Tuesday, May 21, 2019

BUT THEY ARE JUST CHILDREN

L.A. County Juvenile Halls Are So Chaotic, Officers Are Afraid To Go To Work

LAPPL News Watch
May 20, 2019

The detention officer’s email described “chaos” inside one of Los Angeles County’s juvenile halls. Her words were desperate, describing unruly, violent youth and fed up detention officers — enough to prompt a surprise visit by Joe Gardner, president of the county’s volunteer advisory panel, the Probation Commission.

Inside the Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall in Sylmar, he found shattered windows, smashed walls and tiles ripped from the ceilings. Phones in common areas were busted and debris lay scattered on the floors. Gang graffiti had been scrawled on the walls. The staff were overwhelmed.

“I was stunned,” Gardner said of the facility, where about 200 youths are housed behind a sturdy, red-brick wall topped with circular barbed wire. “Some of the damage appears to have taken time to do. It appeared there really wasn’t the oversight that there needed to be.”

The “chaos” in Sylmar is far from an anomaly. Officers have long argued that their workplaces are becoming more violent — and data backs that up. But internal reports and photographs obtained by The Times show just how dangerous and dysfunctional Los Angeles County’s youth detention operation has become.

EDITOR’S NOTE: After complaints by the ACLU that pepper spray causes burning and inflammation of the eyes, nose and skin, the LA County Board of Supervisors in February unanimously approved a “phased elimination” of pepper spray by the end of the year, saying it's inhumane and out of step with the rehabilitation of youth in custody.

Every one of the county supervisors should be made to work as juvenile detention officers daily for one week. What would you bet they wouldn’t last two days? Then let’s see what they have to say about rehabilitation and the use of pepper spray on the darling youths.

No comments:

Post a Comment