JONESBORO,
AR (KAIT) – The Jonesboro mother who was charged for forcing her 10-year-old child
to walk 4.5 miles to school, had her court date continued.
According
to the Craighead County District Court's Office, 34-year-old Valerie Borders
had her court date continued to April 30. Borders is charged with endangering
the welfare of a minor in the second degree.
On
Monday February 13, the Jonesboro Police Department says Borders put her
10-year-old son in danger by forcing him to walk almost five miles to school as
punishment.
Officers
determined Borders forced her son to make a 4.5-mile trek to school from their
home at Fairview Drive. Nequavion Borders, 10, had recently lost his bus-riding
privileges for the fifth time from MicroSociety magnet school, located at 1110
West Washington.
His
mother sent him to school on foot Monday as punishment for the repeated
suspensions. He only made it a few blocks before he was picked up by police.
"She
did the right thing," Nequavion said. "She knew that I had been
suspended off the bus five days, so she didn't do nothing wrong. She made me
walk. I just had to walk. They shouldn't have picked me up. I could've walked
by myself."
Valerie
Borders did not want to make a comment, but she did allow her son to speak on
her behalf exclusively to Region 8 News. He says he now realizes why his mother
wanted to teach him a lesson and "not to just get on the bus and act a
fool."
Nequavion
made it to the busy intersection of Highland and Stadium and crossed the
Liberty Bank parking lot. A security guard approached the boy, apparently
surprised to see a child in the area alone.
"Anytime
you see a child out walking like that, ask yourself a question – is that safe
for the child?" Sgt. Lyle Waterworth with Jonesboro Police said. "If
you wouldn't want your child doing it, we probably don't need somebody else's
child doing it."
Waterworth
says the guard did the right thing by calling police. According to the police
report, when officers arrived, the boy asked them, "Please don't take me
home, mother will beat me." He also told police that he was advised not to
stop walking or talk to anyone until he made it to school.
Police
drove the boy to school and then paid a visit to his mother, who was at home on
vacation from work. Police wrote Valerie Borders a ticket and gave her a court
date.
She
will appear in Craighead County District Court on April 30. If convicted she
could face up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.
Borders'
son, however, said he does not want his mother to get into trouble for him
misbehaving. He says he knows now to behave better on the bus.
"She
should not be going to court," Nequavion said. "I learned my lesson.
That was me that was getting suspended off the bus."
Region
8 News will continue to track this story and provide any updates, as they
become available.
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2012 KAIT. All rights reserved.