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- <text id=89TT1512>
- <title>
- June 12, 1989: Our Violent Kids
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Armed America
- June 12, 1989 Massacre In Beijing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 52
- Our Violent Kids
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A rise in brutal crimes by the young shakes the soul of society
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis
- </p>
- <p> Beating. Rape. Murder. Screams in the night. Bricks in the
- face. Sirens drowning out the crying. These are the images of
- violent crime--the crime generally associated with the most
- depraved individuals. No one is shocked any longer to hear of
- atrocities committed by mobsters, drug pushers or psychopaths.
- But the boy next door? That harmless-looking kid in biology
- class? The captain of the football team?
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to believe, and harder still to comprehend, but
- it is true. Some atrocious crimes in America are being committed
- by those who should be the most innocent--the young. Recent
- weeks have brought news of two particularly brutal acts: the
- gang rape and near murder of a jogger in Manhattan's Central
- Park by a group of youths 14 to 16, and the alleged sexual
- assault on a mentally impaired girl by high school students in
- affluent Glen Ridge, N.J. These crimes have awakened the country
- to the beast that has broken loose in some of America's young
- people.
- </p>
- <p> The Central Park and Glen Ridge attacks are only the most
- highly publicized of the cases occurring across the U.S. More
- and more teenagers, acting individually or in gangs, are running
- amuck. In the Central Park incident, young toughs said they
- were "wilding," which apparently means marauding with no purpose
- in mind but to create havoc and hurt people. In Philadelphia
- packs of youths chant "Beat, beat, beat" as they roam the
- streets looking for victims.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, teenagers have never been angels. Adolescence
- is often a troubled time of rebellion and rage. From West Side
- Story to Rebel Without a Cause, the violence of youth has been
- chronicled on stage and screen. But juvenile crime appears to
- be more widespread and vicious than ever before. "Burglars used
- to rob a house and then run away. Now they urinate or defecate
- in the home or burn it up before leaving," says Shawn Johnston,
- a forensic psychologist in Sacramento. "Thieves mugged a person
- and ran off. Now they beat their victims." Or rape or murder
- them.
- </p>
- <p> Statistics show an upsurge in the most violent types of
- crimes by teens. In part, this trend may result from better
- reporting, but some experts believe it reflects a true increase
- in violence. According to the FBI, between 1983 and 1987 arrests
- of those under 18 for murder jumped 22.2%, for aggravated
- assault 18.6% and for rape 14.6%. Those figures may not seem
- dramatic, but they should be seen in the context of a 2% decline
- in the total number of teenagers in the U.S. since 1983.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the tales behind the numbers are horrifying. In
- Springfield, Mass., last April, a 13-year-old girl was walking
- through a park with a girlfriend when she was allegedly
- attacked by five boys no older than 16. They fondled her breasts
- and appeared to be preparing to rape her when her screams
- brought help. Last September a 15-year-old Houston boy raped and
- murdered a 66-year-old woman, then burglarized her home. In May
- a 15-year-old Detroit boy was charged with killing another
- teenager with a sawed-off shotgun, apparently in a dispute over
- a stolen bicycle. Ten months ago, a 16-year-old boy drove 150
- miles from his home in Princeton, Ky., and shot to death a woman
- he did not know. The boy, who came to be known as "Little Rambo"
- to his schoolmates, told police that he "just wanted to get away
- and kill somebody."
- </p>
- <p> Adolescents have always been violence prone, but there are
- horrendous crimes being committed by even younger children. In
- Detroit last April, an eleven-year-old boy was charged with
- joining a 15-year-old in the rape of a two-year-old girl. The
- two allegedly left their victim in a garbage Dumpster. When he
- was only ten, a boy in San Antonio began sexually abusing three
- of his four younger sisters and continued until he was caught
- at 16.
