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Monthly Archives: May 2009

Governor inks child welfare training bill

 

Follows more than a dozen deaths in a year

Peter Marcus, DDN Staff Writer

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

http://www.thedenverdailynews.com/article.php?aID=4284

Following more than a dozen deaths of Colorado children in one year, the governor yesterday inked a bill that will train welfare caseworkers on how to better protect children.

The Child Welfare Training Academy will train approximately 400 new caseworkers and their supervisors. It stems from legislation, Senate Bill 164, sponsored by Sen. Linda Newell, D-Littleton, and Rep. Joe Miklosi, D-Denver.

“In a tough economic time like this, we should all be extremely proud of this legislation and the new training academy,” said Gov. Bill Ritter. “This will save lives. The academy will give child-welfare caseworkers the tools they need to protect kids and keep them safe.”

The state’s child-welfare system cares for children from about 14,000 families per year. In 2007, however, concerns were raised when 13 children in Colorado died as a result of abuse and neglect. The state’s child protection system was criticized for not protecting the children.

Neveah Gallegos

One case was 3-year-old Neveah Gallegos, who was suffocated, placed in a garbage bag and then buried in her pink princess tennis shoes underneath a tree stump and debris in a Denver ravine.

The girl’s mother and the mother’s boyfriend were only recently indicted related to the murder.

Critics said it was unacceptable that the case slipped past the welfare system’s radar, especially considering the mother’s boyfriend was a registered sex offender, and that little Neveah had been treated at an emergency room for vaginal bleeding.

Chandler Grafner

Seven-year-old Chandler Grafner was another child among the 13 to die that year due to abuse and neglect. He weighed only 34 pounds when he was found dead. Grafner’s biological parents recently filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against child-welfare agencies in Denver and Jefferson counties.

The suit claims that the Department of Human Services in Jefferson County failed to adequately investigate whether Grafner’s foster parents were fit to supply a foster home. The suit goes on to claim that child-welfare agencies in both counties then failed to keep Grafner safe while living in the foster home.

There were even reports at the time that surfaced from Grafner’s school indicating abuse.

The 13 tragic cases prompted a state review of the child-welfare system, which found a lack of communication between workers, as well as poor training practices, among other issues.

Karen Beye, executive director of the Colorado Department of Human Services, said she is hopeful that the new training academy will cut back on such tragedies.

“The committee’s goal is to make sure all children in the public welfare system have access to quality services and to professionals with the knowledge, skills and abilities to make decisions that will help keep them safe and secure,” said Beye of the governor’s Child Welfare Action Committee, which recommended the training academy.

Ritter called for the action committee after the incidents of 2007.

Newell said the new training program is absolutely necessary to ensure the safety of the state’s children.

“We cannot allow one more fatality in our child protective services,” she said. “These deaths are unacceptable and unconscionable, but thanks to Senate Bill 164, we will soon be making headway to keep children safe … Each of these children will be better cared for and protected.”

http://www.wxii12.com/video/19504916/index.html?treets=gws&tid=2655802526813&tml=gws_8pm&tmi=gws_8pm_1_07000105192009&ts=H

Abuse in Schools Widespread, Report Finds

 

Exclusive: GAO Says Misuse Of Restraints, Seclusion, Other Tactics Has Even Proven Fatal

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/05/19/earlyshow/living/parenting/main5024611.shtml

May 19, 2009

(CBS) A new federal study, released exclusively to CBS News, reveals hundreds of cases of abuse of students at the hands of school officials — and even deaths.

The report, done by the Government Accountability Office, finds incidents of abuse of restraints and seclusion, among other forms of mistreatment, in public and private schools alike, all across the country, says CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes.

A congressional panel has scheduled a hearing about the findings for Tuesday, and child advocates are calling for better laws to protect students.

Students such as Cedric Napoleon and Paige Gaydos.

Paige’s mother, Ann Gaydos, is slated to testify Tuesday at the hearing to be held by the House Education and Labor Committee about the abuse Paige allegedly suffered on multiple occasions in school in Cupertino, Calif. when Paige, who has Asperger Syndrome, was seven. She’s now 15 and the family has moved to Monument, Colo.

Cedric’s foster mother had no idea the Killeen, Texas eighth grader’s teacher was physically restraining him when he acted up. Until, Cordes says, the day it led to Cedric’s death.

“She took him down and sat on him,” a tearful Toni Price told Cordes, “and straddled him. And uh… the autopsy report said that they had never seen anything like that except in a car crash, because she crushed his chest.”

The GAO probe finds hundreds of cases of alleged abuse and death in schools over the past 20 years, Cordes says — everything from carpet burns from being dragged to a seclusion room, to bruises from being pinned to the ground. Many of the victims were, like Cedric, children with disabilities.

