Three police officers went to an *elementary* school in Tennessee & arrested four Black girls.
One girl fell to her knees. Another threw up. Police handcuffed the youngest, an 8 yo with pigtails.
Their supposed crime? Watching some boys fight — and not stopping them. (THREAD)
2/ The police wound up arresting 11 kids in total, using a charge called “criminal responsibility.”
The arrests created outrage. State lawmakers called the case “unconscionable,” “inexcusable,” “insane.”
So how did this happen?
3/ These arrests took place in Rutherford County, which had been illegally jailing kids for years, all under the watch of Judge Donna Scott Davenport.
4/ Donna Scott Davenport is the only elected juvenile court judge the county has ever had.
She oversees the courts.
She oversees the juvenile jail.
She directed police on what she called “our process” for arresting children.
5/ In this deposition, a lawyer asks Davenport about taking the bar exam.
It took her nine years and five attempts to pass.
Three years after she got her law license, she was on the bench.
6/ Davenport describes her work as a calling.
“I’m here on a mission. It’s God’s mission,” she once told a newspaper.
7/ She says children must have consequences. She encourages parents to use drug-testing kits on their kids. “Don’t buy them at the Dollar Tree,” she says. “The best ones are your reputable drug stores.”
8/ Under Davenport, Rutherford County locked up a staggering 48% of children whose cases were referred to juvenile court.
The statewide average was 5%.
This graphic shows detention rates for juvenile courts in Tennessee. Rutherford County is on the far right.
9/ Lynn Duke, appointed by Davenport, is the county’s head jailer.
Tennessee narrowly limits when kids can be locked up. But Duke had her own way: the “filter system.”
Her jail locked up any kid deemed a “TRUE threat.”
As for what’s a “TRUE threat,” her handbook didn’t say.
10/ In a videotaped deposition, Duke was asked when the filter system applied. “Depends on the situation,” she said repeatedly.
A lawyer asked Duke, “Is it your policy or not?”
“No. Yes. It — it’s a policy to use it when necessary,” Duke said.
11/ Duke reports monthly to county commissioners, who liken the jail to a business and ask often about the number of beds filled.
“Just like a hotel,” one commissioner says in this video.
“With breakfast provided, and it’s not a continental,” says a second.
12/ The police officer who investigated this fight was Chrystal Templeton. She wanted to charge every kid who watched. She believed charging them was helping them.
By the time of this investigation, Templeton had been disciplined at least 37 times, her personnel file shows.
13/ To arrive at a charge, Templeton met with two judicial commissioners.
In Rutherford County, these commissioners wield great legal power. They can issue warrants, set bail and conduct probable cause hearings — all without needing a law degree.
14/ One commissioner, who used to work in a post office, came up with the charge of “criminal responsibility for conduct of another.”
15/ Of the 11 kids arrested in this case, four wound up being jailed under the “filter system.”
The filter system was illegal. Yet it was written into the jail’s standard operating procedures for nine years.
16/ The Tennessee Department of Children’s Services licenses juvenile jails. It inspected Rutherford County’s jail every year. Not once did it flag the filter system.
“There was very little graffiti,” an inspector wrote one year.
“Neat and clean,” she wrote in three other yrs.
17/ Judge Davenport declined to talk to us for this story. So did Duke and Templeton. So did the Department of Children’s Services.
20/ Check out this promotional video, narrated by Judge Davenport over saxophone music and B-roll of children in black-and-white striped uniforms.
It’s titled, “What Can the Rutherford County Juvenile Detention Center Do For You?”
21/ To report this story, we filed 56 public records requests, got 38 hours of audiotaped interviews from an internal police investigation and watched >100 public meetings spanning 12 years.
For more on our reporting process, check out the methodology section at the story’s end.
22/ @meribah and I want to thank the children and parents who shared their stories with us.
And if you want to know what's happened since this thread was posted in 2021 (outrage from national and state lawmakers; the judge decided not to run for reelection, etc.) here's a 2023 thread with updates:
10 years ago today, I was working a weekend shift @seattletimes when word came in of a landslide near a small town named Oso.
It turned out to be the deadliest landslide in U.S. history.
It also became an exhibit for why local journalism matters in a time of crisis.
1/
43 people died in the slide.
Two days afterward, the county’s head of emergency management held a news conference & said the area “was considered very safe. This was a completely unforeseen slide. This came out of nowhere.”
That same day, I discovered the opposite was true.
2/
I had found a 1999 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers report on the hill, warning of “the potential for a large catastrophic failure.”
I called the report's author, then drove to his office, above a church. He gave me 6 manila folders chronicling the hill’s long history of slides.
3/
3/ The NAACP Legal Defense Fund called for a civil rights investigation. So did 11 members of Congress, writing:
“Tennessee’s children deserve to enjoy their childhoods without the fear of being unjustly searched, detained, charged, and imprisoned.” propublica.org/article/tennes…
A young mom with 4 kids—including twin boys, one with cerebral palsy, the other with autism and epilepsy—moves into a rental home near Milwaukee.
She’s been evicted twice before, so this, her new home, seems “a dream come true.”
She has no idea of the home’s history.
(THREAD)
2/ Her name is Angelica Belen.
The landlord, when she moves in, is Todd Brunner.
He’s known around Milwaukee as the “foreclosure king.” He buys homes others have lost to banks. City inspectors know him well. He’s got lots of building-code violations and outstanding fines.
3/ Belen’s life has been defined by abuse and deprivation.
Brunner’s life has been defined by excess.
So in this two-story house, at 7750 West Hicks Street in West Allis, Wisconsin, two decidedly different lives intersect. propublica.org/article/milwau…
In Justice Alito’s draft opinion reversing Roe, he writes about “an unbroken tradition of prohibiting abortion on pain of criminal punishment,” up until Roe in 1973.
He cites, as historical authority, Sir Matthew Hale.
Let me tell you about Hale & his views toward women.
THREAD
2/ The Alito draft says Hale “described abortion of a quick child who died in the womb as a ‘great crime’ and a ‘great misprision.’”
3/ Hale became Lord Chief Justice of England in 1671. In his views of women, he was not a forward-thinking fellow — *even* by the abysmally low standards of his era.
(Here's an illustration of Hale, from the National Portrait Gallery in London.) npg.org.uk/collections/se…
To understand how KOMO—once a trusted news source in Seattle—has become what you see below, it’s worth revisiting this @KromanDavid story on how the station changed after being bought by Sinclair Broadcast Group. crosscut.com/2018/04/how-li…
Arise Virtual Solutions, which helps companies like @Disney & @Airbnb shed labor costs, loathes the word supervisor. It prefers Quality Assurance Performance Facilitator.
Many businesses use jargon.
But Arise uses bewildering language as a defense against lawsuits. Here's how:
2/ What is Arise?
Arise, in its words, “delivers radical flexibility and on-demand burst capacity at scale.”
Arise, in our words (i.e., @propublica’s), signs up customer service agents who work from home. It then sells this network of agents to companies like Comcast or Intuit.
3/ Arise has been accused of violating federal labor law.
It defends itself, in part, through a dizzying vocabulary of its own making.