle of their tantrums and get them to willingly go along with normal, civilized behavior.

I'm not kidding. My idiot sis in law tried that with my boy once when he was acting up and teasing his cousin. I guess she thought it was a "teachable moment" for this barbarian in child rearing or something because she jumped in before I had a chance to do anything. Naturally it didn't work. He wasn't paying attention to her at all, but she thought she got through to him how his behavior was "not optimum" (her words).

She later saw me temporarily take away his beloved stuffed duck and raise my voice to get him to stop making fun of his cousin when he did it again.....and for the rest of the day she looked at me like I had just tortured a kitten in her presence. It worked, and he didn't do it again during his cousin's visit, but apparently I'm not allowed around my niece alone because of my "brutal" way of dealing with behavior problems. (BTW, my boy's three. Didn't lay a hand on him.)

You think there are some brats in the teens/twenties right now? Just wait....it's gonna get worse. God help us all.
Posted by: Cornsilk Blondie   2010-02-13 09:18  

#5  Ima guessing they don't use the tranquilizer darts in schools anymore.
Posted by: SteveS   2010-02-13 08:54  

#4  a good whacking is in order - for Mom and Dad
Posted by: Frank G   2010-02-13 08:01  

#3  Spare the Rod... Spoil the Child....

Someone must have asked the critical question:

How many cops does it take to take down a six-year-old girl?
Posted by: CrazyFool   2010-02-13 06:46  

#2  Mickey Shalansky --- father.
Kathy Franklin --- mother.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2010-02-13 04:58  

#1  Franklin said she was supposed to meet with school officials Tuesday but had to cancel because she had car problems.

It would appear she has much more than... "car problems."
Posted by: Besoeker   2010-02-13 04:53  

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