“Seclusion and restraint should only be used in an emergency situation,” says Deborah Ziegler of the Council for Exceptional Children.

And the tactics are used more often than parents might think, Cordes points out. In the 2007-2008 school year alone, the Texas public school system reported 18,741 cases of children being restrained.

Laws vary from state-to-state, Cordes, says, and about half the states have no laws at all.

Ann Gaydos, with Paige sitting at her side, told Early Show co-anchor Julie Chen about the restraint and other physical abuse she says her daughter suffered culminating, Gaydos said, with a teacher taking Paige into an empty classroom, lifting her by her wrists and an ankle and slamming Paige headfirst into the ground. Paige was, Gaydos said, “quite seriously hurt” with very bad bruises on her shoulder and head, and with skin forced off a shoulder.

Gaydos says she’ll tell Congress Tuesday she wants “far better oversight of school districts, perhaps some third-party oversight. The districts can’t police themselves. I hope for stricter laws regarding these restraints, and better whistleblower protections. The whistleblower (in Paige’s case) was driven out of the district.”

GOA FINDINGS PDF FILE:

goa

County defends OCY in lawsuit over teen’s death

 

http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090518/NEWS02/305189989

BY ED PALATTELLA

The death of Brittany Legler spurred a series of investigations that reached similar conclusions: the Erie County Office of Children and Youth erred in the case, and OCY had to change.

Five years later, Erie County government is taking a different stance, at least in court: OCY did nothing wrong.

The county’s insurance company is making that claim as it defends OCY in a federal civil-rights suit over the case of Legler, a mentally disabled 15-year-old who died after her adoptive mother, Lisa Iarussi, beat her at their Millcreek Township residence on May 9, 2004.

The suit, in federal court in Erie, is a reminder of how deeply the Legler case affected her family and OCY.

With the family heartbroken and the district attorney and two consecutive county executives leading the way, OCY underwent unprecedented scrutiny after Legler’s death.

The result was new leadership and other changes meant to rid OCY — in the words of a national child-welfare group — of a “toxic environment” and “a culture of disrespect.”

The report of that group, the Child Welfare League of America, is one piece of evidence Legler’s estate plans to present if the suit goes to trial.

 The estate in 2006 sued OCY and eight employees.

Legler’s estate is arguing OCY acted with “deliberate indifference” by arranging Iarussi’s adoption of Legler in 2001 and by not fully investigating repeated allegations that Iarussi was abusing Legler in 2003 and 2004.

The county, through its insurance company, St. Paul Travelers, is arguing that OCY acted appropriately.

The county’s expert witness is a former child-welfare official from Illinois, whose report is docketed.

“It is my overall opinion that the efforts of the Erie County Office of Children and Youth to protect Brittany Legler from child maltreatment during 2003 and 2004 were reasonable and were by no means deliberately indifferent,” the expert witness, John Goad, wrote in his report, for which the insurance company paid him $11,125.

“Any suggestion that, from the information available to OCY, Brittany’s death should have been foreseeable is ridiculous.”

Judge to rule on dismissal

U.S. District Judge Sean J. McLaughlin is presiding over the case. In his latest ruling, in April, he gave the lawyer for St. Paul Travelers, Edmond Joyal, of Pittsburgh, until June 15 to file a motion seeking to dismiss the case.

The lawyer for the Legler estate, Paul Susko, will have 45 days to respond, and McLaughlin will rule later on the dismissal request.

Joyal did not respond to a telephone call seeking comment. The administration of County Executive Mark DiVecchio, who took office in January 2006, declined to comment, citing the pending suit.

A lawyer unconnected to the case said an attorney for an insurance company is in control when representing a municipality, though the municipality has input.

“The lawyer has the authority to go into court and make whatever decisions are reasonable, based on what is in the insured entity’s best interest and based on the facts,” said Gerald Villella, deputy solicitor for the city of Erie. “The client is always the one that is represented, not the insurance company, which is paying.”

The county’s policy limit under the St. Paul Travelers liability policy is $2 million per incident. The county has no deductible, and its total annual premium for the liability policy, according to county records, is $84,400.

The Legler estate is seeking unspecified monetary damages and a decision that would deter the type of conduct the estate claims occurred in Legler’s case.

“We are looking forward to presenting Brittany’s case at trial as soon as possible,” Susko said.

The Erie County Coroner’s Office ruled the cause of Legler’s death as a pre-existing heart condition aggravated by abuse. Millcreek police on May 19, 2004, charged Iarussi with aggravated assault and related counts, and she later pleaded no contest to aggravated assault and endangering the welfare of a child in Legler’s death.