- </p>
- <p> The teen crime wave flows across all races, classes and
- life-styles. The youths who went on the Central Park rampage
- were blacks and Hispanics from Harlem, but they were not
- desperately poor. Three of the five suspects charged in the Glen
- Ridge sexual assault were idolized football stars, and two of
- them were co-captains of their high school team. Eight other
- Glen Ridge High School students, including the son of a local
- police lieutenant, allegedly stood by and watched the assault.
- In Denver a 16-year-old boy charged with first-degree murder in
- a stabbing death was a high school honors student.
- </p>
- <p> The offenders are overwhelmingly male, but girls too are
- capable of vicious crimes. In Escondido, Calif., a 16-year-old
- girl and three teenage boys went on an arson spree last March.
- The group set four fires at three schools, causing damage that
- will cost more than $1 million to repair. A 16-year-old girl
- from Cape Cod, Mass., who had been drinking stabbed her male
- cousin, severely injuring him.
- </p>
- <p> What is chilling about many of the young criminals is that
- they show no remorse or conscience, at least initially. Youths
- brag about their exploits and shrug off victims' pain. A Chicago
- case in which four teenagers raped and killed a medical student
- was solved because of good police work and what Pat O'Brien,
- Cook County deputy state's attorney, describes as "the
- defendants' inability to keep their mouths shut" about the
- crime. "It was a badge," he explains. "It was something they
- talked about as if it gave them status within that group of
- guys." Youngsters offhandedly refer to innocent passersby caught
- in the line of gunfire between two gangs as "mushrooms." "That
- is callous," observes Edward Loughran, commissioner of the
- Massachusetts department of youth services. "Alienated is too
- weak a word to describe these kids."
- </p>
- <p> How could this be happening? The experts offer a raft of
- reasons, everything from physiological and psychological
- abnormalities to family and cultural decay. By themselves, none
- of the explanations are wholly satisfactory. But each of these
- factors may contribute to at least some of the violence.
- Generalizations are difficult because every case is unique. Each
- young criminal has his own genes, his own family background and
- his own response to the many forces in modern culture that
- encourage indiscriminate sex and violence.
- </p>
- <p> A frequently advanced--and hotly disputed--theory is
- that aggression is a biologically rooted impulse of young males.
- Some experts suggest that there may be a genetic component to
- hostile behavior; others attempt to tie it to levels of
- different chemicals that circulate through the body and brain.
- One of them is testosterone. Production of this male sex hormone
- rises dramatically during puberty, a period usually marked by
- intense sexual desire and strong aggressive tendencies. Some
- studies indicate that particularly rough athletes or violent
- prisoners have higher than normal testosterone levels.
- </p>
- <p> Violent youths frequently have neurological problems and
- learning disorders, many of which result from brain injuries
- inflicted in beatings by parents and others. Some suffer from
- paranoia and hallucinations, and others experience seizures.
- Some of the most violent children tend to have grossly abnormal
- electroencephalograms.
- </p>
- <p> But it is too easy to say that biology is destiny and that
- all violent youths are simply captives of their physiology or
- "raging hormones." Society has generally been able to control
- and channel aggressive impulses through its basic institutions--home, schools and church. But these moral pillars are
- crumbling.
- </p>
- <p> Too many children are growing up in families headed by one
- overburdened parent, usually the mother. Even when two parents
- are present, both often have demanding jobs and are absorbed in
- their own concerns. Sometimes the parents are strung out on
- alcohol or drugs. The result is that children do not get the
- nurturing, guidance or supervision necessary to instill a set
- of values and a proper code of behavior.
- </p>
- <p> Children normally learn to trust and develop attachments to
- people within the first two years of life. By then they have
- also acquired a sense of compassion and empathy for others. And
- they have begun to be taught the difference between right and
- wrong and that hurtful actions have consequences. Many
- youngsters, though, fail to acquire those early curbs on
- conduct. Later on, when children misbehave, indulgent parents
- make excuses and forgo punishments. Young boys who grow up with
- absent or uninvolved fathers suffer doubly in that they often
- fail to develop a healthy sense of masculinity.
