Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Police Brutality in DC Classroom
Seema Sadanandan
24 Apr 2013
🖨️ Print Article

by Seema Sadanandan

The Newtown massacre generated reflexive calls for posting police in classrooms, a policy that has long been in place in inner city schools, with devastating effect. “In the matrix of policies and police ushering black and brown students out of classrooms and into courtrooms, the School-to-Prison Pipeline takes shape.”

 

Police Brutality in DC Classroom

by Seema Sadanandan

This article previously appeared in the American Civil Liberties Union website.

“D.C. Public Schools continues to promote policies which increase police involvement.”

When Officer David Bailey grabbed a 10-year-old student by the back of his head and slammed it into the school cafeteria table, it is safe to say that student was not free to leave. On that afternoon, Bailey decided that his routine beat on the streets of Southeast D.C. extended into the hallways of Moten Elementary School.

Although Bailey was not a trained school resource officer contracted from the Metropolitan Police Department nor one of the three contract officers assigned to Moten at the time, his presence raised no red flags. Regular visits from the police in D.C. Public Schools had become ubiquitous.

On the day of the alleged assault, the student, "T.P." had been sent to the cafeteria for the infraction of failing to adequately participate in music class. The result of his childish behavior was a full-on police encounter.

One emergency room, two weeks and countless headaches later. T.P. seemed to be back to normal. Only his mother could see that something about him had changed: T.P. was now afraid to go to school.

When the ACLU of the Nation's Capital recently filed a civil complaint for damages against a Metropolitan Police Officer on behalf of T.P., news stations clamored to hear the story of the alleged assault. Was this story of a rogue cop's brutality against a young boy, just a freak anomaly or the result of a system by design? Perhaps it was both. In the matrix of policies and police ushering black and brown students out of classrooms and into courtrooms, the School-to-Prison Pipeline takes shape.

“Children of color bear a disproportionate burden of unconstitutional police encounters in the educational context.”

Although no crimes had been reported at Moten in the two years before the incident with Bailey, D.C. Public Schools continues to promote policies which increase police involvement. Moten, which serves indigent African American children, sits atop a hill overlooking a community with staggering unemployment rates. Here, police on their beats weave a prison-like environment from T.P.'s doorstep all the way into his school cafeteria.

There was no guidance counselor or teacher present when Bailey, a crime-fighting cop, decided to take school disciplinary matters into his own hands. Criminalizing the normal behavior of black and brown children is the hallmark of the School-to-Prison Pipeline. When non-criminal behaviors in school result in interactions with the criminal justice system, suspension or expulsions, children suffer a powerful blow to their dignity and trust in the school system. Children of color bear a disproportionate burden of unconstitutional police encounters in the educational context.

On the south side of the Anacostia River where Moten sits, the police state and its culture of surveillance erodes any semblance of civil liberties for local residents. T.P. and his classmates cannot remember a time before schools began having metal detectors and roving police officers. But they will likely never forget the day they discovered that school was a place that is unfair and unsafe.

In the wake of the Newtown School Massacre, lawmakers on the north side of the Anacostia River make impassioned speeches about the need to expand police presence in schools. Amidst the feverish political debates T.P.'s mother seems startlingly clear when she says, "Police don't belong in schools with children."

Seema Sadanandan, is an organizer/filmmaker/lawyer who uses art and media as a vehicle for social transformation. She along with DC North Star Productions produced several documentary films including projects focused on indigenous peoples, public property, political prisoners in the United States and the erosion of civil liberties. She is a currently a member of the Maryland State Bar and the Organizer for the ACLU of the Nation’s Capital. Find ACLU-NCA on Twitter and Facebook.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • BAR Book Forum: Jennifer Nash’s “Black Feminism Reimagined”
    Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    BAR Book Forum: Jennifer Nash’s “Black Feminism Reimagined”
    05 Jun 2019
    Black women are still regularly ignored by the very political projects that celebrate us.
  • BAR Book Forum: An Excerpt from Belén Fernández’s “Exile: Rejecting America and Finding the World”
    Belen Fernandez
    BAR Book Forum: An Excerpt from Belén Fernández’s “Exile: Rejecting America and Finding the World”
    05 Jun 2019
    The US is a nation of freedom: the freedom to carry or be shot by a firearm, and to go into eternal debt.
  • Climate Terrorism: The Politically Farsighted Way to Impeach Trump
    Patrick Walker
    Climate Terrorism: The Politically Farsighted Way to Impeach Trump
    05 Jun 2019
    By focusing on climate terrorism, Democrats could show voters that they care more about the common good than their self-serving Russiagate narrative. 
  • Book Review: Bringing Police Torture in Chicago to the Full Light of Day
    Carl Davidson
    Book Review: Bringing Police Torture in Chicago to the Full Light of Day
    05 Jun 2019
    A new book reveals Chicago as a racist police state where the entire criminal justice system was complicit in torture.
  • The Bankers’ “Power Revolution” -- How the Government Got Shackled by Debt
    Ellen Brown
    The Bankers’ “Power Revolution” -- How the Government Got Shackled by Debt
    05 Jun 2019
    There is no reason for the government to borrow trillions from capitalists – except to enrich the financial classes and enforce austerity.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us