Society's Child
"Orange jump suit, in a cell, slammed the door, for 18 hours," Tammy Cooper tells KPRC News. That's how she describes how she spent almost a full day after officers with the La Porte Police Department responded to a call questioning the mother's parenting skills.
Cooper's children, ages 6 and 9, were playing on their motorized scooters outside of their La Porte, Texas home when a nearby neighbor called 9-1-1 and reported that the children weren't being supervised. When the authorities arrived, they acted on the complaint and concluded that Cooper must have been at fault. On her part, the mom insists she was watching her children the whole time from a lawn chair on her property.
"I was out there the entire time," Cooper tells the network. "I never left that lawn chair the entire time."
"I went out there to see what he was here for and he said, 'Ma'am, we're here for you.' I said, 'Oh really? Why?' He proceeded to tell me he had received a call from one of my neighbors that my kids were riding their scooters unsupervised."
Even with the begging and pleading, the police still locked her up and charged her with abandoning her children.
"My daughter had him [the police officer] around the leg saying, "Please, please don't take my mom to jail. Please, she didn't do anything wrong,'" Cooper tells KPRC.
The authorities have since dismissed the case, but will soon be up to bat for another legal battle: Cooper has filed a lawsuit of her own in response. The La Porte Police Department says they are "confident of the known actions of the officers on the scene that evening," but Cooper isn't convinced and is taking the LPPD, the responding officer and the nosey neighbor to court.
The entire incident, Cooper says, is "humiliating," and claims to have accumulated $7,000 in legal fees already.
"I hope that what I went through doesn't go unpunished - that there are consequences for a bad decision," she says.
Reader Comments
When we were kids, playing in the neighborhood while Mom was cooking dinner, 'out there' would mean coming out of the house to yell our names followed by 'dinners ready' or 'time to come in'.
There is definitely something wrong with this picture, and certainly there are alot of neglectful parents in the world these days, but "The authorities have since dismissed the case". It sounds like the arrest was alittle fishy.
on the other hand, you think maybe the police showed up after they had gone back inside the house?
.. to lock someone up because "she didn't watch the children" for 18 hours in a jail cell where she is not able to look after the children at all!
...I could walk away from my house in the Berkeley hills and be gone for HOURS without any adult expressing the slightest alarm.
My mom once told me the story that when I was about 3 or 4, I was playing out in our front yard (this was in Richmond) and walked away with an old man and his granddaughter to play with her. Though it took a police search to locate me, it was not my mom who got in trouble, but the grandpa who had failed to notify my mom before taking me home with his granddaughter.
So this is how things have changed in the 50 years since I was a child. Both of my childhood neighborhoods were urban environments. But they were considered by all to be quite safe. I'm not sure whether actual facts have really changed that much, or just public perception stirred up by media who would like us to believe that a sexual predator lurks behind every tree.
Even if one did, how does it "help" our children to keep them policed 24/7? Has it really helped them grow into powerful, able, confident, freedom-loving adults? Well, has it? I don't know that many young adults. So maybe others out there are more qualified to answer this question.
45 years ago, as a 1 0 yr old, I used to walk to the park, one
mile away to fish. I walked 5 miles away to go bowling or to
get a haircut, all by myself, alone. There was no fear, and why
should there be? I was enjoying my independence and freedom!
Today, under the same situation, my parents could be charged
with child abandonment or other crimes by anyone, friends,
neighbours, law enforcement, and 911 callers. We have become
a nanny state, under the watchful eye of big brother. We have
traded freedom for security.
We have become hyper suspicious of anything, of everything.
We have lost reason and logic. We have become debased humans.
What was once idyllic, is innocence destroyed.
The woman was outside on her lawn when the cop drove up.
Then she's hauled off to jail for 18 hours, leaving her children unsupervised (hopefully not for the full 18 hours).
Based on nothing but the report an incredibly stupid neighbor who obviously never bothered to check a little closer to see if the kids were in fact unsupervised.
Plus a just plain dumb cop who never took the time to see if the kids were in fact unsupervised. Which they were not.
I hope this mom sues the pants off of La Porte.






"I was out there the entire time," Cooper tells the network. "I never left that lawn chair the entire time."
"I went out there to see what he was here for..."
If she was out there the whole time, where did she go out from to see what he was there for? Fishy to me.