MC PAPA LINC

Noble Park, Melbourne: Disturbing moment a female protective services officer slaps 11-year-old boy


Disturbing moment a female transport officer slaps an 11-year-old boy after he spat on her while being restrained – but police commissioner calls it a ‘redirection strike’

  • Video emerges of Victorian officer hitting child
  • He was trying to resist arrest in south-east Melbourne
  • Victoria’s top cop preferred ‘redirection strike’ over ‘slapped’

A female transport officer has been caught on video slapping a child after he spat in her face.

Video shot by an observer shows two Victorian protective services officers (PSOs) having difficulty restraining a boy who is described as being 11 years old, before he turns and spits at the female officer.

PSOs are employed by Victoria Police and primarily patrol train stations and the public transport system.

Victoria Police’s top cop responded to the video saying he was ‘comfortable’ with the officer’s reaction and that the boy could be charged with assault.

He also disputed that the right word to use is ‘slapped’.

Noble Park, Melbourne: Disturbing moment a female protective services officer slaps 11-year-old boy

A female Australian protective services officer has been caught on video viciously slapping a child after he spat in her face

As well as spitting it is understood the child ‘repeatedly used a ‘racist slur’, 3AW reported.

The video was filmed at Noble Park train station in Melbourne’s south-east on Australia Day.

Shane Patton, Victoria Police’s chief commissioner said the PSOs were called to the station where the boy was ‘arrested as a suspect’.

He would not provide further details of what led up to the boy being restrained.

Mr Patton defended the Victoria Police employee and disputed that she even slapped the boy. 

‘You called it a slap, I could call it a redirection strike,’ he told 3AW’s Neil Mitchell. 

Victoria Police’s top cop, Shane Patton, described the slap as ‘a redirection strike’. He said he was ‘comfortable’ with the officer’s reaction and that the boy could be charged with assault

‘I can’t put myself in her position of going ‘I need to stop being spat on’.

‘There’s no doubt that she’s been struck, its redirected his face away from her, it’s stopped any further threat.’

Chief commissioner Patton said the officer shown striking the boy submitted ‘a use of force form’ instead of trying to hide her reaction.

‘At this stage we’re comfortable with what’s been done in relation to that matter.’ 

Chief commissioner Patton added it was ‘absolutely’ possible the boy could be charged with assault for spitting on the officer. 

Chief commissioner Patton said the PSOs were called to the station where the boy was ‘arrested as a suspect’ before the incident where the female officer (left) reacted to being spat on

What is a protective services officer?

Protective Services Officers (PSOs for short) perform some of the functions of police officers in Victoria but they are different.

For a start, their patches are train stations not police stations.

PSOs are located at all 212 metro Melbourne stations and four regional stations (Bendigo, Traralgon, Ballarat and Geelong). 

PSO’s tasks include:

  • monitoring and patrolling peak hour train services
  • building trust in the safety of the station and public transport system through rapport with commuters and the surrounding community
  • working at major events and their surrounds

PSOs train for 12 weeks at the Victoria Police Academy, then undergo three months of mentoring before deployment at suburban train station.

Police officers undergo 31 weeks of full-time, structured training. 



Source link

Exit mobile version