iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Christopher Baker, 4th Grade Boy, Allegedly Stuffed Into Duffel Bag By School Employees

By BRUCE SCHREINER   12/22/11 06:10 PM ET   AP

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- A 9-year-old autistic boy who misbehaved at school was stuffed into a duffel bag and the drawstring pulled tight, according to his mother, who said she found him wiggling inside as a teacher's aide stood by.

The mother of fourth-grader Christopher Baker said her son called out to her when she walked up to him in the bag Dec. 14. The case has spurred an online petition calling for the firing of school employees responsible.

"He was treated like trash and thrown in the hallway," Chris' mother, Sandra Baker, said Thursday. She did not know how exactly how long he had been in the bag, but probably not more than 20 minutes.

Mercer County schools Interim Superintendent Dennis Davis said confidentiality laws forbid him from commenting.

"The employees of the Mercer County Public Schools are qualified professionals who treat students with respect and dignity while providing a safe and nurturing learning environment," Davis said in a statement.

State education officials said they were investigating.

Chris is a student at Mercer County Intermediate School in Harrodsburg in central Kentucky. The day had barely begun when his family was called to the school because Chris was acting up. He is enrolled in a program for students with special needs.

Walking toward his classroom, Baker's mother saw the gym bag. There was a small hole at the top, she said, and she heard a familiar voice.

"Momma, is that you?" Chris said, according to his mother.

A teacher's aide was there, and Baker demanded that her son be released. At first, the aide struggled to undo the drawstring, but the boy was pulled out of the bag, which had some small balls inside and resembled a green Army duffel bag, Baker said.

"When I got him out of the bag, his poor little eyes were as big as half dollars and he was sweating," Baker said. "I tried to talk to him and get his side of the reason they put him in there, and he said it was because he wouldn't do his work."

Baker said when school officials called the family to pick him up, they were told he was "jumping off the walls." Days later, at a meeting with school officials, Baker said she was told the boy had smirked at the teacher when he was told to put down a basketball, then threw it across the room.

At a meeting with school district officials, the bag was described as a "therapy bag," Baker said, though she wasn't clear exactly what that meant. She said her son would sometimes be asked to roll over a bag filled with balls as a form of therapy, but she didn't know her son was being placed in the bag. She said school officials told her it was not the first time they had put him in the bag.

So far, almost 700 people have signed a petition on the website change.org. Lydia Brown, an autistic 18-year-old Georgetown University freshman from Boston, said she started it after reading a story about Chris.

"That would not be wrong just for an autistic student. That would be wrong to do to anyone," Brown said.

Advocates for the autistic were outraged.

Landon Bryce of San Jose, Calif., a former teacher who blogs about issues related to autism, said the school's treatment of Chris was "careless and disrespectful."

"A lot of the damage that we do to students with all kinds of disabilities is by treating them as though they deserve to be treated in a way that's different from other people," Bryce said.

Baker said she heard different accounts about her son's behavior that day.

Baker stopped short of calling for the dismissal of school employees, but she said they should be suspended. They also need more training, she said.

In Kentucky, there are no laws on using restraint or seclusion in public schools, according to documents on the state Department of Education's website.

A July letter from the state agency to special education directors said the state had investigated two informal complaints this year.

In one, "a student (was) nearly asphyxiated while being restrained," and in the other, a student vomited from panic attacks after spending most of an academic year "confined to a closet, with no ventilation or outside source of light," according to the letter.

Baker's case was first reported by WLEX and WKYT.

