Safety Goes Overboard

Here are the child-safety follies of 2022.

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What happens when society gets so concerned about child safety that it starts imagining danger EVERYWHERE, and punishes anyone remaining rational? Here are the child-safety follies of 2022:

MOM HANDCUFFED, JAILED, FOR HAVING SON, 8, WALK HALF A MILE

Last year around this time, Heather Wallace asked her son Aidan, 8, to get out and walk the half-mile home if he couldn’t stop bothering his brothers in the car. Aidan was a block from his suburban Waco, Texas, house when someone called the cops. 

Three raced over to Ms. Wallace’s home. One asked: “Would you do this again?” Wallace said she wasn’t sure. “That’s when the cop replied, ‘OK, I’m going to have to arrest you,’” she recalls. He proceeded to handcuff her in front of the tots and take her to jail. 

Ms. Wallace could only talk to the press now, a year later, because she successfully completed 8 drug tests, 65 hours of community service and a personal essay of contrition, all part of her guilty plea. Had she gone to trial and lost, she’d have faced a 2-year mandatory minimum sentence.

MOM HANDCUFFED, JAILED FOR LETTING DAUGHTER, 14, BABYSIT

At the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, rural Georgia mom Melissa Henderson had to go to work, but her children’s day care center shut down. So, she had her daughter, 14, babysit the four younger siblings. One, age 4, wandered off to his nearby buddy’s home and was gone perhaps 15 minutes. 

The buddy’s mom called the cops. They charged Henderson with child endangerment, because, they said, the boy could have been kidnapped, run over or “bitten by a venomous snake.” In February of 2022, the founder of Parents USA, David DeLugas, filed a new motion to dismiss this case. If she loses, Ms. Henderson can face up to a year in jail.

STRANGER DANGER, PART I

The Lower Merion school district outside of Philadelphia canceled all six of its elementary schools’ parades because, “Just the thought of having an entire school population of young children in a field surrounded by adults that we couldn’t possibly screen was worrisome,” said the district’s community relations director. Yes — tots around any unscreened adults. Awful. Speaking of which —

STRANGER DANGER, PART II: THIS TIME IT’S PERSONAL

As I was walking past my local Queens, New York, elementary school in May, I paused to enjoy watching recess. The playground monitor told me: “You’re not allowed to watch the kids.”

“I can’t stand on a public sidewalk?”

“No.”

When stand I did, security was called. I was told, again, I was a danger simply for being an adult near children (behind a one-story chain-link fence). Humiliated but hounded, I left. 

STRANGER DANGER, PART 3: ONCE MORE WITH FEELING.

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children is the agency that put the missing tots’ pictures on milk cartons in the ‘80s and never mentioned that most were runaways or taken in a divorce dispute. 

Then in 2017 it launched a sort of mea-culpa campaign, telling parents NOT to teach their children “stranger-danger.”

But old habits die hard. This fall the agency sent an email blast to parents across America warning that “attempted abductions occur more often when a child is going to or from school or school-related activities.” 

In other words: Anytime tots aren’t in a school, car or home, they’re in grave danger from
 Guess who. 

NO EXCEPTIONS.

The daughter of a dying, bedridden 79-year-old on the sex offense registry in Shenandoah, Texas, asked for permission to provide her dad’s end-of-life care in her home. But local law says registrants are not allowed to live within 1,000 feet of a playground. The daughter lives 894 feet from one. Request denied.

WAS THERE ANY GOOD NEWS? 

Yes. Colorado became the fourth state to pass a Reasonable Childhood Independence law saying neglect is when you put your children in serious, obvious and likely danger — NOT any time you take their eyes off them. How bizarrely sane.

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