- </p>
- <p> The neglect is frequently compounded by outright abuse.
- Says Dorothy Otnow Lewis, professor of psychiatry at New York
- University: "Kids are being raised by more and more disturbed
- parents. And what this lack of parenting breeds is misshapen
- personalities." Parents punch each other verbally and
- physically--and frequently do the same with their children.
- In fact, the large majority of violent kids have been
- physically, and often sexually, abused by parents, relatives or
- others. One mother, reports Lewis, broke her son's legs with a
- broom; a father threw his child down a set of stairs.
- </p>
- <p> As a consequence of indifference and abuse, children are
- left emotional cripples, self-centered, angry and alienated. And
- fated to repeat the chilling lessons they have learned. "These
- children are dead inside," says psychologist Johnston. "For them
- to feel alive and important, they engage in terrible types of
- sadistic activity."
- </p>
- <p> Their innocent victims are usually surrogate targets; the
- parents may be the ones they really hate. A 17-year-old boy who
- is now in a treatment program in San Bernardino, Calif., began
- sexually molesting younger members of his family when he was
- about twelve. He himself had been molested at the age of six,
- first by his father and then by a twelve-year-old friend. Says
- the boy: "My father used to beat my mom all the time. That makes
- me kind of angry. He was always out partying, getting high. My
- fantasy is making him suffer. First I'd shoot him in the
- kneecaps and let him suffer for about an hour, screaming. Then
- I'd shoot him in the nuts and let him suffer some more, and then
- I'd put a bullet through his head."
- </p>
- <p> Signals of violence surface early but frequently go ignored
- or denied. Serial killer Ted Bundy's family insisted for years
- that he had a normal childhood, points out psychiatrist Lewis.
- It was only recently revealed that "by the time he was three,
- he was putting knives in his aunt's bed." The youngster who
- taunts siblings, bullies schoolmates, tortures pets or peeks in
- windows is sending up warning flares.
- </p>
- <p> Children abandoned physically or emotionally by their
- parents look elsewhere for companionship, acceptance and values.
- Odell Edwards, a 20-year-old serving time in a Ventura, Calif.,
- juvenile facility for attempted murder and other offenses,
- recalls that by the age of 14 he was spending most of his time
- away from home and hanging out with a group of friends that he
- called his "homeboys." Says Edwards: "I never really had anyone
- to talk to. My father was gone. I had no one to turn to when I
- was in trouble, except my homeboys. They became my family."
- </p>
- <p> Members of a group learn about sex from one another,
- experiment with drugs together and look to their friends for a
- sense of belonging and approval. Notes Alan Morris, chief of the
- adolescent unit of the Illinois State Psychiatric Institute in
- Chicago: "Some kids, especially younger adolescents, have an
- exquisite sensitivity to what their peers think. They won't go
- to school if their shoelaces are the wrong color."
- </p>
- <p> But the group's influence is often treacherous. Explains
- young Edwards: "It's peer pressure and wanting to be accepted
- by your friends and trying to prove yourself in the best way you
- know how, which is being violent." Gangs allow even the most
- cowardly and impotent to feel brave and powerful. And they
- override inhibitions and diminish any feelings of guilt.
- Violence becomes contagious. Some youngsters revel in the
- mayhem; others, too weak to break away, become trapped and are
- swept along.
- </p>
- <p> In many instances, the violence is fueled by easy access to
- guns, alcohol and drugs, particularly crack. Users often "fall
- into a sadomasochistic ritual after smoking together," says
- Terry Williams, a senior research scholar at the New School for
- Social Research. "They are angry, hallucinating, and get into
- violent fights." Crack can also leave users sexually aroused.
- When they do not find a willing partner, Williams asserts, they
- may be tempted to rape.
