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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — When the police got a tip that Bonner
Elementary was being hit for the second time in a week, they rushed
three squad cars to the school. As they were cordoning off the grounds,
the burglars emerged - dashing out a front door and across a field.
Norm
Kenaiou, a veteran cop, caught one burglar struggling to hop a
chain-link fence. The shock came when he spun his suspect around and
saw two, doe-like eyes blinking back at him: the eyes of a terrified,
8-year-old girl.
Should he read the child her Miranda rights?
Handcuff her? Kenaiou couldn't bring himself to do that. Instead, as he
later described it, "I took her hand and, just as a father would lead a
child, walked her back to my patrol car."
That another
8-year-old, a 9-year-old, two 12-year-olds and a 14-year-old were also
arrested for the New Year's Day break-in was just as troubling. "It was
a real gut punch," Kenaiou says.
In this working-class tourist
mecca, a party town best known for motor racing and spring-break
frivolity, crime has never been an outsider. Today, Daytona's crime
rate is more than double Florida's and the nation's, having jumped 13
percent in 2006 alone, according to the most recent state
figures available.
But what especially unsettles law enforcement
here is that juveniles - some as young as 7 - are being arrested for a
larger share of the city's felonies.
Mike Chitwood flagged the
problem two years ago, soon after taking over as Daytona's police
chief. It wasn't just that poorer neighborhoods were being pounded by
burglaries, or that cars were vanishing from dealership lots, or even
that assaults and sex offenses were up.
The crimes were happening
under the noon sun - and not far from the city's schools. Initially,
Chitwood ordered truancy sweeps. Then he had his officers fingerprint
kids caught skipping school. After running the prints through the FBI's
national database he saw his suspicions confirmed: Kids were behind
the spike.
It didn't take long for the police to link rings of
teens to burglaries, car thefts, carjackings and even armed robberies.
"We even had kids taking stolen cars out of stolen-car lots,"
Chitwood says.
But more arrests do not a victory make, as the chief came to learn.
In
a city such as Daytona - where poverty lives among the weeded lots and
sagging houses off the palm-lined, neoned strip, behind the
triple-bolted doors of tenements in the shadow of the Speedway - teen
crime and even preteen crime have proven to be resilient adversaries.
Here
and in other cities, chronically high juvenile crime rates - those
ranging above the national average of kids under 15 committing 5
percent of violent crimes, 7 percent of robberies and 9 percent of
burglaries - fray the patience of judges and politicians and pop up on
newspaper front pages. Each spike in offenses prompts a new round of
questions, namely:
What will it take to keep our kids out of the
juvenile justice system - for some, just a pipeline to the prison
system? More aggressive policing? More social services? Harsher
sentences? Or something else?
Would programs to modify the
behavior of kids as young as 5 help? Or would taxpayers dismiss that as
just more nanny government, especially at a time of economic slowdown,
when local and state governments are desperate to cut spending?
Chitwood doesn't hesitate in answering.
"I've
got 8-, 9-, 10-, 11-year-olds committing burglary and stealing cars
now. What are they going to be doing when they're 21?" he says. "Hey,
either you pay when they go to state or federal prison, or you're going
to clean the crap up now. But somewhere along the line you are going
to pay."
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When children commit, or even plan, violent crimes, America takes notice.
Think
about the attention paid in April to a school in Waycross, Ga., where a
group of third-graders allegedly hatched a plot to knock out, handcuff
and stab their teacher with a steakknife.
Recall the outcry a
decade or so ago, when a series of horrific murders by kids prompted
dire predictions that teen "superpredators" would take over America's
streets. Legislators passed get-tough laws, and children were
increasingly transferred to adult prisons for serious crimes - a policy
that many states are now rethinking, and in some cases, retooling.
But
the "rookie" offenses, the ones that start children on the journey to a
life of crime, often don't get the attention they should, says Dan
Mears, an associate professor at Florida State University's College of
Criminology and Criminal Justice.
"There's an at-risk population
of kids in our country, particularly those in poverty - 8-, 9-, 10-,
11-year-olds - who get no attention from our juvenile justice system.
Even in our most progressive states, we wait until a kid has committed
a really bad crime ... to do something."
And even then, he adds,
"the response is much more focused on being punitive, rather than
asking, 'Jeez, what can we do to prevent them from getting enmeshed in
juvenile justice?' - which would cost us a lot less money than
eventually having to incarcerate them."
Daytona Beach is no New
York City, no Chicago; criminologists don't look here for national law
enforcement trends. And yet, Daytona suffers from economic and social
maladies that plague many American cities with high youth-crime rates,
making it fertile ground for a study on how to divert at-risk youths
from a life of crime.
-Seventeen percent of Daytona's families
live below the poverty line, nearly double the national and state
averages of 9 percent. Median household income, $25,439, is not
two-thirds of the national average of $41,994, according to U.S.
Census data.
