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Florida Teen Expelled and Arrested For Science Experiment

First time accepted submitter ruhri writes "A 16 year-old girl in Florida not only has been expelled from her high school but also is being charged as an adult with a felony after replicating the classic toilet-bowl cleaner and aluminum foil experiment. This has quite a number of scientists and science educators up in arms. The fact that she's African American and that the same assistant state attorney has decided not to charge a white teenager who accidentally killed his brother with a BB gun has some thinking whether this is a case of doing science while black."

25 of 1,078 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Playing the race card again by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You could have responded without turning this into race rant yourself.

  2. America has become pussy nation by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 5, Insightful

    America is a bunch of pussies now. Had something like this happened in the 50s-80s..maybe even the 90s, the result would have been a stern reprimand and at most a couple days suspension. This "Daddy" syndrome needs to end. I doubt even the French would freak out the way the school and DA have.

  3. What science? by Keith+Mickunas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Was this really a science experiment? She was mixing household chemicals in a plastic bottle on school property. It had nothing to do with her science class. It's more likely she got this stuff out of the janitor's closet or something like that. It sounds more like a kid being stupid rather than one experimenting.

    Not that I agree with the penalty in any way. Detention or suspension would be ok here since no real harm came from it. It doesn't merit police involvement, or comparison to an accidental shooting.

    1. Re:What science? by ozydingo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      On the one hand, you're right, and calling it a "science project" and a s"science fair experiment" is playing with language.

      On the other hand, since when should science encompass things only inside science class? Whether the experiment was "does the explosion really happen?" (as claimed), or "how will people react to this awesome explosion" (also likely), it's still no stretch to call it science. So the one thing I disagree with you on is this apparent dismissal.

      But, I think overall you and I are in agreement. In my view there is are appropriate and inappropriate place to do such an experiment where you have an idea that the result might be something like an explosion. Maybe doing this type on one's own on school grounds is inappropriate -- though I'm sure there are arguments to be made on both sides for that statement. But does it deserve zero-tolerance, expulsion, and a criminal charge of a 15-year-old as an adult? I can't imagine anyone would think so (though, apparently, some do...)

  4. Re:Playing the race card again by martas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What does a kid with a BB gun have to do with this? Nothing, but it "creates the narrative".

    Funny, if you drop the quotes, instead of "creating a narrative", the BB gun story actually creates a narrative. Namely a narrative where an ADA is out for blood in one instance of possibly reckless behavior from a child that didn't cause anybody any harm, but ignored another instance of possibly reckless behavior from a child that resulted in the loss of life. Whether this has anything to do with race is of secondary importance. The primary issue is the apparent lack of consistency in the severity of prosecution from this ADA.

  5. Re:Every boy used to do this by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 5, Insightful

    She is being tried as an adult, as such, the records will not be sealed. She is unfortunately fucked for life if she is found guilty...

    And I really hope that whatever judge gets this case, tosses it out for stupidity reasons, and bitch slaps the educational establishment for this travesty.

    --
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  6. Re:a chemical explosion in a school bathroom is ok by jbmartin6 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not many are saying that punishment isn't warranted. The problem is that the police were involved at all, that's the ridiculous part. Frankly if the police and DA have time to get involved in this sort of thing layoffs are long past due in this district.

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  7. Re:a chemical explosion in a school bathroom is ok by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No one is saying it's OK. We're saying it's not a felony. Make the kid clean up the mess and suspend her for a week. Problem solved.

    Excessive criminalization is a much bigger threat to us all than kids with drano bombs.

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  8. Re:Playing the race card again by ebno-10db · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I used to dismiss things like "driving while black" until, after a fracas about one such incident in New Jersey, several NJ state troopers came forward and said that it was "unofficial" policy. It's also been statistically documented. If I knew I was more likely to get pulled over because of the color of my skin, I'd be damn resentful for the rest of my life. Want an ever better example? Check out the racial stats on Mayor-for-life "Bill of Rights No Longer Applies" Bloomberg's stop and frisk police state program. Also, given how absurd the government's reaction is, I don't blame anyone for playing the race card or using any other trick to do something about this. I thought it was a temporary suspension, which is no big deal, but apparently she "will be forced to complete her diploma through an expulsion program". WTF? Given the absurdity of "zero tolerance" (aka "zero brains") policies, the principal may have little choice. He did say she meant no harm. But being charged with a felony? WTF? Nobody was hurt. Nobody was likely to be hurt. Schoolyard fights have bigger physical consequences. Since the state has prosecutorial discretion, forget any nonsense about them not having any choice. If I'd been prosecuted this way for some of the "experiments" my brothers and I did as teenagers, I'd be doing life.

