• Re: After banning guns, one in five stabbing suspects is a child, data

    From Billy the pitbull@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 17 08:52:15 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, aus.politics, talk.politics.guns

    On 28 Aug 2021, Yak <yak@inbox1.com> posted some news:sgf02p$jt9$2@news.dns-netz.com:

    Rudy Canoza wrote

    Banning guns doesn't solve anything. Crime is a human behavior.

    Children were suspected of carrying out one in five stabbings in NSW last
    year, with experts concerned about the trend of young men and teenage boys carrying knives and calling it a “recipe for disaster”.

    Data obtained by The Sydney Morning Herald after the fatal stabbing of 17- year-old Easter Show worker Uati “Pele” Faletolu shows there were 61
    “persons of interest” – a police term for suspected offenders who may or
    may not be charged – last year aged 10-17 in knife attacks across the
    state, compared with 205 adults.

    Ninety-eight children aged between 10 and 17 were victims of non-domestic assaults using a knife, screwdriver or scissors in 2021. Two children were fatally stabbed, information from the Bureau of Crime Statistics shows.

    Faletolu was working at the Easter Show last Monday when he met two other teenagers, aged 15 and 16, while on his break from the Break Dance Ride.

    The trio had an altercation with another group of young people, and
    Faletolu died in the ambulance on the way to hospital after he was
    stabbed.

    The 15-year-old boy he was with at the time was arrested and charged with affray, being armed with intent to commit an indictable offence and
    custody of a knife in a public place, while a 16-year-old was taken to
    Westmead Hospital in a serious condition with a stab wound.

    Investigators are probing whether so-called “postcode gangs” – teenagers
    and young adults who group together with others from their suburbs and
    have disputes with other suburbs’ gangs – played a role in the 17-year-
    old’s death. Investigators have yet to charge anybody.

    Faletolu is the second teenager stabbed to death this year. In January,
    members of the public desperately tried to save a 13-year-old with a stab
    wound to the stomach lying in the street in Kariong on the state’s Central Coast.

    The boy died in Gosford Hospital following what police say was a fight pre-arranged on social media.

    Another 13-year-old, who allegedly knew the dead boy, has been charged
    with murder.

    Neither boy can be named for legal reasons.

    The trend of young men carrying knives is inherently dangerous, detective turned criminologist Dr Terry Goldsworth, of Bond University, said.

    “We know the male brain doesn’t develop until about 30 so that frontal
    lobe isn’t fully developed,” he said. “That in conjunction with a deadly
    weapon — there’s a recipe for disaster

    Young people often carried knives for protection, Goldsworth said, begging
    the question of what they needed protecting from.

    “It shows these people are prepared to engage in adverse, risky behaviour
    and don’t consider the long-term consequences,” he said. “They want to
    walk around with a weapon. That exhibits a certain mindset – either you’re going to commit an offence, or you’re going to run into people who will.”

    Parenting expert Dr Justin Coulson, who has a PhD in psychology, said
    multiple factors may lead teenage boys and young men to violent crime.

    “The first is parental involvement and structure,” he said. “We find that
    when parents are engaged, those kids tend not to get into this type of
    trouble. When parents are less involved, they look elsewhere for support
    and will often find it in peer groups that don’t always have the best intentions.”

    Glorifying violence on social media was another contributor to young
    people’s attraction to violence, Coulson said.

    Cultural expectations within some ethnic and racial groups was another.

    “Some groups of young boys have that idea that they need to do what they
    can to preserve their family group, the idea that ‘you’re my brother, I’ll bleed for you’,” he said.

    “The influence of masculine culture … is another [factor],” he said. “Even though some parts of society have moved on from the neanderthal beliefs,
    in the proportion involved in gangs [these beliefs] are firmly
    entrenched.”

    NSW Police Youth Command works with community groups and other government organisations to intervene with young people at risk of criminal
    behaviour, Acting Superintendent Carlene Mahoney said.

    “We know that the key to long and lasting change is working with at-risk
    young people and engaging them to ensure they make good decisions –
    diverting them away from criminal activity.”

    Manly Sea Eagles player Josh Aloaia weighed in on Faletolu’s death on
    Instagram last week, telling his followers that “your postcode and your
    suburb doesn’t care about you”.

    “This needs to stop ... Islanders are assaulting and killing other
    islanders in the streets. Often kids. Our very own people! Where have we
    lost our identity?“.

    <https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/one-in-five-stabbing-suspects-is-a- child-data-shows-20220415-p5adqu.html>

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