Police officer sacked for arresting two six-year-old children
Battery charges against young students dismissed, state attorney confirms
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Your support makes all the difference.A reserve officer with the Orlando Police Department was fired on Monday after he arrested two six-year-old children last week without the proper approval, Chief Orlando Rolón said.
The six-year-olds, one boy and one girl, faced misdemeanour battery charges but will not be prosecuted, Aramis Ayala, the state attorney that serves Orange County, said at a news conference on Monday.
The state attorney’s office never intended to prosecute the children, but could not dismiss the girl’s charges until Monday, Ms Ayala said. The boy’s charges will be dismissed once his case number is assigned, she added.
“I refuse to knowingly play any role in the school-to-prison pipeline at any age,” Ms Ayala said. “These very young children are to be protected, nurtured and disciplined in a manner that does not rely on the criminal justice system to do it.”
The authorities have not released the children’s names, but Meralyn Kirkland told local television station WKMG that her six-year-old granddaughter Kaia had been arrested after having a tantrum in which she kicked a school staff member.
Dennis Turner was working as a school resource officer at Lucious and Emma Nixon Academy, a charter school, when he arrested the children in separate incidents on Thursday.
He was assigned to the reserve officer programme, which is made up of retired officers, The Orlando Sentinel reported.
Departmental policy requires officers to get a supervisor’s approval when arresting anyone under the age of 12, which Mr Turner failed to do in both arrests.
Police officials said on Sunday that Mr Turner had been suspended immediately after the two arrests, pending an investigation into his actions.
Mr Turner served on the police force for 23 years and retired in June 2018, according to the department.
He was charged with aggravated child abuse in 1998 in connection with his seven-year-old son, The Orlando Sentinel reported. He was suspended pending the result of an investigation but the outcome of the case was unclear on Monday.
In 2016, Mr Turner was reprimanded for using excessive force after stunning a man five times with a Taser during an arrest, the newspaper reported.
Mr Rolón acknowledged on Monday that the children’s arrests had damaged the trust between the community and its officers.
“On behalf of myself and the entire Orlando police department, I apologise to the children involved and their families,” he said.
New York Times
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