Los Angeles Students Protest School Police Citations That Hit Blacks, Latinos

Susan Ferriss
iWatch News / News Report
Published: Monday 7 May 2012
“Data shows 40 percent of kids’ tickets went to kids 14 and younger.”
Article image

Los Angeles public-school students rallied Thursday against the large volume of court citations they have been issued for seemingly minor infractions, including tardiness, having a marker or “tool” for graffiti and for acting disruptive.

The citations, issued by the Los Angeles Unified School District Police Department, have been the subject of recent stories by the Center for Public Integrity. Television station KTLA in Los Angeles covered the rally, posting on its website that: “The Center for Public Integrity took a closer look at exactly how school policing is being done, and their findings are raising some major concerns.” KTLA describes some of the Center’s findings from an analysis of three years’ worth of citations recently released by the school district police.

More than 40 percent of 33,500 court summonses issued to students between 10 and 18 went to students 14 and younger. African American students, 10 percent of enrollment, were 15 percent of those cited last year and 20 percent in 2010. The district’s school police force, with 340 sworn officers and staff, is the largest in the nation.

Southern California public radio station KPCC, which co-reported a piece on the citations with the Center, also covered the students’ protest rally Thursday. KPCC reported that some community groups believe a moratorium on ticketing should be declared until the district completes a thorough analysis of the data. One of those groups, the Labor-Community Strategy Center has released its own analyses of the new citation data. KPCC reported that school police don’t plan to stop ticketing.

Zoe Rawson, a lawyer representing ticketed students, said she is concerned that planned closures of what are called “informal” juvenile courts in Los Angeles this summer due to budget cuts will end up sending more ticketed students to full-blown delinquency court. Right now, students cited for low-level infractions are typically summoned to informal courts to appear before “referees,” but do not face prosecutors.

Rawson and other student advocates have worked with juvenile court judges, police and Los Angeles’ city council to adopt new standards limiting the practice of citing students for daytime curfew violations when they are clearly on their way to school.

Ticketed students said they had sometimes overslept or arrived on late buses and were only tardy by minutes. They complained they missed more school time while police handcuffed and searched some of them. The police sweeps were concentrated at low-income schools; students were summoned to court — missing more school — and faced fines of more than $250.

Michael Nash, presiding judge of Los Angeles County’s juvenile courts, has told the Center he prefers more of an emphasis on counseling — rather than sending kids to court — to try to prevent low-level fisticuffs and other misbehavior.

Reprinted by permission from iWatch News



Get Email Alerts from NationofChange

Top Stories

8 comments on "Los Angeles Students Protest School Police Citations That Hit Blacks, Latinos"

pitch1934

May 08, 2012 12:13pm

This is merely another ploy to get more students into more charter schools. They want to be able to say, "See, our public schools are failing the students." It's all for the almighty dollar. Just ask the Koch brothers.

steve dewitt

May 07, 2012 9:02pm

Does this mean that the police are ignoring white kids, or the white kids aren't violating any rules. There should be a study on why minority kids are getting ticketed at such a high rate. One thing is, they must violate some rule to get ticketed. I don't understand ticketing anyway. How can a 12 year-old pay a $200 ticket?

oldhat

May 07, 2012 4:46pm

you are correct hepette only discipline should be adm to non minority students

Btrwy

May 07, 2012 4:28pm

How are school children supposed to pay a $250 fine? Hold up a liquor store? Rob a classmate? Steal cars? Ask parents that can't afford it? Seems like the wrong approach.

Richard Myron Lapham

May 07, 2012 3:48pm

what is proven or even alleged by the tickets being given to a certain age group? Perhaps they are more rebellious?

There is much more to this story that we have not been told - a school district is not going to the hassle of issuing tickets and paying a security force for no reason. Remember, the policies have to be made by board members elected by the public.

As to the racial make up - sure some of it is racism, I have no doubt. I also think some people hear about racism so much until it flavors their attitude. Can a minority student hear all day long about how bad his school is, how bad his neighborhood is, how his area is cheated on funding, how many of his race are incarcerated unfairly etc. and NOT have an attitude? I don't blame him, in many ways, but does anyone think this may not translate, at least sometimes, into anti-social behaviors?

RoyBig

May 07, 2012 2:31pm

How much more proof do we need that we are becoming a police state? Now, as a kid, you have to be worried about being handcuffed at school for being tardy? As a former child counselor at a boy's ranch, I see this as further alienation from authority figures, not a step in the right direction.

hepette

May 07, 2012 1:14pm

AND PEOPLE SAY THERES NO RACISM....PATHETIC ...ITS ALIVE AND WELL TRUST ME.

Joan Moore

May 07, 2012 12:53pm

"Are there no workhouses? Are there no orphanages?" Damn. We are a mean spirited Dicksonian society and I hate it. I wouldn't raise children here. If I couldn't immigrate to another country, I would forgo having children at all. What a terrible time to be a kid in the USA.