  9. Re:Lets not by thewolfkin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Lets not attribute to malice what can be attributed to stupidity.

    And in this case, I hardly believe its about one being black,although it could play a part, it beingthe us,it seems more a thing about one being gun related and the other science related.

    We all know what many americans hate most.

    While there is a theory for that, it doesn't line up with the statements released. They're specifically citing the dangerous nature of the girls activities and the hallowed ground aspects of a school along with actions need consequences. I'm all for punishing the girl. Having actually read a few of the articles she did something stupid. Detention would be light. A suspension for a few days should be the most she gets in my opinion. Expulsion and charges are extremely overboard and charging her as an adult comes out of nowhere, considering both the lack of malice, the lack of injury, and uprightness of the accused. She didn't run away she was there when they came for her and owned up for her actions. She had support from students, teachers, and the principal directly. If this isn't a case for SOME sort of leniency what is?

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  10. Re:Florida by i+kan+reed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think you may be missing the point of condemning racism if you find it acceptable to casually condemn an entire region as being of similar mind. That said, the south wouldn't have as much trouble with racism as it does, if it weren't for the pervasive denial of racist things as racist. So don't take my post as defending that.

  11. My son was expelled for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My now 17 year old Son was expelled from high school two years ago for... get this... popping a regular old helium balloon. He was charged with Disorderly Conduct (the catch-all "when we want to charge you with something" summary crime in Pennsylvania) but we managed to get that dismissed at the Magisterial District Court after about $15,000 in legal fees, most of which was spent trying to obtain school surveillance video showing that the balloon popped when he leaned up against a wall, pinching the balloon between his backpack and the wall, causing it to pop.

    We've home-schooled him since then. It's truly amazing how absolutely brain-dead our government has become. It really does destroy everything it touches, including the education system.

    As the saying goes, "zero tolerance = zero common sense"

  12. Re:Florida by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This has nothing to do with religion. This is the fault of so-called "educators." They have become thoughtless, lazy, and self centered. Don't think so? They pass these so-called zero tolerance policies and blindly enforce them. It lets them discipline anyone for the slightest infraction so that they don't have to deal with the real issue of discipline within their own classrooms. It's far easier, from a teacher's perspective, to get a kid suspended or expelled rather than having to deal with discipline and the child's parents. In my school district, these zero tolerance policies are used in to go after the really bad kids instead of instead of going after them for the real issues. The attitude of most teachers and administrators is that so what if an innocent kid gets caught up in the rules, rules are rules. It's just easier to follow the rules than it is to enforce the spirit of them. It's amazing that educators just aren't thinking.

    I think it's great that some teachers spoke up for this kid, but the union and the board should do this as well.

    I also blame parents, but the parents of this kid are the problem. IT's the problem kids that have the loudest screaming parents only because if their kid gets suspended they have to take vacations days to watch them.

    Honestly, I can't stand the way we treat kids today. We say they're important and then do everything we can to show them they aren't.

           

  13. Re:Lets not by SternisheFan · · Score: 5, Insightful
    She's a kid 'screwing around', same as my friends and I would do as teenagers. Everything's a crime nowadays, and this YouTube video shows what she propably did...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uUudTpSvudg

    Makes a "Bang!" noise, that's all. Give her detention for doing it on school grounds, don't let her get a record that'll keep her from getting a future education. She's a smart and curious young person, that's all.

  14. Re:Playing the race card again by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The democrats are a center right party, we have no left party. The US has huge institutionalized race problems. You can simply compare punishments for the same crime meted out by our justice system to prove that.

  15. Re:Playing the race card again by Dr.+Zim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I'd been prosecuted this way for some of the "experiments" my brothers and I did as teenagers, I'd be doing life.

    No kidding. We'd be under the jail. There used to be a time in this great land of ours when kids could play with things like black powder, acetylene, and sodium and all we'd get is a finger wag by the authorities and maybe have to pay for a trash can we would turn inside out.

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    (name withheld by request)
  16. Re:Florida by Toonol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think you may be missing the point of condemning racism if you find it acceptable to casually condemn an entire region as being of similar mind.

    Exactly, and that goes on a lot, even among otherwise intelligent people. "That *large diverse group* is so bigoted!"

