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Mom Sues Cops Who Arrested Her for Leaving 14-Year-Old Daughter Home Alone. [ Midland, Texas ]
Reason Foundation ^ | 10.11.2021 | LENORE SKENAZY

Posted on 10/11/2021 9:58:49 AM PDT by george76

When my daughter was 12 she'd walk down the streets of Shanghai to get donuts," says the mom, Megan McMurry..

A federal judge has ruled that two cops who work at a public school in Midland, Texas, can be sued for seizing a 14-year-old from her family's apartment because she was there alone. Despite her pleas, the officers did not let the girl call her parents for hours, nor would they let her pick up the phone when her father called. They also searched the family's home without a warrant.

School Resource Officers Kevin Brunner and Alexandra Weaver do not enjoy blanket qualified immunity, ruled U.S. District Judge David Counts, in a case that began with a mom making painstaking plans for her children's supervision when she had to be out of the country for five days and her husband was deployed overseas.

In 2018, Megan McMurry was a special education teacher at a Midland junior high school, married to Adam McMurry, a soldier in the Mississippi Army National Guard. The family had lived in six countries over the course of 10 years, and her kids were used to independence.

"When my daughter was 12 she'd walk down the streets of Shanghai to get donuts," says McMurry.

When the family moved to Midland, the daughter, Jade, opted for online homeschooling. She was home alone for a good part of each day, which is perfectly legal, so long as a parent is not putting a child in harm's way.

In the meantime, McMurry took her 12-year-old son Connor with her to the junior high across town where she worked. He had perfect attendance.

But when the family learned their dad, overseas already, was being mobilized for another stint in Kuwait, McMurry thought the family should consider moving there to be together. She had a job offer at a Kuwaiti school and wanted to visit it before making her decision.

Her kids didn't want to come on the five-day trip—in part because Connor didn't want to ruin his perfect attendance streak—so McMurry arranged for the kids to be in the care of neighbors, Vanessa and Gabe Vallejos. Jade, the 14-year-old, babysat the Vallejos family's six-year-old for several hours every afternoon, so the families were close.

As for Connor getting to school, McMurry arranged for the school's counselor—another nearby neighbor—to drive him.

On Thursday night, October 25, 2018, she boarded the plane for Kuwait.

On Friday morning, the school counselor realized she wouldn't be able to pick up Connor after all, and asked the school resource officer—Weaver, who also lived nearby—to drive him instead. When Weaver didn't answer her telephone, the counselor arranged for someone else to drive the boy, according to McMurry.

Weaver called Child Protective Services (CPS) to report children left home alone. She also called her supervisor, Brunner, and the two went to the McMurry home for a welfare check on Jade.

This is where things got ugly.

The cops had the apartment building manager knock on the family's door. Jade answered and the cops told her she shouldn't be home alone. Jade started crying and asked to call her dad, McMurry says. But the cops wouldn't allow it. They did allow her to change into warmer clothes, since they were going to take her away for an interrogation. While she was in her room she managed to text her dad, "I'm scared! The police are here."

Meanwhile, Weaver went rifling through the cabinets.

The cops put Jade in the squad car and drove her to the middle school her brother was attending, according to McMurry. Bodycam footage shows her crying and begging the cops to let her call her father, but they refused to do so.

At the school, the cops kept Jade in their custody for several hours as they questioned her, asking things like, "Were you going to have a party?" They pulled Connor out of class and questioned him, too.

Meanwhile, CPS dispatched an investigator to the school. He asked the cops if they had called the parents.

McMurry says that when the cops said no, the CPS investigator was incredulous, since that's the first thing they're supposed to do.

Attorneys for Brunner and Weaver did not respond to requests for comment.

The CPS investigator was dismayed that the cops had told his agency that the children were abandoned and truant, because obviously Connor was at school, and the cops were also aware that Jade was homeschooled. (Believe it or not, Weaver and McMurry had been friends before this.) When Jade explained the arrangements her mom had made for their supervision, and CPS ascertained this was all true, it closed the case then and there.

But the cops did not.

When McMurry returned from Kuwait, she faced two felony charges of child abandonment. She turned herself in and spent 19 hours in jail before being released on bail.