- </p>
- <p> If teenagers often get their values from peers, then just
- what are those values? In American society today, the emphasis
- is less on caring for others than on getting money and instant
- gratification. Notes Arnold Goldstein, director of the Center
- for Research on Aggression at Syracuse University: "We are a
- nation whose role models, Presidents and leaders on Wall Street
- have set a tone in the country--`I'm going to get mine.'" If
- the big-shot investment banker can take what he wants, often by
- illegal means, then a teenager may think he should be able to
- grab the spoils in the only way he knows how. Declares Harvard
- psychiatrist Robert Coles: "Our culture accentuates instinct
- instead of inhibiting it."
- </p>
- <p> The entertainment media play a powerful role in the
- formation of values. Today's children, unlike those of earlier
- generations, are fed a steady diet of glorified violence.
- Television cartoons feature dehumanized, machinelike characters,
- such as the Transformers and Gobots, engaged in destructive
- acts. But viewers see no consequences. Victims never bleed and
- never suffer. Youngsters mimic the behavior with toys based on
- the shows. Later they graduate to TV programs and movies that
- depict people killing or degrading other people. By the age of
- 16, the typical child has witnessed an estimated 200,000 acts
- of violence, including 33,000 murders. Inevitably, contend many
- experts, some youngsters will imitate the brutality in real
- life. In a 22-year study, researchers tracked the development
- of 875 third-graders from a rural community in New York. Among
- the discoveries: those who watched the greatest amount of
- violent television at the age of eight were the most likely to
- show aggressive behavior at 19 and later. About one-quarter of
- the students were considered violent at 30--they had been
- convicted of a crime, had multiple traffic violations or were
- abusive to spouses.
- </p>
- <p> Rock music has become a dominant--and potentially
- destructive--part of teenage culture. Lyrics, album covers and
- music videos, particularly in the rock genre called heavy metal,
- romanticize bondage, sexual assaults and murder. The song Girls
- L.G.B.N.A.F. by Ice-T contains the words "Girls, let's get butt
- naked and f***." Or consider these lyrics from Motley Crue's Girls,
- Girls, Girls, an album that reached No. 2 on the Billboard chart
- and has sold more than 2 million copies:
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>The blade of my knife</l>
- <l>Faced away from your heart</l>
- <l>Those last few nights</l>
- <l>It turned and sliced you apart...</l>
- <l>Laid out cold</l>
- <l>Now we're both alone</l>
- <l>But killing you helped me keep you home.</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Guns N' Roses put out an album called Appetite for
- Destruction, which has sold more than 6 million copies. The
- jacket cover, featuring a robot looming over a woman in torn
- clothing, was so repellent that some record stores refused to
- carry the album. Says Tipper Gore, co-founder of the Parents'
- Music Resource Center and a longtime critic of rock lyrics:
- "Music companies are cultural strip miners, profiting from the
- sex and violence and ignoring the scars."
- </p>
- <p> Even today's comic books are not immune from the violent
- trend. While parents may fondly remember the dating shenanigans
- of Archie and Veronica or the wholesome exploits of superheroes,
- their children are now being offered a titillating blend of
- sadism and sex. A stripper was crucified in one issue of Green
- Arrow. Superman, in a story called Bloodsport, battled a
- deranged Viet Nam veteran who was shooting people at random on
- the streets of Metropolis with a gun in each hand.
- </p>
- <p> Among the most offensive purveyors of brutality to women
- are slasher films. The movies that inaugurated the trend,
- including Friday the 13th, Halloween and Nightmare on Elm
- Street, are now tame compared with such opuses as I Spit on Your
- Grave or Splatter University. The main features: graphic and
- erotic scenes of female mutilation, rape or murder. Slasher
- films are widely shown on cable TV, and video shops do a booming
- business in rentals, especially among eleven-to-15-year-olds.
- Youngsters watch three or four at a clip at all-night
- "gross-out" parties. In some fraternity houses on college
- campuses, slasher movies play continually in lounges, along with
- pornographic films.
