7-year-old child in crisis accepted being put in handcuffs by police, RNC chief says following new report - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:29 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

7-year-old child in crisis accepted being put in handcuffs by police, RNC chief says following new report

Chief Joe Boland says the child, the subject of a new report on mental health crises in children, was placed in handcuffs to avoid physical contact.

Police defend actions criticized in recent report from child advocate

A man is wearing a white shirt and black hat bearing the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary's crest.
Royal Newfoundland Constabulary Chief Joe Boland believes his officers made a decision not to use physical force on the child in an escalating situation. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary chief of police is defending two officers' actionsfollowing a report condemning the use of handcuffs on a seven-year-old girl.

Wednesday's 20-page report from the province's child and youth advocate describes how police were called to respond to the childat a family violence shelter in St. John's. Two officers were brought on scene, one in uniform and one in plain clothes, along with support from the mental health mobile crisis unit.

Police said theresponse team officer andthe uniformed officer placed the girlin handcuffs to protect others in the room and shelter property, according to the report.

The advocate, Jackie Lake Kavanagh, found that the officer's actions wereneither proportional nor responsive to the particular needs and rights of the young girl, who was experiencing a mental health crisis at the time.

RNC Chief Joe Boland said Thursday he was initially shocked to hear that a seven-year-old had been put in handcuffs, but saysthe officer applied that restraint to avoid physical contact and said the child accepted beingplaced in handcuffs as an alternative.

"The child quickly escalated the behaviour, and the officer had to deal with a situation with what was the least amount of physical contact that could be used here to try to gain control of the situation," Boland toldThe St. John's Morning Show.

"[The officer]suggested to the child handcuffs. The child turnedaround, put her hands behind her back, and the handcuffs were gently applied. There was no confrontation whatsoever with regards to placing the handcuffs on the child."

Boland said the child also a threw a small object a crank used to open a window which hit one of the officers during the response. The call ended with the child leaving with a paramedic and a police escort.

When asked if the use of handcuffs was justified, Bolandreiterated police were trying to find a way to approach the situation without physical contact even consulting with an expert in British Columbia to find the best approach, according to the police chief.

"You have to look at this [like] 'Do you put hands on a child and physically restrain the child? Or was this the better option?' The report came back, and suggested the officer made the appropriate call," he said.

"So in this case here, the decision was made, 'What would be the least intrusive [action] or cause the least amount of physical contact with the child.' And this decision was made."

Psychologist Janine Hubbard says it's important to take trauma into account when dealing with deregulated children. (Meghan McCabe/CBC)

Dr. Janine Hubbard, a child psychologist based in St. John's, said she was "disturbed and concerned" by how the events were reportedby Kavanagh, saying a child in a similar situation to the seven-year-old might be experiencing some kind of trauma already.

"We know there are very, very rare occasions where physical restraint is an appropriate solution for a deregulated child. And that's usually when the child is putting themselves in extreme physical danger or potential for harm," Hubbard said.

"That's immediately going to have an impact on how a child is going to react when they feel threatened, when they feel frightened, when they feel scared. It needs to be handled from a trauma-informed perspective."

Incident highlights need for more training

Hubbard points out that adultsde-escalate a child in crisis by setting the emotional tone in the room.

"Providing as calm, quiet and safe an environment as possible. Remembering you have a child who most likely is in a fight or flight response. That means they're not at a stage where they're listening to reasoning so we need to regulate in other ways," she said.

RNC officers will undergo trauma-informed training in the fall, according to Chief Boland. (Glenn Payette/CBC)

Hubbard said the incident has highlighted the need for additional police training in mental health and trauma. Bolandsaid that work has already begun within the RNC, with all officers scheduled for trauma-informed training in the fall.

"I don't think that police intervention is the right intervention. I think it was the reason why we created a mental health mobile crisis unit here ... I'd like to see it expanded, quite frankly," he said.

"We have made significant advancements here in trying to deal with a significant problem in our community.... We'll continue to work with our partners in the community to try to enhance our service."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from The St. John's Morning Show