Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Euless Family Harassed By Police

July 15, 2013 – In September 2008, the cities of Bedford and Euless enacted a Juvenile Daytime Curfew ordinance.  Their stated reason for needing the curfew was to "keep kids in school," citing state law as "cumbersome," and stating that the curfew "allows an opportunity to immediately address a truancy problem as it occurs; specifically on the first incident of truancy."  [Source:  Bedford Curfew Ordinance FAQ]

Concerned citizens wrote letters and appeared before the councils to express their concerns about the daytime curfew:  that daytime curfews circumvent state law, bypass due process, establish a short-cut to "probable cause," violate a parent's rights to direct the activities of their children, stifle individual freedom, criminalize being outside, can potentially be abused by overzealous officials, and can result in civil rights lawsuits against cities which implement them inappropriately.

Despite citizen outcry (the whole story is chronicled within the pages of this blog), the council and police chiefs from both cities responded with assurances that students who were out in public during school hours who were not truant or committing a crime would not be affected by the ordinance. 

That was five years ago.

On May 9, 2013, several homeschool children from the same family were walking together in Euless. They were on their way to their grandmother's house in Bedford, via Pipeline Road;  something they did each week when their schoolwork was completed, at their parents' direction.

A little ways into their journey, a Bedford police officer noticed them.  The officer crossed to the Euless side of the street, escorted the children to the Bedford side of the street, and asked them where they went to school, as it was a school day.  The children explained to the officer that they were home schooled and were on their way to their grandmother's house in Bedford.  The Bedford police officer then contacted the Euless Police Department and transferred the children to them, even though the children were not committing any crime and they were not truant.

Although no further action from the police department was necessary, the Bedford police officer detained the children and did not allow them to continue on their way to their grandmother's house where they had been instructed by their parents to go.  Additionally, no effort was made to contact the parents or the grandmother.

When the Euless police officers arrived, they took the children back to the family's apartment in Euless, entered the apartment behind the children, and began looking around, asking questions about how the homeschooling was conducted, and demanding to see their curriculum.  At one point, one of the officers threatened action by CPS.

When the father contacted the Euless Police Department immediately after the threat, he was told by a corporal that it was the department's standard practice to contact CPS if something "didn't seem right," although she refused to comment what was meant in regard to the incident except to offer the "advice" "to clean up the apartment."

To this day, CPS has not contacted the family, so it appears that the police officer used that threat to harass the family.

Despite the family's attempt to contact the Euless Police Department about the incident, and after repeated requests by the Texas Home School Coalition to Euless Police Chief Michael Brown to investigate this incident, the police chief has refused to do so.

The Euless police chief has asserted that "there had to be more to the interaction than described," and yet he has done nothing.  A simple investigation on his part would seem a no-brainer. Instead, he is now insisting that the family contact him a second time before he can do anything.

When the Euless and Bedford City Council first brought up the daytime curfew issue in September of 2008, I was staunchly opposed, for the very reasons illustrated by this incident: police harrassment of children who are out in public with parent permission and who are not committing any crime.

The fact that police entered the home without adult permission or a warrant, curriculum was demanded to be shown and the homeschooling methods were questioned, and that CPS was threatened and used to intimidate the family goes too far.

Here are some questions for Police Chief Michael Brown, the Euless City Council, and HEB-ISD School Board (if you remember, it was the HEB School Board who initiated the request for the daytime curfew ordinance through each city's police chief):

1. Why has this incident, in which a home school family had their home searched by police, asked by them to see curriculum and told that CPS would be called, not been investigated in spite of numerous requests?

2. Does this incident typify what officials mean when they cite the need for daytime curfews for a "zero tolerance" policy?

3. Why would a police chief refuse to investigate this matter?

This incident highlights some disturbing infringements on this family's constitutional rights.

If you are a Euless resident, I urge you to please contact the Euless Police Department and Euless City Council and let them know that you don't appreciate this infringement on this family's rights. 

Contacts:
Euless Mayor Mary Lib Saleh: 817-685-1419
City Hall, 201 N. Ector Dr. - City Hall, Euless, Texas 76039

Euless Police Department 817-685-1500
1102 W. Euless Blvd (Hwy. 10) Euless, Texas 76040
 
Tim Lambert, president of Texas Home School Coalition, has included the correspondence between the Euless Police Chief and himself on the THSC website.
To read the correspondence between THSC and the Euless Police Chief

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