Family of 6-Year-Old Florida Girl Handcuffed at Orlando School Files Lawsuit
Kaia Rolle's ordeal led Florida to raise its minimum age of arrest to 7 years old, but her family and activists say that's not nearly high enough.

The family of Kaia Rolle, a Florida child whose handcuffing and arrest at the age of 6 led to national outrage in 2019, filed a lawsuit today against the city of Orlando, the now-fired police officer who handcuffed and arrested her, and his supervisors.
The lawsuit, filed in a Florida state circuit court, alleges Rolle was subjected to excessive force, false arrest, and malicious prosecution. At a press conference today in Orlando, Rolle's lawyers and family, as well as civil rights activists, also called on Florida to raise its minimum age of arrest for children.
"This happened," Rolle's lawyer, Bobby DiCello, said, holding up a picture of Rolle crying in the back of a police cruiser with her wrists bound behind her. "And it's happening all across America."
Rolle's alleged crime was throwing a tantrum and striking three employees at an Orlando-area charter school.
Body camera footage of the incident showed former Orlando police officer Dennis Turner and another officer putting zip ties around the small child's wrists and leading her outside to a police car as she cried and begged to be let go.
"What are those for?" Rolle, who was in first grade at the time, asks as the officer brings out zip ties.
"They're for you," Turner responded.
Rolle was charged with misdemeanor battery. The charges were quickly dropped.
The national condemnation that poured in after the story went viral led to the officer's firing, and after two years of lobbying from Rolle's family and other advocates, Florida created a minimum age of arrest for children.
As Reason has previously reported, in many states, there is no minimum age for when a child can be arrested and charged with a crime, although incidents like Rolle's have led several states to strengthen protections for children in recent years.
In 2021, the city of Rochester, New York, released body camera footage of officers pepper-spraying a handcuffed 9-year-old girl.
In North Carolina, an investigation by the Raleigh News and Observer revealed that children as young as 6 had been charged with crimes. The story's lead anecdote involved a 6-year-old boy charged with destruction of property for picking a tulip.
However, Florida's new minimum age for arrest is 7 years old. Rolle almost immediately aged out of the law named after her.
"The law we fought so hard to put in place doesn't even protect her," Rolle's grandmother, Meralyn Kirkland, said at the press conference.
Rolle's family and juvenile justice advocates are asking for the minimum age of arrest in Florida to be raised to 14 years old.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
The family of Kaia Rolle, a Florida child whose handcuffing and arrest at the age of 6 led to national outrage in 2019
I don't remember the story, was it because she wasn't wearing a mask or because she thought HCQ might be effective?
Give it a break, monkeyass.
>>Turner and another officer putting zip ties around the small child's wrists
prospective police should undergo evaluations of a sort prior to acceptance at Police Academy?
It is interesting how, between the 6 yr. old picking a tulip story, the 9-yr.-old getting pepper sprayed story, and the 6 yr. old throwing a tantrum and allegedly assaulting 3 people, we get the latter story... again, apparently. Wonder what made it stand out from the others.
Y'know how I avoided arrest in the first grade? By not punching teachers.
It definitely looks like the weaker case to highlight. I don't think a 6 year old should be arrested for punching a teacher in a tantrum either, but a bit of scared straight theater is fine. The flower thing sounds pretty ridiculous on its face and I need to know more about the pepper sprayed 9 year old before deciding whether my initial anger is justified.
I don’t think a 6 year old should be arrested for punching a teacher in a tantrum either, but a bit of scared straight theater is fine.
And somebody, somewhere along the line was going to have to exercise some authority over a 6 yr. old hitting people. Unlike a lot of other cases where the SRO inserts themselves into the situation, the fact that the school kicked it down the line to the PD isn't really the PD's fault.
Presumably, nobody in the school lost their job despite distinctly not doing their job, escalating the situation, and, seemingly even, filing a false report.
And just what information could justify pepper spraying anyone who was already subdued and restrained, much less a 9yo?
Kid has major behavior issues and probably drove the cop to the point of no returns....... nonetheless you have to get approval from a supervisor to arrest anyone under 12. He got fired and now the taxpayers will get hosed.
They shouldn't be using cops to deal with student discipline issues below high school ever under any circumstances.
The problem is they've continuously removed ways to deal with problem kids. Can't discipline them in school with staff, can't send them home, alternate juvie schools have been closed so last discipline authority standing gets the panicky 911 call.
Unless it involves kids eating unauthorized donuts. That is a serious threat to all police.
Okay, we'll increase the minimum age of arrest to 8. Are you happy now!
-Your friends in the Florida legislature
Remember those training posters?
https://reason.com/2013/02/19/is-your-local-police-department-using-pi/
Don't call the police. Have internal security restrain the kid until the parent can pick them up. Heavily fine the parents who send wild, disruptive, out of control children to the school. Or permit the school to discipline them as they see fit.
Oh, fuck no, nobody actually sane wants to outright ban the arrest of 13-year-old murderers.
None of the legislative futzing with ages of responsibility over the last 150 years has improved over the common law's ancient "Rule of Sevens" one bit. Entrench it constitutionally and tell these morons to shut the hell up.
A kid with a gun is just as dangerous as a mentally deficient adult with a gun. When a real threat exists then responders need to have at least the authority to use the minimum effective force to reduce/eliminate the threat. Further, the courts need to be able to provide sentences that act as a deterrent. If they want to encourage sociopathic behaviour in kids and adults then feel free to not give them consequences in their formative years. Sounds like an easy way to create more criminals
None of the legislative futzing with ages of responsibility over the last 150 years has improved over the common law’s ancient “Rule of Sevens” one bit. Entrench it constitutionally and tell these morons to shut the hell up.
+1
Or at least get a "Rule of Sevens" stamp (or gavel, or bat) for the forehead of every retarded Reason contributor who rights a "OMG! Can you believes theys 'restin' chillunz whose not even 10 yet in heres?"
>> Rolle's family and juvenile justice advocates are asking for the minimum age of arrest in Florida to be raised to 14 years old.
The cartels are going to have a field day with that.
Where's the NRA in all this? The way to stop a bad kid is with many good kids with guns.
If the family gets any money from the lawsuit, every single person this little brat has hit during one of her outbursts should sue the family.