People should take responsibility for there their own kids. Melissa your you're a troll.
You still never took the time to clarify the post in question. All of this time available, and I still have no idea what you were saying.
The accusation of trolling is interesting, as your first contribution to the thread was to place blame on parents of a teenager for that teenager being fondled by TSA representatives. You also stated this youngster "destroyed" property by writing on it with a marker.
Perhaps that should be revisited:
Of course, she didn't destroy it. She drew on it. She should have been responsible for restoring it to its original state, with the additional punitive damage of maybe cleaning the other desks of ink/scribbles. Her parents could have rightfully been made aware of this, and it would be important to let them know why their little darling was late from school (because she was cleaning) or to arrange for a time when she could do the detention.
The assertion that "problem kids" are purely the fault of parents is as narrow-minded as the notion that they are absolutely only the fault of the schools. There is plenty of blame to go around, but in this case, it falls more heavily on the idiots who decided it was wise to whip out the cuffs and treat someone like a felon for scribbling on a desk. Discretion was absent from the entire scene.
Moreover, "problem kids" do not always turn into "problem adults." Various people in this very thread have posted admissions of far more "criminal" activity, but they're doing just fine. The school overreacted, and overusing "where are the parents?" just helps it fall on deaf ears. You can't control your children 100% of the time. When they make a bad call, they should be punished accordingly, not carted off in cuffs for coloring on a desk.
Unfortunately, the way she was treated is absolutely preparing her for adulthood, where she could be shot or shocked for failing to obey commands, and where blame will be shifted everywhere but to the people who are actually responsible for the behaviors involved. On one side, she is being coddled and held absolutely blameless by some because of the outcome. On the other, the police are shifting blame around and hunting for good excuses as to why this happened. In the end, she was not appropriately punished for what she did, and the police will not face appropriate consequences.