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June 17, 2013

A man who says he caught four boys vandalizing his father-in-law's home has been charged with child endangerment after corralling them in a closet until police arrived

A man who says he caught four boys vandalizing his father-in-law's home has been charged with child endangerment after corralling them in a closet until police arrived.
Jesse Daniels was arraigned on four counts of endangering the welfare of a child after authorities say he interrupted the vandalism at the empty home in the Wayne County village of Clyde, midway between Rochester and Syracuse.
Daniels, 53, told WHAM-TV in Rochester that he heard pounding coming from the home next door the night of June 8. The house is empty while Daniels renovates it for his father-in-law.
Daniels said he went to investigate while his wife called 911. He said he found four boys, ages 8 and 10, inside with hammers. He took a hammer from one, then stuck the boys in a closet until officers arrived, he said.
"I was fortunate that they were in that room that had a closet, so I put them in the closet," he said. "I said, 'Listen, you guys are staying here until the police come, period.'"
Their parents said Daniels handled the boys roughly and threatened them with the hammer.
The damage to the home included holes in the walls, broken windows and graffiti derogatory to women spray-painted on walls. Daniels estimated that the damage to his father-in-law's property exceeds $40,000.
He said he believed the boys committed the vandalism in retaliation for Daniels' wife telling them earlier in the day to stay off the couple's property.
The boys have been charged with burglary and criminal mischief. Their cases are being handled in Wayne County Family Court.
Paul Bowler, the father of two of the boys, told the station that there are no excuses for his sons' actions.
"I understand they were in the wrong, but there are other ways to handle it," he said. "He (Daniels) knew who the kids were. It's not like they were strangers. And send the kids home and call the cops then. You don't sit there and torment them and tell them you're going to bash their skulls in with a hammer."
Bowler said Daniels grabbed the neck of one of his sons and left a mark. He said that his boys are traumatized and that Daniels should have faced more charges.
Daniels counters that he was just trying to protect his family.
Daniels is due back in court later this month. It wasn't immediately clear if he has a lawyer.
Wayne County District Attorney Richard Healy told the station that the incident is still under investigation.

6 comments:

  1. Unfortunately it is way too late to smother the little delinquents at birth. Send them to jail and give Daniels a cash reward for doing the police's job for them.

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  2. They'll probably convict the victim of the vandals and then sue him. EVERYTHING is upside down in the USSA.

    "Turning and turning in the widening gyre
    The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
    Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
    Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
    The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
    The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
    The best lack all conviction, while the worst
    Are full of passionate intensity..."

    Yeats, "The Second Coming"

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  3. What ever happened to "citizen's arrest"? Isn't that still okay? How about the right to stop a criminal from damaging your property and holding him until the police arrive? I thought that was a good thing. I would have threatened them with the hammer too, and a lot more! The boy's father faults the homeowner for "trauma"? No wonder we have gangs! You know what, my dad would've clobbered me and yanked me around not a little bit if I did such a thing, and apologized profusely to the man who caught me. There would have been no "my poor baby" for me. What kind of message does it send to a kid when a parent doesn't hold him fully accountable for his actions? What will the police have to contend with in the future when the kid knows daddy will come in and rescue his little butt? Sure hope I never live next to these people.

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  4. Why isn't it good the little punks were "traumatized"? If their parents did even a half-witted job of raising them, none of this would have happened.

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  5. But it's fine for cops to kill people over nothing and get off with 'qualified immunity'. I'd throw Jesse's case out of court. CAN WE SAY JURY NULLIFICATION?

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  6. No doubt were talking "urban yoofs" here or else the media wouldn't have covered the story. Po lil urban yoofs was subjected to the whip from da raycis honky bichass crackaz.

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