    Not only are comments like that repulsive because of their innate stupidity, they're harmful because they are recasting the basic elements of racism and bigotry in a more socially tolerable guise, against a group that the poster feels it's OK to condemn based on stereotypes.

    And I'm not from the south, so this isn't defensiveness. It's irritation. Just think about what you say.

  17. Re:Playing the race card again by martas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The way I interpreted the summary is as follows: "Case A wasn't prosecuted, case B was. Case B was less deserving of prosecution than case A. One difference between the two cases is attribute R, which should not have any bearing on the decision to prosecute, but in practice often does (as is quite well documented). Hence, it is worth questioning whether this is one of the instances where attribute R is incorrectly used to decide matters regarding criminal justice".

    That seems quite reasonable to me.

  18. Re:Florida by JWW · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your last line is spot on.

    Zero tolerance policies are for zero brained educators.

  19. Re:Not a science experiment by BLKMGK · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No it wasn't, this experiment was done outside. The police report clearly states this if you had bothered to read. When I was a kid I did the same thing with dry ice and water as well as vinegar and baking soda. Water and baking powder were also interesting but pretty weak. Friends did all sorts of stuff with powdered iodine. All of us turned out just fine, we didn't have our lives ruined or curiosity killed. My teachers wouldn't have allowed me to do this but they might have demonstrated the reaction to our class as they did many other things. We're destroying our kids...

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  20. Re:Playing the race card again by ebno-10db · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're talking about the school's reaction. The far more egregious issue is charging her with a felony, which is something the school has no say in. This is more about police overreaction and DA's whose only interest is self-aggrandizement. Law, justice, or even sanity be damned. What do you think happened to Aaron Swartz?

  21. Re:Florida by neonKow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, but the school is supposed to be the a source of wisdom and knowledge for developing adults. Instead of being the voice of reason that acknowledges and points out the heightened sensitivity to the child (and yes, a 16-year-old is still very much a child when it comes to making non-malicious mistakes like this), and teaches her to exercise better judgement, the school system is teaching her that if her curiosity leads her to accidentally crossing the line on what will freak out parents, the who system will come down on her and try to throw the book at her.

    Although, after reading what I just wrote, that's probably a pretty accurate and depressing lesson of our current paranoid state. Still, I don't think kids should be subjected to such treatment.

  22. Forget the Race Issue Here by smack.addict · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do think the race issue is worth discussing. As well as the gender issue.

    But there's something more fundamental and less likely to stoke passions at play here:

    DOING SCIENCE IS ABOUT MAKING MISTAKES. Her "punishment" should be to write a paper on what she was trying to do and why the results were not what she expected. Simple, end of story.

    There should be no real punishment of any kind, much less the over the top expulsion and arrest.

    The simple fact is that she should be encouraged to make mistakes, not punished for them. And the most basic problem we are dealing with is that our school systems don't understand this fact.

  23. Re:Playing the race card again by blueturffan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about interpreting it this way. "Case A wasn't prosecuted, Case B was. At first glance, Case B appears to be less deserving of prosecution than Case A, but Case B took place on school property. In Case B there was clearly intent to create an explosion and given recent high-visibility events involving 1) kids being murdered at a school, and 2) innocent bystanders being killed/maimed by an explosion it is predictable that any explosion at a school will be highly scrutinized. Furthermore, in Case B, the so-called experiment appears to have been done without supervision, permission or any safeguards making the "experiment" excuse seem unlikely. Additionally, schools have published weapons policies and zero-tolerance policies, with mandatory consequences for violation. Had Case B taken place away from school property and/or under controlled conditions, it is extremely unlikely that Case B would have been prosecuted."

    Note the complete absence of Attribute R. Also note that there was no judgment on the merits of the school's policies. As the parent of a student that was suspended for a zero-tolerance policy violation that even the principal thought was ridiculous, I have strong feelings about zero-thought policies, but that's a rant for another day.

  24. Re:Playing the race card again by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Thing is, there are likely a whole host of differences in the two cases."

    OK. How about she was a straight A student and he wasn't?

    "You know, contrasts like circumstance, motive, intent...?"

    I'm pretty sure those were covered. For example, she was exploring science and he wasn't. Her motive was to learn; his wasn't. She intended to be better at science; he didn't. As you can clearly see all those other differences point more strongly at a bias, and exploring those things makes it more likely that "she was black and he wasn't" is the big difference that the DA actually cares about.

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