This Mom Was Arrested and Jailed for Making Her Son Walk a Half-Mile Home
Media hysteria and overzealous governments have led many to believe that childhood independence is a form of abuse.

What does it take for a parent to get arrested?
Surprisingly little.
Scott and Heather Wallace of Hewitt, Texas, encourage their three boys to play outside on their own to build independence.
One day, driving home from karate practice, 8-year-old Aiden misbehaved. So, half a mile from home, Heather stopped the car and told him, "Walk the rest of the way on your own."
He'd done it before. But this time, before he got home, someone called the police.
"There's a little boy walking down the sidewalk," she told 911. "He's a perfect target for somebody to kidnap!"
Police picked Aiden up and drove him home.
His parents share their story in our new video.
"You weren't worried about [Aiden]?" I ask them.
"Not at all," says Heather.
Scott adds, "It's a safe neighborhood."
It's true. Based on data from the FBI, their town is among the safest in Texas.
Nevertheless, the cops arrested Heather! They kept her in jail overnight.
"It was terrifying," she tells me. "I was just waiting, crying."
The cop told her, "To have an 8-year-old…walk by himself, that's a big problem….We don't know who's in that white van."
That's just dumb, says Lenore Skenazy, author of Free-Range Kids.
"99.99 percent of white vans are guys coming to fix your toilet or mow your lawn."
She says ignorant media mislead us about what's really dangerous. News reports cite Justice Department data and claim "460,000 kids are reported missing every year!"
But that just means: "460,000 children are late for dinner, stayed at school and forgot to tell their mom….The definition of 'missing' is missing for an hour!"
Kidnappings by strangers are extremely rare. Just being in a car is 400 times more dangerous.
"You don't see people saying, 'I could put Johnny in the car, but what if we're T-boned?" Skenazy points out. "We've come up with a culture that sees a kid outside and fantasizes not just something bad but the very worst-case scenario."
The officer who picked up Aiden argued the worst-case: "You have a lot of crazy people out here," he told Heather. "I don't trust my child out of range [of] about 20 or 30 feet from me."
Twenty or 30 feet?
"It was a lot of his opinion," Heather tells me.
Police officers can act on their opinions.
Local prosecutors went even further. They indicted Heather, claiming she placed her son in "imminent danger of death" and acted "against the peace and dignity of the state."
Really!
When her employer heard that, Heather lost her job.
Good thing officials weren't this obsessed with stranger danger when I was a kid. I walked half a mile every school day.
Crime was much worse then. Even including recent upticks, crime has dropped sharply over the past 30 years.
What's changed is media hysteria. Any dramatic incident, anywhere, appears instantly on our phones. Frightened, gullible, math-illiterate officials say, better safe than sorry.
Now Scott and Heather say that, too.
"Will you drop your kids off again?" I ask.
"No!" says Heather. "We're scared."
"It's not that we don't think it was the right decision," says Scott, "But what they decided for us was not very affordable. [Now] we don't even leave them in the car to go into the convenience store."
"Not because someone's going to take them," Heather adds, "but because someone's going to see and call the police!"
Lenore Skenazy has persuaded eight states to pass "childhood independence" laws. They clarify that letting kids do things on their own isn't abuse.
"You don't want the government telling you when you can let your kids do things," she says. "You know your children better than they do."
COPYRIGHT 2024 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.
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You are only safe in the tender loving arms of the state.
Scienfoology Song… GAWD = Government Almighty’s Wrath Delivers
Government loves me, This I know,
For the Government tells me so,
Little ones to GAWD belong,
We are weak, but GAWD is strong!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
My Nannies tell me so!
GAWD does love me, yes indeed,
Keeps me safe, and gives me feed,
Shelters me from bad drugs and weed,
And gives me all that I might need!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
My Nannies tell me so!
DEA, CIA, KGB,
Our protectors, they will be,
FBI, TSA, and FDA,
With us, astride us, in every way!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
Yes, Guv-Mint loves me!
My Nannies tell me so!
Was the kid morbidly obese like Jeff? Were there unmasked, unvaxxed bitter clingers along the route? Did the path cross in proximity to Pluggo’s single wide?
You’ve got to admit, Pluggo coming upon an unaccompanied eight year old boy would be like an early Christmas for him. Not so much for the kid.
Am guessing he is a big fan of Halloween.
“Kid walking alone” and we all shit our pants!
“POTUS candidate, a known luster-after-the-death-of-democracy, lusts some MOAH for the death of democracy”, and we all shrug our COLLECTIVE shoulders!
Your shoulders are belong to US (and Our Tribe), cumrades!!!
When I was a kid, I had to come home for dinner when I heard the 4:30 whistle at the Naval Air Station Atlanta, which was a couple of blocks from my house. You could hear it for a mile and I had to stay within hearing range. When they moved the base in 1959 when I was 10, dad got out his conch shell horn, and that replaced the whistle. I walked to and from school most every day from first to seventh grade, about 3/4 of a mile.
I’d hate to think how much time my folks would have spent in the police station.
Gee, I didn't know Texas was a nanny state.
I stand corrected.
