fracas


Playground Beatings and Third Grade Murder Plots.

Picture this.

Some children are playing on the playground. Their ages? 8 to 11.

One of the ten year olds and the 11 year old, begin picking on the 8 year old. The 8 year old’s 10 year old sister tells them to stop. They stop indeed, but instead, choose to re-direct their bad behaviour towards the 10 year old for trying to defend her younger sister.

They drag this ten year old off the monkey bars, and proceed to stomp on he head and legs, shattering her hip in the process. 

So went the day a the playground for Rikki Trianna, the victim.

“They started stomping on my head and legs,” the victim, 10-year-old Rikki Triana, told the Erie Times-News from her bed at Hamot Medical Center. “I couldn’t do anything.”

Triana had surgery Friday and has three pins inserted into her right hip to keep the bones together. She will likely need more surgery and possibly a hip replacement at some point because she is young and still growing, said her mother, Lisa Triana. [5]

But aren’t they too young to be punished?

According to Chief Erie County Public Defender Tony Logue, the law does allow for the prosecution of individuals as young as 10, through juvenile court. The youngest of the accused is 10, the older of the two, 11.  The lawyer for the 10 year old is petitioning the court to have the charges dismissed, preferring instead, to have the case go through a system that aims to help abused and neglected children. In the Erie County court system, children are dealt with either based on delinquency or dependency, the child being ruled “dependent” based on abuse or neglect.

Sounds admirable, I suppose, only her family has come out stating what a good girl the accused is, not that she’s a poor soul who’s been abused or neglected.

“She is not a street girl. She minds adults,” said the grandmother of the 10-year-old. [3]

While the hearings were held behind closed doors, the families of both of the accused whom lawyers are trying to paint as ”abused and neglected” to avoide prosecution as delinquents, filled the lobby of the juvenile probabtion offices. Said the grandfather of the 11 year old,

“She’s an A and B student. She’s never been in trouble in her life. She helps take care of her little brother,” he said. [3]

However, despite family insisting that these girls are good girls, there has to be something wrong somewhere. Brad Foulk, of the Erie County District Attorney’s office had no idea what to make of the events.

“I’ve not seen anything of this magnitude allegedly happening before,” Foulk said. “We’ve seen cases of bullying, but if these allegations are true, it goes way beyond anything I’ve ever seen. It’s very, very, very troubling.” [5]

Ditto for the police reaction.

“I don’t ever remember having a case where kids this young did so much damage,” police Lt. Dan Spizarny said. [5]

Parenting today means never having to discipline!

These attempts to avoid responsibility for the actions of the girls, of course, upsets Trianna’s mother considerably. As a mother, I can understand her feelings. It appears the two girls don’t fit the description of “abused or neglected” yet again, adults are doing their best to teach a youngster, that we make up whatever story we have to, to avoid taking responsibility for our actions. Does anyone question whether or not getting away with stomping someone’s head and legs until you shatter their hip, then getting away with it because the adults in your life concoct a story that’s not necessarily true to get you out of trouble, won’t lead to either of these girls later following in the steps of the Lakeland teens?

“I’m not saying I want these kids to suffer all their lives for this, but they need to understand the implications of what they did, the severity of what they did,” Triana said from her daughter’s hospital room. “They need to pay for what they did to get it through their head that they did a bad thing.”

She said it’s been painful watching her daughter suffer.

It is the hardest thing I’ve ever been through,” she said. “No parent wants to sit in a hospital room with her daughter and watch her scream in pain. You never want to see this.” [2]

Crush your friend’s hip, plot to kill a teacher… who needs to play ball anymore?

“The plan was very specific. They would knock the teacher unconscious with a paperweight, bind her with toy handcuffs and duct tape, and then stab her with a steak knife, police said.  Each student would have a specific role in the plot.

One child’s job was to cover the windows so know one outside could witness the attack and another would clean up after the attack.”

The teacher’s “crime” and their justification for plotting this?

The teacher had allegedly scolded one of the students for standing on a chair. The plot was uncovered when another student reported that a student had brought a weapon to school.

Indeed, the paperweight, the cuffs and the tape were brought to school, and are pictured here in this image taken by the Waycross Police Department. [6]

Has the world gone mad?

