Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Court upholds arrest of boy who burped in gym class

-

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — A federal appeals court has upheld the petty misdemeano­r arrest of an Albuquerqu­e student accused of repeatedly disrupting his middle-school class with loud burps.

The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals decision on Monday ruled that the officer and educators named in the lawsuit were entitled to immunity, and the arrest was justified under a New Mexico law that prohibits anyone from interferin­g in the education process.

The student was a seventh-grader at Albuquerqu­e’s Cleveland Middle School at the time of the May 2011 arrest.

His mother, who also isn’t named, filed the lawsuit against the then 13-year-old’s principals and the police officer who escorted him to his patrol car before patting him down, cuffing him and taking him to a juvenile detention center. He was held for an hour before his mother arrived. She argued her son’s arrest was unlawful and resulted in excessive force.

“At worst, (the boy) was being a class-clown and engaged in behavior that would have subjected generation­s of school boys to an after-school detention, writing lines, or a call to his parents,” a complaint filed by her attorneys said.

According to the school, the boy was in physical education class when his teacher said he began making other students laugh with fake burps. The teacher sent him to the hallway, where he continued burping and leaning into the entrancewa­y to the classroom so the students could hear.

That’s when officer Arthur Acosta, assigned to the middle school as its resource officer, was called to the hallway where the boy was seated, according to court documents.

The boy disputed the version of events provided to the officer by his teacher Margaret Mines-Hornbeck before the officer led him away from the classroom, and took him first to the school’s administra­tive office and then the juvenile detention center.

The boy was suspended for the remainder of the school year.

The appeals court also ruled Monday on a separate complaint brought by the boy’s mother stemming from a school official’s decision to search the boy in the November after the burp-related arrest.

Court documents show the assistant principal who suspected the teen may have been involved in a marijuana transactio­n asked him to remove his shoes and jeans, and flip the waistband of a pair of shorts he was wearing under his jeans.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States