Long story short, almost a year later—she was suspended without pay the entire time— McMurry's case came to trial. Brunner claimed to be on a prearranged vacation. McMurry, eager to get the case heard, allowed the trial to proceed without him.

Her neighbors, the Vallejoses, testified. The CPS investigator and his supervisors testified. The school counselor testified. Connor and Jade testified. When Weaver testified and was asked why she didn't let Jade talk to her dad, she replied she hadn't wanted to worry the man. In fact, here's some of the transcript:

Q: Do you not remember Jade telling you that her dad is trying to call her and you told her not to answer that phone?

A: Now that you've stated that, I do recall that occurring.

Q: So her father is trying to call her when you're taking her from her home to Abell Middle School and you're telling her…not to answer the phone when her father is calling?

A. Correct I didn't want to cause him any undue stress.

The trial took four days. The jury deliberated for five minutes and found McMurry not guilty.

Now McMurry is suing the officers for violating her Fourth and 15th Amendment rights. Her suit alleges that they searched her home without a warrant and seized her daughter illegally. The cops are not supposed to remove children from a home without alerting the parents, unless there is an immediate threat to the children's life and limb. Since the law is so well-established on those protocols that the officers had to have been aware of them, the federal judge has waived their plea for qualified immunity and is allowing the lawsuit to proceed.

This is particularly sweet for McMurry because she knows what actual abandonment looks like.

"My mother was a drug-addicted drug dealer," she says. "I grew up in foster care from the time I was 11. I would be in a two-week shelter, then a 30-day shelter, you know how it goes. I went to 25 different high schools by the time I graduated with a 4.0."

It was her hard-won resilience that got her to adulthood, and resilience is exactly what she and her husband are trying to instill in their kids. That's why she let them stay home without her. She knew they'd be responsible, and she knew this was not something impossible for young people to handle.

Clearly, the apple is not falling far from the tree. In a letter to the circuit court, Jade wrote that she wants everyone "to know what these two officers did to me and my family for no reason."

"My parents have taught me to work hard for anything I want and to self-advocate," wrote Jade. "I may not have known my rights that day, and they definitely didn't inform me either, but I knew what they were doing was wrong."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: kidnapping; localnews; midland; texas
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To: SkyDancer

My 80 year old brother tells the story of how when he was in kindergarten our mom walked him to the public bus stop. He would wait there until the bus came, ride it to a place where he had to transfer, transfer to the other bus and then walk a block to school. It was a Catholic school. Our parents had one car and she had a baby at home. He survived.


21 posted on 10/11/2021 10:26:12 AM PDT by Mercat
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To: Lurker

Good grief. When I was a kid my mom would say “be home when the streetlights come on.” She had no idea where we were, nor did the parents of any of the kids I played with. Circa 1966.


22 posted on 10/11/2021 10:27:01 AM PDT by freepertoo
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To: Allegra

# Power trippers exist at every level of government. CPS is pretty bad in a lot of places.

In this case, CPS were actually the sane ones. That is fairly surprising to me.


23 posted on 10/11/2021 10:28:10 AM PDT by zeugma (Stop deluding yourself that America is still a free country.)
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To: george76
Now McMurry is suing the officers for violating her Fourth and 15th Amendment rights.

The 15th amendment reads:

AMENDMENT XV - Passed by Congress February 26, 1869. Ratified February 3, 1870.

Section 1.

The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude--

Section 2.

The Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

How does that apply?

24 posted on 10/11/2021 10:29:05 AM PDT by gitmo (If your theology doesn't become your biography, what good is it?)
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To: nickcarraway
When CPS A voice of reason you know you’re in trouble.

In spades.

25 posted on 10/11/2021 10:30:37 AM PDT by gitmo (If your theology doesn't become your biography, what good is it?)
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To: dware
HA!!

Go get um!!

Kudo's to your Bro!!

It would be a pleasure to meet him and his fam!!

26 posted on 10/11/2021 10:33:07 AM PDT by Osage Orange (1961 VW Two Door Truck)
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To: freepertoo

Ditto that!!!


