The Maui News

ACLU demands reform after Black child is arrested on Oahu

- By JENNIFER SINCO KELLEHER

HONOLULU — Honolulu police officers and officials with Hawaii’s public school system discrimina­ted against a disabled Black child by handcuffin­g, arresting and interrogat­ing the 10-year-old girl for a “run-of-the-mill” dispute between children, the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawaii said.

The ACLU sent a letter Monday to the Honolulu Police Department, the state Department of Education and the state attorney general’s office demanding the statewide school district make policy changes, including forbidding staff from calling police on a student unless the student presents an imminent threat of significan­t harm to someone.

Honowai Elementary officials called police to the

Waipahu school in 2020 because the girl allegedly drew an offensive sketch of a student who was bullying her, according to the ACLU letter. The parent of another child wanted to press charges.

The girl’s mother went to the school and was falsely imprisoned when school staff and police prevented her leaving two rooms she was confined to, the letter said.

The mother “expressed some concern about being African American in an encounter with the police” and was worried about her daughter’s safety “in light of the police presence given the high rate of police violence against Black people, and the discrimina­tory disciplini­ng of Black girls in schools,” the letter said.

The ACLU wants the city and state to pay $500,000 in damages to the child and her mother.

The ACLU is giving police, education officials and the state attorney general’s office until Nov. 8 to respond.

“The Department of the Attorney General is aware of the letter and will work with the Department of Education to respond,” Gary Yamashiroy­a, special assistant to the attorney general, said Monday.

Honolulu police are reviewing the letter and will work with city attorneys to “address these allegation­s,” said Sarah Yoro, a spokespers­on for the the police department.

The letter described how the mother cried in horror while watching police drive her daughter away in handcuffs.

The girl later told her mother police made the child remove her shoelaces and earrings at the police station, but she didn’t know how. The handcuffs left marks on the girl’s wrists, the ACLU said.

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