Hewitt is just South of Waco, almost dead center between Dallas and Austin. Being outside the metropolitan areas, it is pretty conservative, but guess that in itself doesn't prevent "see something say something." I'm certain that the good citizen who called it in feels pretty damned good about their virtue on that.
"Lenore Skenazy has persuaded eight states to pass 'childhood independence' laws. They clarify that letting kids do things on their own isn't abuse."
Guess you have to have an actual law to keep prosecutors and cops from channeling hysteria, and upending your life in the process.
'What does it take for a parent to get arrested?'
A self-righteous, nosy cunt and an intrusive nanny state.
Next question.
Not letting children do things on their own is abuse.
aye
No surprise. Grown-ups think having to EARN a living is ‘abuse’.
A good portion of the whole population thinks not being able to Gov-Gun STEAL is ‘abuse’.
Sadly; STEALING (Gov-Guns) doesn’t make sh*t.
So the mentality puts the nation into a zero-sum resources architecture.
When that zero-sum hits the sh*t will hit the fan.
Some of it already is. The political heat is some of the sh*t.
That’s just dumb, says Lenore Skenazy, author of Free-Range Kids.
Come on Stossel. This is like when Nick “interviewed” Billy earlier this month.
Echo Chamber lol JoUrNaLiSm. Gotta crank out the material, right? But let's not put any effort into it and just go with Repeated Narrative.
Seriously, you have a great issue with a great example of it - and the only person you put into your JoUrNaLiSm for it is... a regular contributor to the same website.
Bushleague dude. Bushleague. And that hurts me to say, because I actually like you a lot of the time Stossel.
In the 1960s we were taking the bus downtown at 8 y/o to go to the movies.
Media hysteria and overzealous governments have led many to believe that childhood independence is a form of abuse.
DENYING childhood independence is a form of abuse. Those described in that subhead (if it is accurate) have it exactly backwards.
Progressives are the problem. They want a total nanny state.
Progressives ? In Hewitt , Texas ? Really ?
https://bestneighborhood.org/conservative-vs-liberal-map-hewitt-tx/
There is so much stupid going on with these cops and the prosecutor, I don't even know where to begin.
We are not in Kansas, or even America, anymore.
Things have changed.
Growing up I remember having to walk 10 miles to and from school.
In the snow. Uphill. Both ways.
I must have been abused as a child because my elementary school was just over a half mile from my home and I had to walk every day because school buses didn't pickup kids that close.
I must have been abused as a child because my middle school was approximately 2.5 miles from my home and I had to walk every day because school buses didn't pickup kids that close and even if they did it was much faster walking through the football field than the bus trip.
I must have been abused as a child because my high school was 5 miles from my home (if I cut through the shopping mall parking lot and the school fields) and I had to walk every day (until I was able to by a used beater car) because school buses didn't pickup kids early enough for school activities like cross-country training or because on other days didn't pick up kids from the grocery store where I worked early mornings. I know that there is the trope about having to trudge through he snow for miles, but it does snow quite a bit where I was raised and I didn't have the luxury to get a ride to school from either my parent or friends. I couple of times from my grocery store manager when I stayed late to assist with unloading an extra truck.
I must have been abused because I was allowed to go hiking in the mountains with my friends, or play unsupervised at various sport fields with my friends, or rake the cemetery (punishment for breaking a street light with a football).
Kids need independence to enable them to grow. Of course they gain more independence as they age. Even a three year old needs to be given some independence, to learn some cause and effect. The role of a parent is not to stifle the development of their child, but to foster growth while protecting from catastrophic harm. Not to hand hold and prevent developing the necessary skills that they will need as they mature.
I'm not an expert, but have raised a child and have grandchildren. I have been assisted and have assisted numerous friends and family through difficult times through the process. Competing is more meaningful when there is a winner versus everyone is a winner. It became very apparent, just listening to the kids instead of the parents.
Kids are not stupid and they know the difference. Competing and not winning does not mean that you are a loser, but that you didn't win. Particularly if you performed to the best of your abilities. The reality is that some people are better than other people are. There is a reason why not everyone is a professional athlete or a doctor, etc.. Through independence, kids develop their skills, learn what they like, what they are good at. The overprotective parent and the nanny state are doing a grave disservice to the future success of the kids.
Y'know, when I was a kid, I actually liked walking to/from school because it involved a path through the forest and a rope swing across a creek. (First time we had to lug some kind of cumbersome project to school with us, we figured out the path across that didn't require swinging through the air.)
And get this - the direct path to the forest involved going through the neighbor's back yard. She usually had fresh baked cookies for us as we trekked home. We all called her Momma Wilson. And we beat the snot out of anyone who picked on her kid. Don't mess with our buddy who had the cookie mom.
It was a different world though. Far less LGBT pedos, for one.
Slow news day?
In the late '90's, we had our 4th grade daughter walk about a mile home from school to teach her self-reliance and independence. My wife followed along in the car for the first few weeks until we were all comfortable with the arrangement. The other kids on the block complained to their parents to let them walk home too. No dice. We got a few comments about being "bad parents", but fortunately no one turned us in.