Kids learn how to avoid abductions

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Stranger danger taught in Escape School


If a stranger approached 11-year-old Kaitlyn on the street asking for help or directions, she wouldn't offer any assistance.

"I'd just ignore them and walk on by," the Fort Myers Middle sixth-grader said. "If it was a weirdo, I would say I don't know."

Kaitlyn's strategy is among those outlined in Dignity Memorial's Escape School, a nationwide program that reviews deceptive practices of kidnappers while showing techniques to avoid abduction. Locally, Fort Myers Memorial Gardens offers presentations across the Southwest Florida.

Thursday's Escape School at Fort Myers Middle drew both students and their parents, who many times worry more about safety than do their children.

"He's 12 and as outgoing as they come. She's 13 with blond hair and blue eyes," parent Michelle Anders said. "You have to be scared."

Her two children, Quintin Ray and Amber Ray, are not allowed to ride their bicycles alone or walk by themselves, and they always carry a cell phone when they are outside without their mom nearby.

Anders is especially worried about Amber because she is deaf, and cannot always sense if someone is behind her. After 11-year-old Carlie Brucia was abducted last February in Sarasota, Anders stepped up the focus on safety. Amber, a seventh-grader, learned a new technique at Escape School —clinging onto her bike like Velcro to make any abduction attempt very difficult.

"The bike will never fit in the car," Amber said.

Fourteen-year-old Dominick Strahan, an eighth-grader at Fort Myers Middle, would use the windmill technique to flee a predator. That involves children flipping their arms in a circle to release them from a stranger's grab. Dominick doesn't plan to let anyone get that close to him, though.

"If I were on a bike, I would go the opposite direction of the person," he said.

At home, mother Nicole Strahan has given stranger-danger talks and reviewed all of the normal precautionary strategies. She still wanted her son to attend Escape School to possibly learn more.

Fort Myers Memorial Gardens has coordinated several dozen Escape Schools in the past year, drawing as many as 300 students and parents in a single session. Community outreach coordinator Edward Herbert Jr. rattles off statistics to start — 4,600 children are abducted each year, and 300 are never seen alive again — before showing a 20-minute safety video. Children then practice the windmill and Velcro techniques, and learn how to jam a car's ignition or pull wiring out of cars.

Kaitlyn's mother, Holli Knight, said she has taught a lot at home, but still worries about what could happen.

"You hope your child takes that to heart and applies it if necessary," Knight said. "We realize what's out there; we're not naive."

Copyright 2005 , The News-Press.

http://www.deaftoday.com/v3/archives/2005/01/kids_learn_how.html
 
That is important to teach our children how to avoid abduction, Because never know who is a bad person and who is a good person, I always tell my boys do not talk to strangers, not taken anything from strangers that offer you candy or a ride, or walk away with them. If they tried to take them off their bike, to hug their bike so it makes the person difficult to take the child. I feel bad for those who were kidnapped, Parent need to teach their children how to keep themselves safe. ;)
 
While it is extremely critical to teach our kids about this, I feel sad at the same time that we have come to this point where we get very nervous when our kids are out there alone.

I am so nervous that I wont even let my girls out of my sight. I literally tremble if I dont see them for a few minutes when we are at a public place. Last weekend, we were at a store and my youngest disappeared for a few minutes. My heart started racing uncontrollably and I was close to tears but jumped for joy when I saw my sweet girl's face.

I teach them these tools, Cheri, but it is still hard emotionally. I remember it was so much safer back then in my youth. :(
 
Me 2 Meg and Cheri,

My boys will tell you how overprotective I am when it comes to them playing outside by themselves, I have to know where they are going, when they will be back, even had to ask them question like if their friend's parent has guns in their house etc...I can't help it for feeling this way sometimes, but I worry alot and I know my boys are in good hand

I've also taught my children about strangers, but the problem is my little one is too friendly, he goes up and talk to anyone who comes near him, and there are times I have repeatly told him not to, and sometimes I had to explain a bit deeper why...I think he understand just a little bit, but still he just a young kid!...

I'm sure every parents out there has worry about their kids and who they talk to etc...
 
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