Fragen? Antworten! Siehe auch: Alternativlos
Dafür hat Lauderdale County, Mississippi, eine Lösung:
an investigation launched last December revealed that “the agencies have helped to operate a school-to-prison pipeline whereby children arrested in local schools become entangled in a cycle of incarceration without substantive and procedural protections required by the U.S. Constitution. The department’s findings show that children in Lauderdale County have been routinely and repeatedly incarcerated for allegedly committing school disciplinary infractions and are punished disproportionately, without constitutionally required procedural safeguards. Children have also been arrested at school for offenses as minor as defiance.
Defiance, das ist ja wie bei uns auf Demos, "Widerstand gegen Vollstreckungssbeamte". In der Praxis sieht das so aus, dass sie Kinder, die auf Bewährung draußen waren, wegen so Lächerlichkeiten wie "dress code violations" verhaftet und zurück in den Bau geschickt haben.Ihr werdet sicher genau so überrascht sein wie ich, dass das hauptsächlich Schwarze und Behinderte getroffen hat.
Und einmal im Knast lief das ähnlich weiter:
In 2009 the Southern Poverty Law Center brought a class-action lawsuit against the Lauderdale County Juvenile Detention Facility, accusing it of keeping youths “crammed into small, filthy cells and tormented with the arbitrary use of Mace as a punishment for even the most minor infractions — such as ‘talking too much’ or failing to sit in the ‘back of their cells.’”
(Danke, Rop)