With support from the Sills Foundation, SFY has created special materials for officers to use when arresting a parent in the presence of a child. Child psychiatrists, psychologists, police officers, social workers, and most importantly, children themselves contributed to the development of these materials. Mindful that officer safety is paramount, these are guides that may mitigate the trauma experience by children, while not compromising the officer in this most difficult situation.
Thanks to the Sills Foundation, these materials are available from SFY at low cost. They include:
SFY can customize these materials to reflect the needs of individual departments. As an example, our Card for Parents for officers to give to another parent or guardian, can be translated into appropriate languages.
Based on the protocols of police departments and the recent report from the International Association of Chiefs of Police, SFY has developed a protocol for dealing with arrests of parents in the presence of children. We recommend this protocol be used as a “check off” list.
SFY recommends agencies develop policies that describe from soup to nuts what should happen for officers encountering children while serving no-knock and other forms of warrants, responding to emergency calls for service and domestic violence matters. In all these situations, youth have been inadvertently traumatized or physically harmed in the process of parental/caretakers’ arrests.
SFY has drafted a model police and recommends consideration of three excellent policies currently in use in departments across the nation:
The reactions of children who witness the arrest of their parent vary considerably by age. The circumstances also have a great impact on children. Are they witnessing a Raid? Have they watched a Domestic Violence encounter? To aid officers in these trauma-filled situations, SFY has developed a guide to possible reactions by the age of the child. With support from psychiatrists, psychologists and police officers, the guide also includes the best way for an officer to respond to a child’s behavior in an age appropriate manner.
These posters can be hung in booking rooms to remind parents to let officers know if they have children who might need care or a welfare check while they are under arrest.
Many parents and caretakers do not know that a child’s exposure to the trauma of parental arrest can have long-term consequences. Police officers can play a critical role in explaining the importance of being mindful of a child’s needs following an event and providing a list of local resources. This simple card for parents can be translated and provides space for the department to add contact information for local sources of help.
SFY collected interviews from children whose parents had been arrested in their presence. Was there anything officer could do to make this difficult situation easier? Children responded by asking for something soft to hold that would help them feel safe and less alone.
While we leave the facts in the officer’s hands, SFY can help officers give a little boy or girl a Teddy Bear, something to hold. Please join us in making life a little better for children who believe they have lost everything.
Police Departments: Contact Us to Order Teddy Bears
Donate to Provide Departments with Teddy Bears: Donate Now
For more information, please email us.
SFY collected interviews from children whose parents had been arrested in their presence. Was there anything officer could do to make this difficult situation easier?
Contact SFY at 617.714.3789 or email us at info@strategiesforyouth.org
© Strategies for Youth. All rights reserved.
$25,000 will allow us to educate 5,000 new youth in 2025 with our innovative Juvenile Justice Jeopardy games.
Please sign up for our newsletter to the latest on Strategies for Youth’s efforts to create safe and thriving communitities for our children.