A Parenting & kids forum. ParentingBanter.com

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » ParentingBanter.com forum » alt.parenting » Spanking
Site Map Home Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

FW: CO Teen's family called LE 50x last 3 yrs



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old July 14th 03, 04:54 PM
Fern5827
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default FW: CO Teen's family called LE 50x last 3 yrs

Subject: CO: Childs family called 911 Fifty times in 3 1/2 years
From: "Teresa"
Date: 7/12/2003 7:16 PM Eastern Daylight Time
Message-id:


50 calls to police
Childs family dialed 911 frequently for help with teen son

By Brian D. Crecente, Rocky Mountain News
July 12, 2003

Paul Childs' family called the police emergency line 50 times in the past 3
½ years, sometimes asking officers to help them deal with the
developmentally disabled teen, police records show.

The last 911 call from the home came July 5 at 1:11 p.m. and 20 seconds.

As family members had done at least nine times in the past, they were
calling to ask police to help with Paul Childs. But this time the call ended
with his death.

The Rev. Michael Thompson, Paul Childs' uncle, said Friday the family would
call the police because they considered officers as friends. Whenever Paul
got out of hand, Thompson said, they felt they were calling "Paul's friend."

The Childs family never imagined that a police officer would shoot him.

Thompson also said that the family believes James Turney, the police officer
who shot Paul, had been to the house at least once.

But it couldn't be determined from police reports and wasn't confirmed by
police officials whether Turney had ever been there.

"Something is missing, something is lacking," said the Rev. Patrick Demmer,
who has been helping the family since the shooting. "We can't just blame
police. We have to take some of the responsibility and say, 'Where were we
50 times? Where were we at?' "

Family members have said they called the police July 5 to help the
15-year-old boy, who was threatening the family with a knife.

There were several other instances in which family members called 911 to get
police to talk to the boy, according to dispatch records.

For instance, on July 24, 1999, Childs' mother called 911 saying her son had
been caught stealing and that she had made him take the things back to the
store.

She asked the 911 operator to send an officer to the home to explain why
stealing was wrong. An officer was dispatched.

"He loved and trusted them," his mother, Helen, said of the police two days
after the fatal shooting.

On other occasions, she asked police to talk to him about calling 911 and
hanging up, and to take him to social services because he was trying to run
away.

Since January 1999, family members called police six times to report that
Childs had run away.

Demmer says the family didn't realize the type of response they would get
July 5 when they called for help.

On the 911 dispatch tape from the fatal shooting, Paul Childs' sister can be
heard calmly saying that her brother was threatening their mother with a
knife and that he had hit their mother in the past.

Responding officers were apparently told that Childs' address had been the
scene of previous calls for domestic violence and family disturbances.

When officers arrived, they ordered everyone out of the home.

Relatives have said that Turney had his foot inside the screen door and that
Childs stood in a hallway holding a knife close to his chest when the
officer opened fire.

Childs was shot four times.

At least three other officers were in front of the home when the shooting
occurred.

Two of them had Tasers, a device used to stun suspects from a distance
without causing permanent injury, and the other officer was trained in
crisis intervention. But the less-lethal weapons were not used.

Although Police Chief Gerry Whitman declined to discuss details of the case,
he said that in general the use of less-lethal weapons depends on the
situation.

"To implement any of these strategies you need time and distance to be able
to choose your reactions," he said. "When the time gets short and something
explodes in front of you, you have to react.

"Sometimes momentum is not on our side," he said.

The killing of Childs, an East High School student, has outraged the
neighborhood, and community activists are calling for an independent
investigation.

Demmer wonders why the call for help ended in a shooting, despite the fact
police knew they were going to a home to which they often responded.

"To say that police went there 50 times - 50 times in three years - you know
you are not dealing with something normal," Demmer said.

"A greater sense of sensitivity should have been in the hearts of the police
officers going there," Demmer said. "That's the danger of calling the
police. The police are not the ones to call for all of these situations.

"Something is wrong when a crisis situation like this occurs and the only
option this poor mother has, a single mother, the first recourse they have
is to call the police."

Demmer's church, the Graham Memorial Church of God in Christ, is three
blocks from where the shooting took place.

He recalled that when his two teenage nephews were getting into trouble and
fighting a lot, his sister called him and his brother for help.

"If one had grabbed a knife, she wouldn't have called police, she would have
called us," he said. "We would have come over, then put our nephews in
check."

Demmer said that although he feels the police overreacted, the shooting is
as much an indictment of society and the community.

"There is a tremendous problem that has not been addressed by the family or
society," he said. "It's an indictment on the community that we are somehow
not there - that the family is having this sort of problem."











Comment: Loving families disempowered by the Nanny state.

http://www.profane-justice.org But you know the family has received NO
REAL HELP FROM DSS, CPS, THERE.


 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Heroic mother has her 15th, wants more jitney General 156 November 21st 04 10:16 PM
Heroic mother has her 15th, wants more jitney Pregnancy 112 November 21st 04 10:16 PM
Review: Johnson Family Vacation (***) Steve Rhodes General 0 March 31st 04 05:34 PM
| Most families *at risk* w CPS' assessment tools broad, vague Kane General 13 February 20th 04 06:02 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:27 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 ParentingBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.