Thursday, October 11, 2007

SNEAKY BOOY EARNS TRIP TO THE POLICE STATION

Oh my, how bizarre! Well I guess that is one way to do it. If we can control and/or discipline our children we just call the police in to do it for us.

Can you imagine doing it here at home though? Firstly to try and get the police to come ot your home for anything - would be a bonus to start off with and thereafter they are likely to charge you for 'defeating the ends of justice' as they would probably view it as a hoax of some kind!

Only in Africa - but where else would you choose to live? It's home to me, warts and all!

Sneaky boy earns trip to the police station
December 06 2006 at 04:58AM
By Seanna Adcox


Columbia, South Carolina - A fed-up mother had her 12-year-old son arrested for allegedly rummaging through his great-grandmother's things and playing with his Christmas present early. The mother called police on Sunday after learning her son had disobeyed orders and repeatedly taken a Game Boy hand-held video game player from its hiding place at his grandmother's house nextdoor and played it. He was arrested on petty larceny charges, taken to the local police station in handcuffs and held until his mother picked him up after church. "It was only to teach my son a lesson. He's been going through life doing things and getting away with it," said the boy's mother, Brandi Ervin.
Police did not release the boy's name. The mother said her son was diagnosed in the last year with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, but that his medicine does not seem to help. She said he faces an expulsion hearing at his school on Wednesday. Rock Hill Police Captain Mark Bollinger said the boy took a swing at a police officer assigned to the school last month. He has been suspended from school since then. The boy's case will be presented to Department of Juvenile Justice officials in York County, who will decide what happens to him, Bollinger said.
His mother hopes he can attend a programme that will finally scare him straight."It's not even about the Christmas present," she said. "I only want positive things out of it. There's no need for him to act this way. - Sapa-AP

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