Police Reportedly Assaulted 11-year-old Black Boy For ’Horseplay’ At State Fair

Time and time again, police act like monsters to people of color and are allowed to walk away without consequences. A situation made possible by a system that was designed for them to do exactly what they are doing without consequence. The question for the parents of these children and those who love them is, what are they prepared to do to protect their loved ones since the system refuses ro stop this madness?

By Darrell Smith

A moth­er demand­ed answers Monday after she says her 11-year-old son was chased, tack­led and blood­ied by California State Fair offi­cers dur­ing the fair’s Kids Day. The inci­dent on Tuesday, July 19, brings up fresh alle­ga­tions of racism and exces­sive force from offi­cers. Elk Grove’s Cynthia Martin said at a news con­fer­ence just out­side the Cal Expo gates Monday her son was hors­ing around with friends out­side of a State Fair roller coast­er. That horse­play led fair police to chase down and injure the 11-year-old before ques­tion­ing him for more than 30 min­utes and forc­ing him to sign a no-tres­pass­ing agree­ment with­out his par­ents present. “My child is not the same. He’s with­drawn. He’s scared,” Martin said

Martin’s son stood near her side, his head bowed at times and his hands shoved deep into his jeans pock­ets. The fam­i­ly was accom­pa­nied by Tanya Faison of Black Lives Matter Sacramento and civ­il rights attor­ney Mark Merin. “He’s 11 years old. He’s a child. What makes him dif­fer­ent from any oth­er 11-year-old? I’ll tell you. He’s Black. A Black male,” Sacramento NAACP pres­i­dent Betty Williams told reporters. “It doesn’t mat­ter your age when it comes to soci­ety and law enforce­ment. You are treat­ed dif­fer­ent­ly and he should nev­er have been treat­ed this way.

Merin has filed a tort claim, pre­cur­sor to a fed­er­al civ­il law­suit against California State Fair. “He’s just a child. They brought him down by chok­ing him. They man­han­dled him and used force, so imme­di­ate­ly there’s false arrest,” Merin told reporters at Cal Expo. “… They obvi­ous­ly used exces­sive force. Then they took him out of the view of his moth­er which vio­lates her due process. This puts Cal Expo on notice that this is a big issue.” Faison is call­ing for offi­cers’ body cam­era and oth­er secu­ri­ty video footage. Williams plans to meet with fair executives

There is noth­ing that val­i­dates grown men doing what they did to him. There’s no rea­son to tack­le a child,” Faison said. “Any lev­el of injury is unac­cept­able.” The inci­dent is the lat­est involv­ing State Fair law enforcement’s inter­ac­tions with young Black and brown fair­go­ers in recent years. In 2017, two eth­ni­cal­ly diverse groups of teenagers said they were racial­ly pro­filed by State Fair police dur­ing open­ing night before they were eject­ed from the grounds. One girl suf­fered a con­cus­sion and her thumb frac­tured in an encounter with officers

One of the exchanges in 2017, cap­tured on video, showed a 17-year-old girl tack­led to the ground by offi­cers. The girl tack­led by fair police believed she was tar­get­ed because she and her friends were Black. In an unre­lat­ed inci­dent at the same 2017 fair, a Black teen said police began record­ing him on a cell­phone cam­era after a fight between two oth­er teenagers, then fol­lowed him as he walked away. The offi­cer soon called addi­tion­al offi­cers, one of whom shoved him toward the exit. “This isn’t the first occa­sion I’ve been called to try to get jus­tice for some­one for an inci­dent at the State Fair,” Merin said

Martin’s son and a group of six friends were in line for a ride at the fair at the end of the fair’s Kids Day. The group was “horse­play­ing,” Cynthia Martin said, jock­ey­ing to be first in line for the ride. The gate for the ride was closed as rid­ers queued up, but Martin’s son leaped the gate to sit in the front seat of the ride ahead of his friends. A ride oper­a­tor kicked him off and told him to leave the ride, accord­ing to the family’s four-page claim against the fair. He rejoined his friends and was walk­ing with them toward the exit when he noticed they were being fol­lowed by sev­er­al officers.

In the neigh­bor­hood we live in, most peo­ple don’t look like us. His friends don’t look like him. The oth­ers have blond hair and blue eyes or brown hair and brown eyes,” Martin said. The offi­cers did not approach his friends, she said. The 5‑foot‑3 boy was fright­ened and ran from the group. The offi­cers chased him down and tack­led him to the asphalt. He escaped the first tack­le and sprint­ed toward the gate and his moth­er, but offi­cers caught up to him. He was again tack­led to the ground and then pushed into a gate as fair patrons looked on. Officers car­ried the boy away to a secu­ri­ty trail­er and refused to let his moth­er inside, she said. “They slammed the door in my face. No child should be inter­ro­gat­ed by police with­out their par­ents there,” Martin said. “This was Kids Day, a day when fam­i­lies should be safe com­ing to the fair and not be ter­ror­ized by the police depart­ment and assault­ed and have vis­i­ble injuries and vis­i­ble scars and emo­tion­al scars.

State Fair offi­cials in a state­ment Monday after­noon said they were “dis­ap­point­ed” by the 11:30 p.m. inci­dent, say­ing the 11-year-old was unat­tend­ed and “demon­strat­ing dan­ger­ous behav­ior that put him­self and oth­ers at risk of severe phys­i­cal harm, specif­i­cal­ly climb­ing over a safe­ty fence and almost being hit by a roller coast­er ride.” Fair offi­cials said ven­dors accused the boy of attempt­ing to steal items, accord­ing to fair police, and the boy was briefly detained. A small cut was treat­ed with a ban­dage, fair offi­cials said, and then released to Martin after ques­tion­ing. “We believe the Cal Expo Police fol­lowed all prop­er poli­cies to quell the sit­u­a­tion and keep the minor safe,” the state­ment read. But Martin described a far dif­fer­ent scene, telling reporters that she took her son to a local Kaiser Permanente med­ical cen­ter for fur­ther treat­ment. “He had doc­u­ment­ed injuries around his neck, hips and stom­ach area and area of his upper shoul­ders. He was bleed­ing from his nose. His shirt was cov­ered in blood,” Martin said. “They knew what they had done.”