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Page 59 of 73


E. MPD Unnecessarily Escalates Encounters with Children.
We have serious concerns about MPD’s treatment of children and the lasting impact of
police encounters on their wellbeing and resilience. 42 During interactions with children
regarding minor issues, MPD officers escalate the encounters with aggressive and
demeaning language and, at times, needless force.
At times, MPD aggressively escalates encounters with children who have committed no
crime or where the child is a victim. In one incident, officers handcuffed and used force
against a 16-year-old Black girl who called MPD to report she had been assaulted.
Before arriving at the precinct to give a statement, officers handcuffed the girl after she
refused to give them her phone. When she became agitated and reactive, the officers
responded with insults and threats, telling her, “When [the handcuffs] do come off . . .
Ooh, I’m itching,” “I leave my gloves on when I fight,” and “If I gotta whip your ass, I will.”
After three hours, officers removed the handcuffs to reposition them. As she complained
that her hands were hurt and swollen and tried to move her wrists, the officers grabbed
her and pushed her face down onto the ground to handcuff her again. The girl was then
arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.
MPD has escalated interactions when enforcing laws that are intended to keep children
safe. After two Black boys (ages 15 and 16) ran from an officer who was citing them for
a curfew violation, officers demeaned the boys and threatened violence. When one boy
asked if they were going to jail, the officer responded, “If it’s my decision, hell yeah . . .
I’d have so much damn fun rolling your ass down to jail. I’d love doing that shit.” Another
officer threatened to assault the boys when he worried that he may have lost his MPD
mobile device during the foot pursuit: “I am fucking these little kids up, man… I am
fucking you all up, I just wanted to let y’all know that.”
MPD officers have mistreated children in crisis, even when it is clear the child has
significant disabilities. In one incident, a CIT officer threatened to take a 14-year-old
Black boy to adult jail because the boy ran away from home. The boy was diagnosed
with autism, ADHD, bipolar disorder, and developmental delays and had the intellectual
functioning of a four-year-old. The boy’s mother had called the police after the boy, who
had been released from a mental health facility that day, got upset at bedtime, threw a
garbage can and a chair, and ran from home. After the boy was found, a CIT officer
raised his Taser toward the boy, who was calm and compliant, and told him, “I don’t
want to use it on you, but if you don’t listen to me, I can.” Officers planned to take the
boy to the hospital for psychiatric treatment. But the CIT officer continued to threaten
him, saying that he would take the child to jail “with the big boys,” and “If I have to come
42 Interactions with the police can lead to damaging and lasting outcomes for children, especially Black
and Latinx teens, including post-traumatic stress, increased levels of depression, diminished academic
performance, and increased chances that a child will engage in delinquent behavior in the future.
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