Disturbing Video Shows School Cop Body Slam and Drag a Black Female Student

QueEx

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Disturbing Video Shows School Cop
Body Slam and Drag a Black Female Student​


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Authorities in Richland County, South Carolina, are investigating a video that surfaced Monday showing a uniformed officer aggressively confronting a high school student. Local station WIS-TV reports that county sheriff's deputies are investigating the incident, which took place on Monday at Spring Valley High School, according to school officials. The video, which appears to have been recorded on a cellphone by a classmate, shows a white male officer standing over a black female student sitting at her desk; moments later he grabs the student and flips her on her back. After dragging her across the floor, the officer says, "Hands behind your back—give me your hands." The video has no additional context as to what led to or followed the altercation.

"Parents are heartbroken as this is just another example of the intolerance that continues to be of issue in Richland County School District Two, particularly with families and children of color," a local black parents group wrote in a statement responding to the video.

Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott told WIS-TV that the school resource officer (SRO) was responding to a student who was refusing to leave class. "The student was told she was under arrest for disturbing school and given instructions, which she again refused," Lott said. "The video then shows the student resisting and being arrested by the SRO."

The video is the latest in a series of disturbingly violent altercations involving school cops. As Mother Jones first reported in July, there have been at least 29 incidents in the United States since 2010 in which school-based police officers used questionable force against students in K-12 schools, many of which caused serious injuries, and in one case death. Data on use of force by school cops is lacking even as the number of officers on campus has ballooned over the past two decades, with little training or oversight.

Update, 6:15 p.m. EDT: Here is a statement released by the school district, via local TV reporter Megan Rivers:

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http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2015/10/video-school-cop-body-slams-and-drags-black-female-student


 
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First the teacher should have evacuated the classroom and isolated the student, having the police officer arrive. Any student refusing commands poses a danger to other students. You are requesting a person with a deadly weapon to come into a confined space with kids, what if other students got upset and tried to grab his weapon or pulled a knife? He may have to use deadly force.

After seeing all her classmates leave, she would have felt less compelled to resist and would have became more self aware of the seriousness of the situation. No need to stay in a classroom that is empty.

Once isolated he could have enacted appropriate force to remove the student

Additionally, notifying the student that she could challenge the decision being made with the principle, instead of protesting in class. I think it is healthy for people to challenge the status quo and injustices like myself such as ideas, surveillance, and harrassment.
 
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First the teacher should have evacuated the classroom and isolated the student, having the police officer arrive. Any student refusing commands poses a danger to other students. You are requesting a person with a deadly weapon to come into a confined space with kids, what if other students got upset and tried to grab his weapon or pulled a knife? He may have to use deadly force.

After seeing all her classmates leave, she would have felt less compelled to resist and would have became more self aware of the seriousness of the situation. No need to stay in a classroom that is empty.

Once isolated he could have enacted appropriate force to remove the student

Additionally, notifying the student that she could challenge the decision being made with the principle, instead of protesting in class. I think it is healthy for people to challenge the status quo and injustices like myself such as ideas, surveillance, and harrassment.


Sounds reasonable to me.

 

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