ESA Donates to School Crime Tip Line

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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ESA Donates to School Crime Tip Line


The Entertainment Software Association [http://www.theesa.com] has donated $200,000 to Speak Up Cumberland County, part of a nationwide hotline that will let kids report an impending school crime without fear of being labeled a snitch.

Cumberland County will become the first in the state of North Carolina to join the Speak Up [http://www.paxusa.org/speakup/index.html] national hotline, which will let students call or text an 800 number to anonymously turn in fellow students who are planning to commit crimes. Sheriff Moose Butler expressed hope that students will be more inclined to take advantage of this program because nobody will think less of them for ratting out the kid who's bringing an Uzi to school.

"We have encouraged, of course, the students to talk," he said. "But this initiative here, Speak Up, gives us a program where students really can speak up, of course, without having to be openly talking to a law enforcement person."

Callers to the line will have 24 hour access to professional counselors, who will be able to alert school security or sheriff's deputies to potential threats. The tip line "dovetails" with new anti-bullying legislation put into place last year that requires schools to come up with policies to protect students who get pick on, according to State Rep. Rick Glazier. "The biggest threat to schools isn't from someone coming from outside in," he said. "It's from someone boiling over inside."

The ESA Foundation supports numerous organizations ranging from the PAX [http://www.one-economy.com/], the group behind Speak Up, in 2006 and 2007. Still, it's not too hard to imagine that some commentators will see the contribution as little more than a thinly-veiled admission of the industry's responsibility for the rise of violence in schools. Why pay to clean up the mess, after all, if it didn't have some hand in making it?

The $200,000 grand from the ESA will pay for two years of local advertising for the tip number.

Source: GamePolitics [http://www.fayobserver.com/Articles/2010/01/30/972279]


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HardRockSamurai

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May 28, 2008
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While it's obviously a ESA publicity stunt, it's a nice gesture all the same.

Although it does bring a question to mind: has anyone actually USED that hotline?
 

Avatar Roku

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Jul 9, 2008
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Andy Chalk said:
Still, it's not too hard to imagine that some commentators will see the contribution as little more than a thinly-veiled admission of the industry's responsibility for the rise of violence in schools. Why pay to clean up the mess, after all, if it didn't have some hand in making it?
Although you're probably right that people will reach that conclusion, the fact that they also donated to the Association on American Indian Affairs, as you pointed out, should be able to silence most people. After all, nobody's going to claim that games are responsible for what happened to them, right? Right?
 

oppp7

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Aug 29, 2009
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Don't worry. Jack Thompson is gone. He won't be able to say video games are behind violence with the same amount of publicity as before.
 

Jared

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Jul 14, 2009
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Nice to see some good publicity...somewhat

Hopefully the money will help the organisation!
 

CuddlyCombine

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Sep 12, 2007
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That's great. Any savvy kid can figure out a way to get anyone who could turn him in brought in by the authorities before he goes on a rampage now.
 

Silk_Sk

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Mar 25, 2009
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I don't see this working. Only a handful of kids would actually know of any crime worth reporting. Anonymity would only work for minor offenses only an asshole would report. Essentially, the jerks would get away with anonymously getting random kids in trouble and the kids who actually know something important would still be afraid of being found out.
 

fozzy360

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Oct 20, 2009
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Andy Chalk said:
Still, it's not too hard to imagine that some commentators will see the contribution as little more than a thinly-veiled admission of the industry's responsibility for the rise of violence in schools. Why pay to clean up the mess, after all, if it didn't have some hand in making it?
I'm gonna have to agree with this.

The stigma still remains that violent games cause kids to go nuts, and all the ignorant ninnies will shout that the industry is trying to buy its forgiveness. Sure, it's a nice gesture (even if it is nothing more than a publicity stunt), but I can't help but fell that their donation will end back firing on them with that kind of aforementioned reaction. Only time well, I guess.
 

anyGould

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Sep 17, 2007
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The part I find amusing is that people think that an anonymous tip line will prevent people from figuring out who the fink is.