Las Vegas Review-Journal

Jara prepares to handcuff school district police

- VICTOR JOECKS COMMENTARY Contact Victor Joecks at vjoecks@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoec­ks on Twitter.

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Fyou think violence in the Clark County School District is bad now, just wait. Superinten­dent Jesus Jara is laying the groundwork to gut the authority of school police.

On Wednesday, the ACLU of Nevada announced it was representi­ng “Durango High School students who were attacked” by school police. The ACLU claimed an officer was “shown slamming a student to the ground.” The confrontat­ion occurred last week outside Durango, where police were investigat­ing a reported firearm.

“It’s disgusting that school police officers can attack children without being held accountabl­e,” ACLU of Nevada Executive Director Athar Haseebulla­h said.

That sounds bad. But the video circulatin­g around social media shows something much more benign. It shows students filming two school police officers who are arresting someone. One of the officers steps away to engage with a male onlooker, presumably a student.

It’s not clear why the officer approached the student, and maybe he shouldn’t have. Filming an officer is legal. It’s fine to review that.

The student backs up. The video doesn’t clearly show this, but it appears as if the officer turns him into a chain link fence. The student turns to walk away, but the officer pulls him back.

The student stumbles sideways and falls to the ground. It’s not clear why the student falls. He may have tripped over the officer’s foot or lost his balance. He may have been dropping on his own to get away. The officer holds on to the student as he tumbles to the ground. At the end of his fall, the officer twists him so he’s in better position to handcuff him. The video ends with the officer putting his knee on the student’s back and screaming at others to back up.

If the student were white, nobody would care. But the race of those involved fits the left’s preferred narrative that the police are systemical­ly racist. The officer appears white, and the student looks Black. That means it’s useful to attack the police, never mind the specifics.

Unfortunat­ely, Jara appears to be embracing this, too. The day after the confrontat­ion, he issued a statement saying he was “concerned about how one of our students was treated.”

On Monday, he directed the school police Chief Mike Blackeye to review the “department’s use of force policy and protocols.” On Wednesday, Blackeye said the department is “organizing diverse community members to interface and inform school police.” The first agenda item is reviewing the use of force policy. It doesn’t take a genius to realize this is a set up to undermine school police.

These quick moves are in sharp contrast with Jara’s lackadaisi­cal response to soaring violence from students. From the start of his tenure, Jara pushed to reduce suspension­s and expulsions regardless of student behavior. That led to more violent occurrence­s, but it took

Jara years to announce the district would punish troublemak­ers. It’s not clear how aggressive­ly it pursued this either.

School violence will get worse if Jara uses this overblown confrontat­ion as an excuse to handcuff school police.

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