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A really interesting study, one that I'm glad to see done because it reinforces my own perception. 
I think most will recall the outrage, both from both sides, about the cited incident.
Here's an interesting overview, much shorter, about the reasearch.
http://www.npr.org/sections/13.7/20...for-putting-kids-at-perceived-but-unreal-risk

I think most will recall the outrage, both from both sides, about the cited incident.
http://www.collabra.org/article/10.1525/collabra.33/No Child Left Alone: Moral Judgments about Parents Affect Estimates of Risk to Children
On December 20, 2014, Rafi Meitiv, age 10, and his sister Dvora, age 6, were walking home from a park about a mile from their home in Silver Spring, Maryland. A bystander saw them walking and called 911 to report, quite literally, a sighting of unaccompanied children [1]. Police picked the children up and drove them home. When their father told police that Rafi and Dvora had permission to walk home from the park, the officer asked him, “Don’t you realize how dangerous the world is? Don’t you watch TV?” The police officer called in Child Protective Services, who threatened to remove the children from their home unless their father signed a ‘safety plan’ promising never to leave the children unsupervised [2].
By letting their children walk home from the park, the Meitivs violated a parenting norm specifying that every child must be under direct adult supervision at all times. As the officer’s comments suggest, this norm seems to reflect a fear of horrific events such as children being kidnapped by strangers. But the actual risk of a teen or child being abducted by a stranger and killed or not returned is estimated at around 0.00007%, or one in 1.4 million annually—a risk so small that experts call it de minimis, meaning effectively zero [3]. Motor vehicle accidents, by contrast, are the most common cause of preventable death among children [4]. Thus, by driving the Meitiv children home (ostensibly to protect them from the risk of kidnapping), police actually exposed them to the much greater risk of being killed in a car accident.
Here's an interesting overview, much shorter, about the reasearch.
http://www.npr.org/sections/13.7/20...for-putting-kids-at-perceived-but-unreal-risk