In a word, yes.

“While some are busy scoffing at the effects of the negative influences too much violence on television, in movies, and in video games; the effects of unsupervised time online and too much freedom have on our youth, others are taking it seriously.

More and more, we see violence as a solution to a problem, said Victoria Williams, a psychologist with the Center for Psychological Services in Oak Lawn.

“Our kids have seen so much violence that they don’t experience it with the same regard or even the same caution that we may,” she said.

In many ways, says Doreen Zaborac, a licensed therapist in Tinley Park who also writes a column for the SouthtownStar, society is not just desensitized to violence, it glamorizes it.” [4]

So what are parents supposed to do?

How about parent your children?

Just as I, and so many others have been shouting about for years, this generation of parents has failed their children.  Those of us who are doing the right things have still failed this generation if we have not spoken up loudly enough to our own peers, about what is happening to our childrens’ generation.

It will affect us. Mark my words.

Our animalistic and violence-hungry children will grow to be adults who behave the same way. They will in turn, bring children into the world and raise them to be the same… or worse, because we allowed the snowball to roll unhampered through the field deep with frosty ignorance.

They may abuse the very parents who allowed this to happen, as their parents’ generation becomes elderly and reliant for their own care, upon the hellions they raised with no conscience for what’s right and how each human being deserves to live as a human… not as though we were all some animated character in a video game that bleeds fake blood and whose broken bones don’t hurt.

Zaborac offers these suggestions:

  • Control the things that are within your control.
  • Communicate with your child.
  • Being a good role model for your kids also is important.
  • Show them how to handle conflict by handling it in your own life.
  • Maintain a close relationship with their teens so that they confide in you, so they see you as someone they can turn to in troubling times.
  • Make sure they understand the difference between right and wrong. Talk them through scenarios and make sure they understand consequences. Sometimes, I think there are too many gray areas. Kids don’t always understand gray areas.
  • Another thing parents can do is keep abreast of what their kids are putting online.
  • We need to glorify standing up for the right thing. We don’t do that much anymore. [4]

She couldn’t be more right. I’m going to go out on a limb and say that in my opinion, being a good role model and glorifying standing up for the right thing are the most important things on that list. Yes, even teens whose parents try have a close relationship with, will go through times where they seem closer to friends. If the parent has shown by example, and made sure doing the right thing is something so ingrained in that teen though, it will be there when they’re faced with the horrible peer pressure.

And if they fall, the parent must understand that… is not the time to put aside being the role model and standing up for what’s right. Seeking quasi-truthful ways to get your child out of trouble will never give them those valuable tools, but will only result in your having condemned them, yourself, and a whole generation… to a world no one would even want their dog to live in.

Sources:

  1. http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=4626462&page=1&GMA=true  (Trianna picture source)
  2. http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080411/NEWS02/804110387/-1/NEWS02
  3. http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080410/NEWS02/804100401/-1/NEWS
  4. http://www.southtownstar.com/lifestyles/vickroy/886085,041308vickroy.article
  5. http://www.philly.com/philly/wires/ap/news/state/pennsylvania/20080409_ap_girls1011heldinattackatschoolplaygroundinpa.html
  6. http://www.nationalledger.com/artman/publish/article_272619847.shtml (Weapons picture source)

 

 


10 Comments so far
Leave a comment

The common theme that I am finding these days is that no one is taking responsibility for their actions. I am horrified that these kids stomped on this child’s hip, but there is no recourse. There is no responsibility it seems. Instead there is just this attitude of “my child could never have done this”.

I taught preschool about the time this group of kids was in pre-school and over and over again when we tried talking to the parents about troubling behaviour the response we got was “my child does not have a problem, it must be you, the teacher because they are fine at home”.

Comment by skywindows

This is just horrific.

I agree with Sky that parents take no responsibility these days at all. They simply won’t admit there is ever anything wrong with ‘their’ child, maybe because they think inside it might mean there is something wrong with their parenting. I dunno.

I think this is something devolving in society. People used to be honorable and have integrity, and that is becoming very rare in these troubling times. We’ve become a Nation of blame-everyone-else-first.

