Kenzie Houk was just 26 when she died. Shot through the back of the head with a 20-gauge shotgun. Her unborn son Christopher was due in two weeks. He died too. Standing over the bed, allegedly, was Jordan Brown. He had apparently just shot his future step-mum.
He was eleven.
The United States recently abolished the death penalty for children – in 2005 – but Jordan Brown still faces the rest of his life in prison, set to become the youngest child in the history of the nation to be jailed for the term of his natural life. The laws have been relaxed to exclude this punishment for any other crime apart from homicide, but that still leaves thousands of children locked up, essentially forever.
Last week a 10-year-old boy shot his Nazi, white supremacist father in California. The evidence so far suggests the boy – so young, so maleable – had been infected with his father’s neo-nazi rants and beliefs. That will be considered in his trial. Who’s the real monster here: the father? The boy?
Human rights groups are outraged about handing out life sentences to children. And the argument goes a little something like this. Locking up children is against the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. The United States of America joins only Somalia in not ratifying the treaty. The convention is, incidentally, the most ratified of any international treaty in the history of the world with 193 national signatories. As you read this, the GOP (Republicans) in the US state of Minnesota have introduced a bill to condemn the treaty; and the rights of the child.
The rights groups slam the rejection as an abdication of responsibility toward children everywhere. They’re children, after all. They’re developing. They’re growing. They shouldn’t be imprisoned for a lifetime for crimes they committed in the ignorance of youth; crimes they may well have never committed when they were 24. Or 30. Or 50.