In October 2012, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a civil rights lawsuit against Meridian, Mississippi, its police department, and officials for incarcerating children for non-criminal violations of school rules!
The public schools sent students to Meridian Police Department for the smallest things - like farting in class or “violating” the dress code by wearing the wrong color socks. Police automatically arrested all referred students, often without probable cause, no legal representation, and without reading them their Miranda rights.
And, of course, they found that their school-to-prison pipeline had a severe impact on Black and disabled students.
Fortunately, in 2013, Meridian Public School District parted ways with the police department - somewhat. They decided to have internal school staff handle student misconduct instead. They implemented resource officers properly trained in addressing mental health incidents.
There’s an overarching message here.
Black youth already face state-sanctioned violence outside the classroom as it is. So community-based resources and better disciplinary action approaches for Black youth in schools cannot be ignored. It was crucial for the Meridian school district to divest in policing and invest in our children.
The truth is police have no place in schools. With what we know about the "adultification" of Black youth and how school officers push the school-to-prison pipeline along, more public schools should follow suit.