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White Cops Just Following Protocol to Serve and Protect Themselves When They Handcuffed a 64lb, 3.5 Ft Tall, 8 yr Old Black Boy During Niggerization Lesson at [Blind Obedience to Authority] FLA School

From [HERE] A Florida family is suing after a video surfaced showing the arrest of an 8-year-old Black boy at an elementary school.

Police said the child, whom the family says has special needs, was accused of punching a teacher in a 2018 incident in Key West, Florida. The video began circulating on social media this week.

Body camera video shows the child crying as he was handcuffed.

“He was so small the cuffs fell off his wrists!” civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump said in a tweet. “Unbelievable!!”

Crump, who is representing the boy’s family, provided the video, which shows white Key West police officers trying to arrest the 64-pound, 3.5-foot-tall boy only to realize the handcuffs were too big for him.

According to the police report, the teacher, who is not the boy’s normal teacher, claimed the boy punched her in the chest. The report said the teacher did not sustain any “obvious injuries.” The white media did not mention whether the teacher was also white - what do you think?

The boy was taken to a juvenile detention center and charged with felony battery, a charge that has since been dismissed.

The 8-year-old’s family said the boy takes medication for ADHD, oppositional defiant disorder, depression and anxiety, and he can become sensitive to touch. They said the school was aware of his disabilities.

The family is suing the three officers for excessive force, the school officials for failing to intervene, the city of Key West and the school district for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act.

“Where’s the decency, where’s the humanity. Where is the concern?” asked Crump. “That is somebody’s child. All those adults would never allow that to happen to their child, but for whatever reasons, they said, it’s fine to do it to this little boy.”

The Key West police chief told the Miami Herald that the officers involved did nothing wrong and followed standard operating procedures.