Seven Year Old Handcuffed Over $5
AFRIK UPDATE
The family of a 7-year-old New York boy is suing police and
the city for $250
million, saying cops handcuffed and interrogated the boy for ten hours after a
scuffle over lunch money at school.
Wilson Reyes, a student at Public School 114 in the Bronx reportedly got into a fight with a fellow student
in December after he was accused of taking $5 of lunch money that had fallen on
the ground in front of him. Responding to a complaint of assault and robbery,
the police were called and took the boy to the local police precinct where officers allegedly handcuffed and interrogated him for ten
hours, according to the lawsuit.
"Imagine how I felt seeing my son in
handcuffs," Wilson's mother, Frances Mendez, told the New York Post.
"It was horrible. I couldn't believe what I was seeing," she said.
The claim, filed by family attorney Jack Yankowitz, accuses the NYPD, among other things, of
false imprisonment, physical, verbal, emotional and psychological abuse, and
deprivation of Reyes' constitutional rights.
Robbery charges against the boy were later
dropped, and the NYPD, though it disputes the accusations in the suit, is
investigating the incident.
"While the lawyer's claims are grossly
untrue in many respects, including fabrication as to how long the child was
held, the matter is nonetheless being reviewed by the department's Internal Affairs Bureau," Deputy Commissioner
Paul J. Browne told ABC News in an emailed statement.
New York City Public Advocate Bill de Blasio was
critical of the NYPD in a statement posted on theNew York City Public
Advocate's website.
"Seven-year-olds don't belong in
handcuffs," he said. "As a parent, I wouldn't stand for this in one
of my kids' schools. Our school system's over-reliance on the NYPD as a
disciplinary tool traumatizes our young people, sows distrust in our
communities and drains vital city resources away from responding to genuine
crimes. This has to stop."
Source:ABC News
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