- </p>
- <p> Sexually explicit movies may lead some young men to
- reaffirm the all-too-common male attitude that when a woman says
- no she really means yes. Many experts believe that such films
- may be a contributing factor in date rape, one of the most
- common adolescent sexual crimes. "Teenagers are only doing what
- they are told to do," says sociologist Gail Dines-Levy of
- Boston's Wheelock College. "They are being conformists, not
- deviants."
- </p>
- <p> In some cases, poverty can help spur violent crime. Many
- ghetto residents have little sense of hope or opportunity, and
- feel they have little stake in preserving society. Boys often
- have trouble forging a masculine identity without one of the
- primary accompaniments--a job. Teen unemployment is endemic
- among poor youth, running more than 40% in many communities.
- Meanwhile, welfare and social programs suffered drastic cutbacks
- during the Reagan era. Says Chicago psychiatrist Carl Bell:
- "Violence is the weapon of the powerless." Agrees Professor Leah
- Blumberg Lapidus of Columbia Teachers College in Manhattan: "It
- relieves boredom and makes a statement, like graffiti, that
- says, `Notice me.'"
- </p>
- <p> But a life of privilege can also be corrupting. Children
- who have everything given to them may come to believe that they
- are entitled to anything, that they are above their fellow human
- beings and above the law. And yet their busy, overachieving
- parents may not be giving pampered teens what they need most:
- attention and supervision. "Neglect is abuse," says Randa
- Dembroff, an official of the Los Angeles County Bar Association.
- "A workaholic parent is just as abusive as one who physically
- abuses his children."
- </p>
- <p> Can anything be done about violent youngsters? Many
- Americans are calling for stronger laws and punishments. They
- argue that juveniles should be prosecuted as adults and that
- prison sentences should be longer. "These kids are getting away
- with murder," declares Robert Contreras, a police detective in
- Los Angeles. "They are not afraid, have no respect for anything
- and joke that in jail they'll at least get three square meals
- a day." Syracuse's Goldstein surveyed 250 juvenile delinquents
- for their solutions to violence and found that they too favored
- harsher sentences. Many thought that jail was too "cushy."
- </p>
- <p> Others have offered an even more radical idea: locking up
- parents. California is trying to do just that. Under an
- eight-month-old statute, parents can be held responsible for
- the criminal activity of their offspring. In April, Los Angeles
- police arrested a woman whose 15-year-old son has been charged
- with participating in the rape of a twelve-year-old girl by a
- dozen members of a street gang. If she is convicted of violating
- the parental-responsibility law, she faces a maximum penalty of
- a year in jail and a $2,500 fine.
- </p>
- <p> Such solutions offer only illusory security. Parents
- contend that they cannot control their children. And most
- youngsters are eventually released from jail. Many return more
- hardened than before. "You need to break delinquents from the
- group where antisocial behavior is reinforced," explains
- psychologist Michael Nelson of Xavier University in Cincinnati.
- "But we're caught in a catch-22 dilemma. We place delinquents
- in reform schools, where they have more access to individuals
- who are poor role models."
- </p>
- <p> An unpopular but more sensible approach, say experts, is to
- offer rehabilitative treatment. Various communities across the
- U.S. are trying such programs--with considerable success. The
- programs call for individual and group therapy for the offender
- and sometimes for his family as well. The strategy is to get
- violent youngsters to recognize the inappropriateness of their
- actions and to accept responsibility for them. That is a
- difficult task, particularly with sexual offenders, who are
- often imitating what was done to them.
- </p>
- <p> In some programs, youngsters discuss or write up their own
- cases in an effort to identify the behavior patterns or
- situations that are liable to trigger hostile actions. For
- example, sexual offenders are advised to avoid baby-sitting. In
- the program operated by the Justice Resource Institute in
- Massachusetts, members concentrate on overcoming aggressive
- thinking patterns--for instance, assuming that they are the
- butt of the joke whenever people are laughing.