___

Associated Press writer Janet Cappiello contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST EDUCATION

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- A 9-year-old autistic boy who misbehaved at school was stuffed into a duffel bag and the drawstring pulled tight, according to his mother, who said she found him wiggling inside as ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- A 9-year-old autistic boy who misbehaved at school was stuffed into a duffel bag and the drawstring pulled tight, according to his mother, who said she found him wiggling inside as ...
Filed by Emmeline Zhao  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 3,288
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (69 total)
12:32 AM on 01/22/2012
This is sad! I hope every one of those teachers and everyone who supported them get raped by a rhino and live. People with disabilities deserve the same respect as someone without disabilities! This is just embarrassing and I'm in complete disgust!
12:25 AM on 01/22/2012
This is sad! I hope every single one of those teachers and everyone who clapped and supported the teachers for doing it get raped by a rhino and live! If this happened to a"normal" functioning student there would've been a much bigger outrage. People with disabilities deserve the same respect as anyone else!
04:55 PM on 01/10/2012
http://www .youtube. com/watch?v=LSlVPU5QT-8
http://www .youtube. com/watch?v=wPe6vMLIemc&feature=related

Now look, I agree children with special needs can be prone to abuse. We have little to no evidence that what this teacher did was wrong. Her story changes slightly between here and youtube. In this story, it makes one believe the child was unattended, whereas in another interview she states an aid is sitting right next to a child. It is my belief this is a case of a mother that doesn't know anything. We place way to much trust in the testimony of the mother.
09:37 PM on 11/23/2012
You have got to be kidding! If an aide was available, why put him in the bag? but to add insult to injury "they" closed and tied the bag up...WTH!!! Come on, why not have the aide sit with him in the office until mom picked him up? Now you have the adacity to berate the mom as not knowing anything. So sad because she should be calling for the firing of every adult involved instead of suspension. Just SMH.
04:47 PM on 01/10/2012
So, in a second interview it was a ball bag. Also in this other interview the aid was sitting right next to the bag. I think the mother just doesn't know anything about anything. She apparently has to frequently come to pick up her unruly son.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPe6 vMLIemc&feature=related
photo
Proximate Cause
America, Home of the Bought & Sold
02:26 PM on 01/22/2012
whatever, the kid should have never been put in a bag. Need to stuff you in one and then see the useless drivel you spew online.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jennifer Hagan
Expat Mother of two living in France.
09:51 PM on 05/26/2012
Her son has autism and he probably have behavioral problems. But you fail to realize that he is a child. A CHILD. My sister's neighbor had a fourteen year old son with severe autism. A sound set him off and he started screaming at the school and crying. This male teacher tackled him to the ground (he was just standing there and not responding to anything they said) and he laid on top of him with the assistance of two other teachers. The kid was struggling and what they didn't realize is that they were smothering him. They smothered him to death. All over some petty crap. They are people too. Above all they're kids.
09:40 PM on 11/23/2012
I agree with you.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:02 AM on 01/04/2012
This is a great example of we people not trained in SI SHOULD NOT decide or try to do it on their own without training and proper supervision by a trained professional.

Even giving the school staff the benefit of doubt that they were trying to implement an equivalent to a sensory wrap or some such - How horribly inappropriate! Especially as it seems the parents were not consultant and the article implies this was a one size fits all approach.

Where is the BCBA and or school psychologist?
06:57 PM on 01/03/2012
As a former teacher and having taught special needs children, this is an outrage! I have said this PLENTY of times and I'll say it again...teachers, ALL TEACHERS, whether tenured or non-tenured SHOULD be evaluated, unannounced, throughout the school year. Principals, supervisors, etc,,.. need to see what goes on in the classrooms without a teacher or an aide aware that they are about to be observed. Like I said....unannounced. This boy most likely wasn't able to communicate to his mother about the previous duffel bag incidents that took place in his classroom or else something would have been done much sooner. These educators take advantage of the fact that some special needs children aren't able to tell their parents what goes on in the classroom during the day. Parents put so much trust into teachers and aides that care for their children. This is a total disgrace that these school officials resort to such unprofessional measures. There is no need and NEVER a need to treat any child this way! This is inexcusable behavior. These school officials who took part in this so called punishment need to be fired and never be allowed to work around children ever again!
--Lori Young, CT
03:56 PM on 01/03/2012
Shame on Kentucky public schools for allowing the use of restraints and punishment. The school officials should be dismissed and all teachers should be excused of their liscense and should never be able to work with any children let alone and child that has developmental disabilities. Charges should be brought up against all involved including administration of the school for neglect, abuse, assault and attempted murder. this is appaulling, I cannot believe that this sort of treatment is still happening anywhere let alone in The Unted States. This should not be overlooked by our Federal Government.
10:56 AM on 12/29/2011
They're victimizing children who have limited communication skills. An autistic child is less likely to be able to report the abuse to his parents. Had this child's mother not come along at the time he was in the bag, she probably would never have heard about it.

