2012-05-14

Kindergarten cops! Say 5-year-old autistic boy’s tantrum at school gets 3 generations in scrap with NYPD

Vatic Note:  We are going to be seeing a lot more of this going on as we are already.  However, what has not  happened "yet", is the retaliation that usually accompanies these brutal assaults by the police.  What is dangerous about the cops doing this, is, they may well be married with children themselves and they would then be at risk.... so it would be best if they tried to act civil with our civilians.

First of all, the boy is autistic and most of you know  what that means.  It means he has been assaulted already even before, either with the intentional and criminally contaminated vaccines he is required to have to attend school, or by GMO products, or Drugs from a drug company, Eli Lilly Co comes to mind.

That means all this will pile up and then one day.... some small thing will trigger mass reactions and that is when the bankers better seriously hit the road.  Keep those airplanes parked close by fellas.   Or hunker down in your Goldman sachs recently reinforced building with your own power source within the basement.  Oh, yes, we know a lot.  LOL
Kindergarten cops! Say 5-year-old autistic boy’s tantrum at school gets 3 generations in scrap with NYPD
Posted by - April 18, 2012 

Mom and grandma get cuffed and great-grandma suffers broken rib in battle with police in Brooklyn, lawyer says

Kindergartner G.R., with great-grandma Lana Lirtsman (l.), mom Ida Rozenberg and grandma Maria Lirtsman. Kindergartner G.R., with great-grandma Lana Lirtsman (l.), mom Ida Rozenberg and grandma Maria Lirtsman.

A Brooklyn school’s botched handling of a 5-year-old autistic student’s tantrum ended disastrously — with his mom and grandma in handcuffs and his great-grandmother’s rib broken, the family and their lawyers charge.


Cops hauled the kindergartner out of Public School 197 in Brighton Beach, handcuffed his kin when they tried to comfort the boy, and pushed his 80-year-old great-grandmother out of the ambulance transporting him to the psych ward, they say.
[...]
Grandmother Maria Lirtsman, 50, was the first family member to arrive and was physically blocked from seeing her grandson, she said. 
A police officer dragged her down the school stairs faster than she could walk, she said, and at one point she fell. Cops handcuffed her twice, Rothman said. 
“I was treated like garbage, like I’m a second-hand citizen,” said Lirtsman, who immigrated to the U.S. 35 years ago. “In Russia , I would expect something like that, but in America it was the first time.” 
Cops also handcuffed the mother and then pushed the great-grandmother to the ground when she tried to get in the ambulance with the distraught boy. 
The ambulance driver ultimately stepped in to make sure the police released Rozenberg from handcuffs. 
G.R. was given a clean bill of mental health and released from Coney Island Hospital, his family and attorneys say. 
Later that evening, great-grandmother Lana Lirtsman returned to the hospital, fearing she was having a heart attack. Instead she learned that her rib had been broken, the family said.
[...]
Source: NY Daily News


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