-The percentage of single-parent households in
Daytona Beach is higher than that of two-parent households. Nationally,
there are three times as many two-parent households as single-parent
homes, the census notes.
-Fewer than half of Daytona's residents
own their homes, far below the average for the rest of Florida, where
70.1 percent are homeowners, census data shows.
And this city has
yawning demographic disparities: In Daytona Beach, where a third of the
population is African-American and half is white, 8 of 10 children
arrested in 2005-06 were black; just 16 percent were white, according
to the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice.
"These poor,
minority kids always fall between the cracks," says Jeffrey Butts of
Chapin Hall, a child and family research center at the University of
Chicago. "Their law violations scare away child welfare agencies, but
most times their initial crimes are not serious enough to merit
aggressive intervention by the juvenile justice system."
What to do, then, in cities like Daytona?
"We'll
never have the tax base and political will to bring outside solutions
into every neighborhood," Butts says. "What it takes is creative
organizing - to find positive people in each community and to build
them into a force for change."
---
There exists a patchwork
of nonprofit groups that endeavor to dent this city's child-crime
problem - faith-based, medical, government, among others. And then
there are foot soldiers, such as Georgia Williams, who works for the
Boys & Girls Clubs of America.
"Miss Georgia," as the
children respectfully call her, is director of the Palmetto facility in
32114, Daytona's poorest ZIP code. Her responsibility: 166 kids, ages
about 6 to 12. Her staff: Two.
In physical terms, Williams'
workplace is modest: A one-story structure of grafittied brick that a
decade ago served as a low-income housing project. This club has no
basketball court, no pool, no soccer field, not even a flag for its
flagpole - just a faded sign hung crookedly in a barred window:
"Safe Place."
What it does have, though, is fundamentally important: rules.
Here,
bad behavior isn't tolerated: not fighting, profanity, backtalk,
forgetting to brush one's teeth, or fluffing off homework. At 52,
Williams is old-school, likes order. "These kids don't come here to get
their character developed," she says, "but they wind up getting
just that."
Spanking is a no-no, but she has other tools, such as
"time outs." Those punished in this way sit alone for 10 minutes or
perform clean-up duty. More serious offenders receive two-day
suspensions, and do neighborhood cleanup.
Williams' larger
purpose is to groom these children for life "on the big stage,"
starting with lessons in hygiene, and other basics. She and her helpers
drill the kids on the importance of a good breakfast, telling the
truth, staying in school.
And, adds Kamri Skillings, 11, on the
pitfalls of illegal substances. "Cocaine, marijuana, meth - the
biggies," she says. Anything else she's been warned to avoid? "Um,
diseases that can be spread from kissing and stuff."
This all
might seem rudimentary, but it's vital to children who often don't get
the basics from a grandparent who's raising them, or a single mother
who's working multiple jobs to pay the rent, says Joe Sullivan, who
oversees 11 Boys & Girls Clubs in east-central Florida.
"A
lot of these latchkey kids need boundaries - how to act, how to behave.
They need somebody to pay attention to them," he says.
And yet, he says, only a handful of the poorest families in the surrounding projects send their kids to the Palmetto club. Why?
Williams
thinks it's largely cultural: "We do a lot of mentoring here. I like to
mold my youngsters, push them to the limit. I think that makes a lot of
the parents around here uncomfortable."
Sullivan understands
that. Still, he might be able to attract more children from the
neighboring projects by adding an outdoor playground. "You need to have
things for the bigger kids to do. They won't just sit indoors."
Then,
reality sets in: This is going to be a hard year. Private donations
have shrunken in the slowing economy; government dollars are getting
scarcer. Consequently, the Boys & Girls Club will shutter two
facilities in the county, spreading kids among its remaining clubs,
Sullivan says.
Gail Hallmon, operations director at The House
Next Door, a support agency for troubled families, commiserates. Her
organization lost $100,000 last year in funding from the state and
county - a 5 percent budget hit. This year, she expects more cutbacks.
"In
times like these, all social services are getting cut - and the first
things to go are the programs designed to keep kids from becoming
criminals. There isn't really any organized attention and funding to
help those kids who haven't broken the law yet - only for kids already
in the juvenile justice system."
Last year, her group partnered
with the local police to try to create a Daytona Beach Truancy Center.
The cops would sweep neighborhoods for truants and bring them to the
center. (Presently, they are returned to school, but police say the
students often walk in the front door and out the back.)
At the
Truancy Center, two social workers would interview and assess the
children and, together with school counselors, link them and their
parents to drug or mental health screening, classes on managing anger
and impulses, and the like.
The House Next Door applied for state
grants; the Daytona police applied for a grant from the Department of
Justice. The idea was to pool resources - about $250,000 - for the
center's first year.
Both were rejected.
"It's painful to
know," Hallmon says, "that you know what will work to keep kids from
becoming criminals, but that you can't get the money to make it work."
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