The school needs to train its employees, for crying out loud. Anyone employed to work with autistic children ought to know something about the condition.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
urfree2speak
Justice though the heavens fall
08:29 AM on 12/29/2011
title iv actions are almost a thing of the past, the mentally ill are now referred to by horrible names in the main stream media.
its not uncommon to hear names like nut case, fruit , wacko, etc, even grandma with althiemers is no longer exempt from this kind of stuff.
05:48 PM on 12/27/2011
Teacher is lucky that it was not my student in the bag. There would have been a group of teacher in the bag when I left the school!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frant52
02:53 PM on 12/27/2011
What sort of person would do that? I cannot imagine how angry I'd be if that was my child. That teacher should never teach again, or in any way be around children, specials needs or not!
This is disgusting!
01:05 PM on 12/26/2011
Every time I read things like this my heart breaks! I have a special needs grandchild that goes to school in Bainbridge Georgia.Last month Special Olympic Bowling was held at the YMCA my grandchild's so called teacher would get up and act silly,childish,hugging and helping ONE child while the others might as well been invisisible.ALL the children needed to be praised and encouraged not just the one the teacher like the best. Life is so unfair at times but people that mistreat special needs children should burn in Hell!
ThinkGlobal
Military Spending Killing America
08:52 PM on 12/25/2011
Anyone hired to work with special needs children should have a through background check. The practice of putting a human being in a duffel bag should be a criminal act no matter what the age or mental state or diagosis of said person.
10:25 PM on 12/26/2011
So true how can we make miss a rule?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jennifer Hagan
Expat Mother of two living in France.
09:55 PM on 05/26/2012
When you work for schools in most school districts in Kentucky, they do a background check. But according to the privacy act, no employer can ask you about your mental health history without your consent. A lot of people wouldn't consent to it. Seemingly normal people with normal histories do weird and bizzaro things all the time. I don't think that is going to prevent this from happening. They just need better equipped teachers to work with special needs kids.
07:54 PM on 12/25/2011
OH! Heads would ROLL if that were my son! Why did it take so long for them to actually question such cruel and unusual punishments?! I think it's time someone looked into their training and certificates, this is in NO way mentioned in any curriculum I've seen, let alone for special needs. They should be ashamed of themselves!
07:31 PM on 12/25/2011
I'm a 6th grade science teacher whose room happens to be right next to the self contained special education room. I also happen to be a mom to a beautiful 3 1/2 yr old boy with autism. The way the students next door to my room are treated really breaks my heart.

The aides haven't a clue and I doubt could even tell you what autism is. Yet they think that this child twirling around and hand flapping is doing so to spite them, so they yell, and then start screaming and then say, go in the corner and "don't turn around, no one wants to look at you". Granted I've never seen them do anything physical (believe me I see that and the cops are called forget about talking to the principal).

This is so disgusting to me. I've complained only to be told that what they are doing is ABA (Applied Behavior Analysis) and in the child's IEP. Can you believe that the professionals at my school actually think humiliating a child and screaming at them is ABA??? Needless to say, our son will NEVER be sent to school unless he's fully mainstreamed. Right now we have a beautiful Son-Rise Program for him that we are running out of our home. To the parents of Christopher, hope to god that you all can get a good lawyer and sue the pants off this school district.