A White Woman Called Police On A Black 12-Year-Old - For Mowing Grass

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Reggie and his troupe were finishing up Lucille Holt-Colden's yard when the police was called.It's a business that has existed for as long
as there have been summer vacations and borrowed lawn mowers: A pint-size entrepreneur offers to endure the rage of a summer sun on a
neighbor's behalf, pushing a lawn mower across high grass for a small fee.Last week, in Maple Heights, Ohio, that entrepreneur was Reggie
Fields, a 12-year-old middle schooler who is the owner and mower-in-chief of Mr
Reggie's Lawn Service
His sister and two cousins also provided manual labor in their neighborhood outside Cleveland, working a rake and a broom to corral
clippings.That's what they told Lucille Holt-Colden, 51, who encountered them at a Dollar Tree where they were purchasing a gas canister and
some lawn bags on June 23
Holt-Colden thought it was a good investment
Her grass was growing taller, and her $20 would be used to keep this particular group of black youths off the street and out of trouble.She
was mostly right.As Reggie and his troupe were finishing up her yard, a Maple Heights Police SUV rolled up in front of Holt-Colden's
house.When she saw the police through the window, she was surprised
Then, when she learned what had happened, she was outraged - and reached for her cellphone to share it with the world."My neighbors that
stay in that house right there," she said, swiveling the phone as it recorded her on video
"So I guess I have a line where part of it is not my yard
They called the police to tell the police that the kids was cutting their grass
Who does that Who does that"She captioned the video: "This is RIDICULOUS!!!" a phrase she repeated several times during an interview with
The Washington Post, along with "Who does this"Reggie, it seemed, was not just getting a lesson in summer business economics; he was also
being schooled in the 21st century phenomenon known as #LivingWhileBlack.Recently, African Americans who were engaged in laughably innocuous
activities have been viewed through criminal-tinted glasses - and suddenly found themselves making explanations to police officers and
security guards about completely lawful activities.Someone called the police on a black man who was reading a book about Christianity while
watching the ocean
Black people have had the authorities sicced on them while going to the gym, shopping for underwear, waiting for the school bus and
couponing.Reggie isn't even the youngest #LivingWhileBlack victim
A few weeks ago, an 8-year-old selling cold water to passersby to help fund a trip to Disneyland was approached by a white woman who
pretended to call the police on her
In 2012, police were summoned to an elementary school in Georgia where they handcuffed a 6-year-old kindergarten student - for throwing a
temper tantrum.Holt-Colden and Reggie are both black; the neighbor who called the police on Reggie is white, but she doesn't know why the
woman called the police
According to Holt-Colden, the same neighbor has called police in the past - last December the neighbor reported a snowball fight between
Holt-Colden's children
The Washington Post has reached out to the Maple Heights Police Department to verify the call about a snowball fight
The neighbor could not be reached for comment."If the kids were white," Holt-Colden said of Reggie and his family members, "they would not
have called." She told The Washington Post that neighbors of various races live in the neighborhood but "I don't have any problems with any
other neighbors."When the police came, Holt-Colden said, Reggie's 9-year-old cousin was frozen with fear in her driveway, worried that he
was in trouble.But Reggie kept mowing
The children were not cited or stopped by the police in any way.Still, Holt-Colden said she was upset that a lawman responded in the first
place.The Cleveland area has recently been shaken by the death of Saniyah Nicholson, a 9-year-old killed in the crossfire during a shooting
in the eastern part of the city
Her death raised concerns about the idle time of thousands of students out of school for the summer, Holt-Colden said.Saniyah was sitting
outside a boxing club in east Cleveland, according to the city's Fox-affiliate, WJW-TV, when two rival groups started firing at each other
The bullets missed the older men, but struck the little girl sitting in her mother's car
Her family planned to bury her on Saturday.Holt-Colden said she wants more people to do what they can to keep children occupied with
meaningful tasks
She worried that Reggie's interaction with the police would be discouraging.Many others chipped in to prevent that from happening."People
are inboxing me like, 'How can I get in touch with these children' 'Where are they at' 'I got property I want these kids to cut,'" Holt
said.She started a GoFundMe for Reggie
By Saturday afternoon, people had donated more than $8,600, the equivalent of more than 430 lawns.But Reggie and his crew aren't resting on
that publicity-fueled windfall
Some people donated supplies - a leaf blower and a lawn mower - to help his business
And he's still out mowing lawns.He's even made fliers on orange paper with an image of a lawn mower: "Mr
Reggie Lawn Cutting Service
Taking it one step at a time
Schedule an appointment I'll be on time