27 posted on 10/11/2021 10:34:10 AM PDT by Osage Orange (1961 VW Two Door Truck)
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To: george76

There is no method of execution too painful and slow for all these scumbag communist Apparatchiks...


28 posted on 10/11/2021 10:34:21 AM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is another Sam Adams now that we desperately need him?)
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To: george76

There was a time (and it still holds true in many countries) when 13 year old girls (and older) were allowed to legally marry.

Society has dictated what the legal age is for many things in life, and a lot of those societal decisions are arbitrary. For example, why is 18 the legal age for a lot of things, and why is 21 the legal age for drinking?

I’m not looking to have laws allowing 13-14 years become the legal age for anything, but, at that age, a lot of kids can take care of themselves at home and around school. While a lot of kids might take longer to mature, we are not all the same.


29 posted on 10/11/2021 10:35:33 AM PDT by adorno
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To: yoe
I think they are bored. Not much happening at schools so if you want your superiors to take notice of your stellar work you need to stir up some trouble for you to solve.
30 posted on 10/11/2021 10:37:39 AM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (I had my emotional DNA done. Turns out I am a reincarnation of Subadar Prag Tewarri.)
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To: george76

These stories make it tough to back the blue.


31 posted on 10/11/2021 10:40:02 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: george76

In homes where a parent dies and the older children have to take on responsibilities you may find that such 14 year olds are far more responsible adults at 14 than most college grads.


32 posted on 10/11/2021 10:40:03 AM PDT by Seruzawa ("The Political left is the Garden of Eden of incompetence" - Marx the Smarter (Groucho))
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To: dsrtsage

We left our kids at home alone when 12 yrs old.......at 15 we could go away on week end trips and have family members simply check in on them. They ‘earned’ this by being responsible while we were gone....and they learned too what it felt like not to have mom nor dad right there. Started slow with trips to the store...and built up to evenings out. Then day trips etc.

I suspect she had family and neighbors watching out for these kids. It should have never happened as it did with being reported in the first place.


33 posted on 10/11/2021 10:40:41 AM PDT by caww ( )
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To: Mercat

Same with gramps - school days waited at the corner with other kids for the bus to PS (NYC) one time he lost his bus pass and had to walk home, about three miles.


34 posted on 10/11/2021 10:41:10 AM PDT by SkyDancer (If at first you don't succeed, so much for skydiving)
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To: WMarshal

Kids today can’t even play in their own back yard alone without some ‘concerned citizen’ goes and reports it that some kid is outside unsupervised.


35 posted on 10/11/2021 10:42:22 AM PDT by SkyDancer (If at first you don't succeed, so much for skydiving)
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To: george76
That school counselor would be on my $hit list after this. The mom boards a plane to Kuwait, confident that the counselor is going to take her son to school, and the counselor bails on the responsibility. There are some things a person agrees to do for someone that simply have to be done. The counselor is like those commercials where a person "is pretty sure" a carnival ride is safe.
36 posted on 10/11/2021 10:42:37 AM PDT by Sans-Culotte (11/3-11/4/2020 - The USA became a banana republic.)
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To: george76

School cops are a “special” breed who can’t get on the real force.


37 posted on 10/11/2021 10:42:38 AM PDT by Seruzawa ("The Political left is the Garden of Eden of incompetence" - Marx the Smarter (Groucho))
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To: Mercat

At kindergarten level our school had safety classes for kids walking to school. Taught how to safely cross highways etc.

That of course doesn’t happen today and the world is far more dangerous for kids walking.


38 posted on 10/11/2021 10:43:06 AM PDT by caww ( )
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To: yoe

The system does not like people that home school and keep their kid out of their system.


39 posted on 10/11/2021 10:44:28 AM PDT by gunnut
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To: fwdude
I really never knew an empty house growing up as a late baby boomer.

This late baby boomer became a latch key kid at age 7. I knew what I was supposed to do when I got home (my homework..) and make sure my room was neat and organized. One of my parents checked my homework when they got home to make sure I did it correctly.

I guess that's called child abuse these days.

40 posted on 10/11/2021 10:45:27 AM PDT by usconservative (When The Ballot Box No Longer Counts, The Ammunition Box Does. (What's In Your Ammo Box?))
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