- </p>
- <p> The treatment centers also try to elicit a sense of
- empathy. At Giddings, a maximum-security facility for juveniles
- in Texas, murderers keep a daily journal of their feelings and
- act out their crime, taking the roles of both their victim and
- surviving family members. Sexual offenders meet with groups of
- victims every few months. At its prisons and work camps, the
- California Youth Authority runs voluntary classes in which
- inmates study property crimes, domestic violence, sexual
- assault, child abuse, homicide and victims' rights. Some
- offenders do eventually express remorse. Says one Giddings boy,
- a middle-class 15-year-old from Austin who raped his
- eight-year-old neighbor: "I realize how society really looks at
- rape. Sometimes at night I sit up crying. I look back and say
- that could never have been me."
- </p>
- <p> Such programs are clearly valuable, but the treatment is
- costly. Therapists say the optimum time needed for counseling
- sex offenders ranges from twelve to 18 months. (It can take
- about six months just to break through the denial phase.)
- Follow-up and outpatient therapy are also necessary. As a
- result, not enough youths get treatment.
- </p>
- <p> No matter how effective the programs are, they are
- indisputably too late. Violence-prone youths need to be
- identified and helped before they explode in rage. Reporting of
- physical and sexual abuse in particular should be encouraged.
- The earlier the intervention, the greater the chance of success.
- All youngsters could also benefit from improved sex-education
- programs that explore the emotional as well as the mechanical
- aspects of sex. Some schools have begun offering special courses
- in preventing violence. A ten-session curriculum, designed by
- Dr. Deborah Prothrow-Stith, the Massachusetts commissioner of
- public health, is being used in several high schools in Boston,
- Detroit and Denver. "We tell them anger is potentially
- constructive but they need to learn how to handle it," explains
- Prothrow-Stith. Students examine how fights begin and analyze
- videotapes of arguments.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the lessons learned at school can easily be undermined
- by today's popular culture. The messages that blare from
- stereos, TVs and movie screens amount to a second education for
- the young. And much more money goes into the development of this
- after-school curriculum than goes into education. Rock stars
- earn millions, but a high-school teacher is lucky to get $30,000
- a year.
- </p>
- <p> A growing band of activists is lobbying TV, movie and
- record producers to reduce the level of sex and violence in
- entertainment. Terry Rakolta of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., the
- mother of four children, has started a group called Americans
- for Responsible Television. She has suggested that networks
- devote the first two hours of evening programming to family
- shows and has also asked major advertisers to avoid sponsoring
- programs that the group finds objectionable. One of Rakolta's
- first targets was Married...With Children, a racy prime-time
- sitcom. Parents' Music Resource Center, meanwhile, has
- successfully pressured the Recording Industry Association of
- America to create a rating system that alerts parents to
- sexually explicit lyrics. Warning labels are now printed on
- record jackets. The group also provides printed lyric sheets and
- encourages parents to complain to radio and TV stations about
- raunchy and violent programming.
- </p>
- <p> Even the activists admit, however, that removing all sex
- and gore from the media would make no more than a small dent in
- the teen crime problem. Much more fundamental changes in society
- are needed. Government at all levels should step up the battles
- against drugs, poverty and racism. Far more money should be
- poured into education, day-care and recreational opportunities
- for the young. Youngsters need more of their parents' time, and
- they need to know that society cares about them.
- </p>
- <p> Above all, parents should take a long, hard look in the
- mirror. The values of today's youth are merely magnified
- reflections of the values of their elders. Parents should
- remember the words of the father in Harry Chapin's song Cat's
- in the Cradle, when he comes to a sudden realization about his
- insensitive, uncaring son:
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>He'd grown up just like me</l>
- <l>My boy was just like me.</l>
- </qt>
- <p>-- Mary Cronin/New York, Melissa Ludtke/Boston and Sylvester
- Monroe/Los Angeles, with other bureaus
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-