Comment by jayleen

Man, kids are crazy today. What is wrong with these kids?

Comment by bronsonfive

[...] seems that the news is filled with it. Columbine, School Killers, Playground Beatings and Third Grade Murder Plots… Teens beating a girl to post the video on YouTube, Sport Killings of the Homeless, and other [...]

Pingback by atLindas » Teen beatings, kid killers and child violence in the news. What’s wrong with kids today?

My daughter had her butterfly clip pulled out of her hair and broken in half by a little girl. When I spoke to the teacher she told me my daughter had a tendency to lie to me to get attention, IN FRONT OF MY DAUGHTER, then she spoke to the other girl and the other girl said she was no where near my child. She said she was walking with a different girl, so that girl was called out and Shyann said, you were in front of me, you have no idea what happened, the other girl said nope I was with so and so and she didn’t do anything. The teacher talked to the playground teacher who had watched it all go down exactly as Shyann had said. What did the teacher do/say? She said that other girls weren’t lying they just didn’t see any reason to bring up something that had already been dealt with by the playground supervisor. Yeah. No wonder I pulled her out and homeschooled her. She’s going back next year with the command to aim for the face with her fist of any child who pulls that crap. Considering the teachers don’t even stand up for the kids who are being picked on.

Comment by Carrie

oh and this was in 3rd grade as well…

Comment by Carrie

An issue I feel passionate about! Parenting…. it does involve taking responsibility for the values your children have and who they are.
Bullying…. killings…. violent video games……..Respect! Respect! Respect
Respect for people, people’s belongings, feelings… what are parents thinking!!!
How can parents protect bad behaviour; do they not see the consequences of not disciplining children and making them accountable for their actions.

I agree with all that you say Fracas…..that children are being raised with no conscience. Video games desensitizing our next generation, children running rampant while parents strive to appear credit card rich… raising “silver spoon children”, trying to be friends instead of mentors and actually giving them the best start in life possible.

Children are the world’s resources! Besides squandering this, parents that do not instil superior morals, values and a good sense of right and wrong in their child are shirking their responsibility. This “avoidance” path only causes grief for all.

Having travelled, there are many societies where it is not only the parents who meter out teachings and consequences, it is the responsibility of the whole community. Why has society taken away the school’s permission to discipline. What is wrong with detentions? Extra essays? Why do we wait until “killings, beatings, bad behaviour” cause school kids to be expelled!!! Seeing that children spend a good portion of their day at school, let’s give some of that disciplining power back to the schools. We all need to band together to raise good kids! Our world depends on it!

If parents are becoming more lenient and negligent in parenting, perhaps consequences for both parents and children need to be explored….. when children are at a young age. Perhaps parents should be held responsible!!! People need to be responsible for their actions, no matter how old they are. If parents don’t teach, perhaps there should be consequences for them as well.

Comment by aussiebabe

Hey Fraccy – a note to check you-know-where to see Dusty’s pics of grandkid. Also another note for you in there from the chicken’s nemesis. You can erase this when you’ve seen it. :)

Comment by jayleen

Nice post

daisy

Comment by daisy

Many small children know what to do and say to get their parents arrested. They are taught this by society.

Years ago I walked in from pulling weeds in the yard and tripped over my daughters shoes, I told her to pick them up and put them away, she rolled her eyes and turned to walk away, I grabbed her arm… made her do as I said. Next thing the police were at my door, scolding me in front of my child (child had lied of course) Officer said I was not to touch my daughter (I did grab her arm) I said I will do what a parent must do, he said then he’d have CPS come and take my daughter.

Kids get better and better at manipulating the system to get what they want. They hone these skills to perfection. Today their is more parent abuse then the other way around… all jump to protect a child (children know this)…

Parents are falling into societies gaps.

I have seen many parents, “not” parent their children (and I do mean many!) due to the real probability of their children being taken away. Children end up as, well as your article points that out, they are not very good citizens.

I have 4 adult children, all happy successful, loving, responsible individuals.

The hardest part of getting these results, were the:

Teachers
Police
CPS

and so on.

Comment by Junny




Leave a comment
Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <pre> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>