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Presentation to the Pinellas County School
Board This past spring, I requested that the Board members visit the Criminal Court Complex to observe juvenile delinquency court proceedings. Janet Clark went during the school summer vacation, so the detention and arraignment cases were not as school-related as you will see between now and next May. When you attend, arrive early, at 7:45 a.m., and you will see children in handcuffs and leg restraints. Also, take the time to watch a juvenile delinquency trial for a school-related charge. I observed the trial of an 11 year-old elementary school boy who was charged with battery in a school-related incident that involved a 5th grade girl who had a crush on this 5th grade boy. She accused him of inappropriate touching to her chest area over her shirt, which law enforcement called battery. This ‘offense’ was alleged to have occurred within six feet of the teacher and another adult who both testified they saw nothing, nor heard the girl call out for help, as the girl had proclaimed. At the trial, the boy was found ‘not guilty’ by a Pinellas juvenile judge. Just to give you an example of how a juvenile judge speaks to an 11 year-old child, here is what the judge said to the boy. Please imagine if an 11 year-old child would comprehend what this judge said to him. This is the official court transcript excerpt, starting on page 68: I’m going to read this in a similar barking style that the judge spoke.
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