
Hyde Square Task Force Youth Community Organizers Waldy Nova, Sheila Reyes, Pamela Pauling and Deli Tejeda are working on a survey of 700 Boston teens looking at their relationship with MBTA police. The teens say MBTA cops routinely conduct illegal searches of youth. (Yawu Miller photo)
When Waldy Nova sees an MBTA cop approaching, he says, several scenarios run through his head.
“I automatically assume I’m going to get talked down to, searched, arrested or kicked out of the station,” he says.
Nova knows his experience is not unique. He knows because he has witnessed numerous altercations between MBTA officers and students. He also knows this because he and his fellow youth organizers at the Hyde Square Task Force have conducted surveys with more than 700 Boston teenagers to assess the relations between the cops and the students.
The Task Force youths are now compiling their data and expect to release their report next week. While they wouldn’t comment on the data, the teens working on the project said most of the teens they interviewed spoke about harassment, illegal searches and being kicked out of stations.
“Most of us have experienced most of these problems or witnessed them,” said Pamela Pauling, who worked on the survey. “A lot of people get searched for no reason. They get grabbed and thrown up against the wall.”
Each of the four youths interviewed at the Task Force office also shared their own personal stories of instances where they said they either experienced or witnessed police harassment. None of them has ever been arrested.
Deli Tejeda tells of being illegally searched by police officers who said they suspected he was selling drugs. Sheila Reyes was kicked out of Forest Hills Station by a surly officer who accused the group of teens she was with of littering.
“The youth that we work with are always complaining about problems with transit police,” Reyes said.
The Task Force teens say youth relations with the MBTA police are particularly important because most of the high school students in Boston use the public transit system and come into contact with transit police.The experience youth have with MBTA officers is markedly different than what adults experience, according to Nova.
“I’ve never seen an adult being kicked out of a station,” he says.
“Or searched,” adds Pauling.
“Or kicked out of a station,” adds Reyes.
MBTA police officers have jurisdiction over MBTA property and have the full right to arrest anyone engaged in illegal activity on MBTA property.
In the 1990s, the MBTA police engaged in a “zero tolerance” policy against youth on the system, logging as many as 680 arrests a year.
After a series of Banner articles detailing allegations of MBTA police abuse against teens, including numerous arrests of teenagers for trespassing, the agency brought in a new chief, Joseph Carter, who re-assigned many of the officers who were responsible for the arrests and dismantled the Anti Crime Unit — a plainclothes unit that targeted teens.
Under current Chief Paul MacMillan, MBTA police are now making fewer arrests, according to youth advocate Lisa Thurau Gray, who says the agency arrested 84 youth last year.
“I think things have improved tremendously,” she said.
MBTA spokeswoman Lydia Rivera said MacMillan was not available for comment. The chief is scheduled to meet with the Task Force youth this week, she said.
The complaints the youth are making are not unique to the MBTA police. Like most black and Latino teens in Boston, the boys at the Task Force each say they are often stopped and searched by Boston Police.
“Wherever I’m at, whenever I see any kind of authority, because of my skin tone I’m going to get searched,” says Tejeda, who is dark-skinned.
The teens say they know the police are not supposed to search them without probable cause.
“Most kids are intimidated into revealing the contents of their bags and pockets,” Tejeda says. “They’re forced to do so illegally. The cops break the rules and don’t get called out on it.”
“I think that’s why some youth act out,” Nova cuts in. “How would you feel if you were in that situation? If it happened to you constantly? Everyone has their breaking point.”
The Task Force teens say their ultimate aim is to improve relations between youths and the MBTA police.
“We want to establish a good relationship,” Nova says. “We want there to be harmony between the police and the people they’re supposed to protect and serve. Youth are as much a part of the community as adults, just as the T officers are a part of the community and have to be treated with respect.”
| May 9 10:11am by Moses [24.218.127.121] | |
Our society as a whole is a cancer. If we do not move to a cashless society we will become slaves of the bankers and corporations, oops we already are. Why should the MBTA police change their behavior? 1. Their behavior is condoned, and even applauded, by its institution. The public is powerless against these agencies because they have convinced us that we should use our public officials to make changes. We actually need to stop using money, which pays them to oppress our people, and work for each other instead of the established money based system. (Zeitgeist addendum, look it up!) 2. The courts uphold police false reports and juries watch fake law and order shows assuming that our judicial system is honest (Book: The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander) 3. Police are being instructed to act as if anything can happen at any second. This technique will drive a human being crazy by paranoia which is why they act the way they do. Why should they change their behavior when our government is waging war all over the world? Rule by aggression or you can call it being “sadistically proactive” and officers get a pin and a plaque at the end of the year for most arrests. 4. What financial benefit would the MBTA receive if they stopped searching for arrests to meet monthly quotas to keep their jobs? It’s a business people, the police need arrests to move up, personnel need paperwork to push, lawyers need defendants, the jails and prisoners need inmates. It is a self perpetuating system based solely on profit and personal gain.
If you believe that our society is better off in a money based system where morals will always be trumped by money, then you are part of the problem. Good luck trying to make a better world, knowing it is not a profitable venture. |
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| May 6 0:14am by gingicat [70.88.219.217] | |
When I worked for BU Academy, a private high school for gifted children with a different schedule than the public schools, our kids were regularly harassed for traveling during public school vacation time, and forced to pay. From a friend still working there, I understand that it is still the case... and that the Commuter Rail conductors are particularly nasty about this. |
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