Crash scene is shock treatment for teen offenders
By: Drivers.com staff
Date: Friday, 06. October 2006
From a report in the London Daily Telegraph
Ten teenagers in Wales got a rather nasty shock as the made what they thought
was a police-organized trip to an outdoor rehabilitation program. In the roadway,
they came across the demolished remnants of an Alfa Romeo and a Montego, surrounded
by broken glass and blood.
The bus in which the teens were riding had received a radio call diverting
it to the accident on the outskirts of the town of Merthyr Tydfil. When they
arrived at the scene, the teens were faced with firemen, paramedics, and what
looked like severely injured passengers, some of whom were cousins or friends
of the teens in the bus.
The group was informed immediately that the accident was a mock-up. But youth
workers said they reacted as if they were at the scene of a real crash. Some
tried to help the victims. Others became distressed or seemed numbed with shock
said a newspaper report in the Daily Telegraph.
The fake crash was set up by South Wales police as a means of preventing the
joy riders from repeating their offenses. The exercise was organised by the
Oasis youth project following the deaths of two teenagers in a stolen car last
year. It was the first time such shock tactics were used as a treatment for
suspected joyrides, according to the police.
The parents of the teenagers, aged between 15 and 17, had signed consent forms
and trauma counselors were on hand to talk to the youths, reported the Telegraph
article. "The idea was to stop kids from stealing cars and driving dangerously,
risking their own lives and members of the public," said one youth counselor.
One of the 16-year-old boys on the course said: "It was an awful shock and
I started panicking straight away. I could see my cousin inside one of the
cars and I will never forget that feeling."
However, not everyone agreed with the tactic as an educational measure. Keith
Towler, a spokesman for the National Association for the Care and Rehabilitation
of Offenders, criticised the use of shock tactics. "You have to question the
exposure of youngsters to such a traumatic incident," he said. "Although trained
counsellors were around to help, it was a risky and potentially dangerous approach."
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Showing 1 - 2 comments
Cameron 16,
Wow. This needs to be put in driver's training. I am shocked at what I will feel like if I had to see one of my family members in an accident. First of all, I would have had to be sent to the hospital! I am very scared of terrible car accidents, and or plane crashes, this would have traumatized me. About tht atuopsy thing, I don't think so. Maybe we could learn the causes of car accident death.
VMH,
As a former police officer, I completely endorse this method. I even believe that all teens getting ready to drive should be required to see an autopsy (preferably in person) of a teen killed in an auto accident. These are not youngsters they are young men and women on the verge of being handed an enormous responsibility. One in which they have the potential to kill themselves and others. Traumatic, I certainly hope so! I hope the scene at the mock accident stays in their heads for a long, long time. It is much less traumatic than delivering the death notification to the family; and of a life not lived but rather wasted. At least the teens who experience these things have the opportunity to overcome their "trauma" whereas the dead and their families do not!