Guest guest Posted February 4, 2003 Report Share Posted February 4, 2003 All, You may remember when I mentioned, a few months ago, the 14-year old male high school student with AS that was accused of brutally sodomizing a small poodle, leading to the euthanizing of the pet. I was upset that the police, the district attorney, and the media had apparently decided that the boy was guilty. The evidence was spotty... only a single eyewitness that had not gotten a clear view of the perp's face, but the fact that he had AS meant to everyone that he HAD to be the one that did it. It just fit everyone's preconceived notions about what " those kind " of people would do. Had this been a normal 14-year-old, it is doubtful that the media would have revealed the identity and the address of the accused; until this happened, I had thought it was illegal. I learned that it is legal, but the media have an " understanding " with the authorities that they are not to reveal juvenile's names or addresses. In this case, though, they chose to do just that, and it is obvious that they did so because of the special circumstance in this case... that is, that the boy is on the spectrum. It is doubtful that the police would have arrested someone and stopped the investigation with such flimsy evidence. He had AS, though; that, apparently, was a handy surrogate for actual evidence. Being different automatically creates the presumtion in the minds of the masses that one is more likely to do all sorts of terrible things. This boy had to endure months with a transmitter strapped to his ankle, locked in his house... other boys that commit crimes are released on bail, but not someone this dangerous. He has AS; he must be a threat. Now it has been revealed that the youth's lawyer proved in court that the boy was in school when the attack on the dog took place. The charges have been dismissed, and the youngster is free. Free in the sense of not being incarcerated, but certainly not free of the demons that will probably haunt him for a lifetime. He was treated like a horrible criminal and subjected to terrible treatment by the authorities and the media, and it was all because he was not normal. Certainly it was not the physical evidence; there was none. It was not the eyewitness testimony; no one clearly saw the face of the person that was allegedly in the area at the time, and no one saw anyone do it. He will have to live with the pain and humiliation of this forever. I am glad that he was vindicated; most people on the spectrum seem to love animals, so I really had doubts that he did it. He maintained his innocence throughout, but no one believed him. He was, and is, abnormal; he must have done it. Only he didn't. I have asked the reporter that interviewed me and wrote the article in which I appeared to write a follow-up piece. I am also going to write a letter to the editor. The newspaper, which was one that chose to reveal the boy's identity, is the Tucson Citizen, if any of you are interested in doing the same. Shame on them... shame on the police, and shame on the district attorney. Shame on neurotypical society for assuming that abnormal means criminal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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