Showing posts with label criminal charges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label criminal charges. Show all posts

Saturday, March 29, 2008

8 Year Old Autistic Boy Charged for Biting Teacher

According to the Tifton Gazette an 8 year old non verbal autistic boy at Horizon Academy in Tifton, Georgia has been charged with assault after he bit his teacher. The teacher claims to have been walking by the student, engaged in regular teaching duties, when he reached up and bit her on top of her right arm. (This seems a little strange if the boy was seated how was he able to reach up and bite her on top of her arm while she walked by?).

I am amazed that an 8 year old non verbal autistic boy was charged with assault in this case. Many severely autistic children bite themselves and others. It is sometimes a part of their neurological disorder. The boy might well have been overwhelmed by his placement in a classroom with other students and might have needed instruction in a quieter less stimulating environment.

On the basis of the facts reported in the Tifton Gazette .... it would not appear they know all that much about autism in Tifton, Georgia.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Autism and the Criminal Law

Should an 18 year old man with autism and an IQ measured between 43 and 62, who a psychiatrist has testified functions on the level of a 3-4 year old be found competent to stand trial for criminal charges of assaulting a teacher and a room mate in separate incidents? The question is not one that Michelle Dawson, Jim Sinclair or Amanda Baggs have offered much enlightenment on but it is one that is undoubtedly of great concern to many parents of low functioning autistic children, both out of love for their children and concern for themselves, siblings and other caregivers. It is a question that is under deliberation by a judge in an Athens, Georgia court proceeding as reported in Judge considers whether to put mentally disabled man on trial for assaults by Athens News Senior Writer Jim Phillips. The Defendant is being tried in juvenile court.

The young man involved requires 24 hour supervision and has difficulty following the context of a discussion according to the psychiatric evidence. A caseworker though has testified that he understands that it is wrong to hit. I would not presume to assess the evidence from afar, as summarized in a newspaper article, of a matter under deliberation by a judge in a proceeding. The court's decision will be of interest to many parents of severely autistic children.