Iarussi, now 40, was sentenced in December 2004 to seven to 14 years in state prison. She is at the State Correctional Institution at Muncy, near Williamsport.

‘Everything was not fine’

According to court records, Joyal is building the county’s defense around Goad’s report and the contention that OCY workers never had enough evidence to determine that Legler — who had 212 cuts and bruises on her body when she died, a cauliflower ear and a previously broken rib — suffered from abuse.

Evidence from the criminal case and other probes showed that school employees contacted OCY 10 times in the 13 months preceding Legler’s death.

A state-mandated local committee faulted OCY for not holding face-to-face meetings with Millcreek Township School District officials about their complaints of suspected abuse of Legler.

“Don’t think we are just saying everything was fine,” Erie County District Attorney Brad Foulk, a member of the committee, said in June 2005, commenting on the report.

“It was not. Everything was not fine.”

Preventing tragedy

The Millcreek school employees have been deposed in the Legler suit.

The estate’s lawyer, Susko, said in court records that “some of these witnesses who called OCY about Brittany will testify that the OCY personnel seemed to be annoyed or irritated as to repeated calls about the same subject.”

The administrators of Legler’s estate are Charles Hayes and Victoria L. Hayes, the legal guardians of Legler’s adoptive sister, Abby Iarussi, who was 8 years old at the time Legler died.

“Brittany Legler’s death was entirely preventable,” Susko said in court records, “and would not have occurred if the OCY personnel named as defendants in this matter performed their duties correctly.”

The county disagrees.

“No professional person in regular contact with Brittany … had substantial evidence that she was being abused,” Goad, the expert witness, said in his report.

“Even if OCY had obtained every bit of information that every one of these providers had, it would have not been sufficient to verify abuse, much less remove Brittany from Ms. Iarussi’s care.

“Sadly, no child welfare agency will ever prevent every tragedy.”

Staff writer Lisa Thompson contributed to this report.

ED PALATTELLA can be reached at 870-1813 or by e-mail.

Senator demands investigation of blinded boy case

 

http://www.kget.com/news/local/story/Senator-demands-investigation-of-blinded-boy-case/zi1iC_GVW0OrBMw4dvnO-Q.cspx

A Bakersfield man accused of eating his 4-year-old son’s eyeball has a lengthy criminal record, including a child abuse conviction. Kern’s Child Protective Services refused to say Monday why social workers allowed the boy to live with the man, or if anyone was monitoring the child’s well-being.

A state senator labeled the situation ”outrageous” and called for a full investigation of the case.

Angelo Mendoza Sr., 34, was arrested April 28 after neighbors found his son lying in a pool of blood in the east Bakersfield apartment where the two lived together. One of the boy’s eyeballs was completely gone and hasn’t been located. The other eye was damaged beyond repair, police said.

The boy told investigators, ”My Daddy ate my eyes.”

Mendoza’s criminal past dates back more than ten years. He has more than 20 cases on file in Superior Court. Three years ago, he and the boy’s mother pleaded no contest to drug charges and willful cruelty to a child.

The mother, who has a warrant for her arrest on a drug case, is out of the picture, leaving Mendoza to share an apartment alone with the boy.

Why would authorities allow that?

KGET’s Alex Valle took that question to CPS Monday, but got no answers.

County officials wouldn’t discuss the case or say when a case worker last checked on the boy. But CPS officials said drug charges aren’t always enough to take a child out of the home. CPS says according to state law there must be serious physical abuse before a child is taken away from his parents, drug charges or using drugs in front of your kids isn’t always enough. (What about the willful Cruelity to a child, that wasn’t enough?)

Bethany Christman, Assistant Director of Child Protective Services, said federal and state laws prohibit her from explaining.

“There is a whole variety of child abuse,” Christman said. ”There is anything from what we call general neglect all the way through severe neglect, physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse. Those are all the various topics we can remove a child under. It depends on the degree of what those are if we can actually remove a child.” ( I think Willful Cruelity of a child, sounds pretty severe)

CPS won’t tell us their last complaint against Mendoza or if they were watching the boy more closely because of his father’s criminal past.

Supervisor Ray Watson says he expects officials from CPS will report to the Board of Supervisors about the case at their meeting on Tuesday.

Sen. Dean Florez has been a vocal critic of Kern County CPS and promoted a state investigation a few years ago.

In response to our inquiry Monday, Florez issued this statement:

“This outrageous case of child abuse deserves a great deal of scrutiny, and given the seriousness of 4-year-old Angelo Mendoza’s injuries, I think it is fair to question whether child protective authorities let him down.

”A young child living with drugged-out parents deserves extra attention from child protective authorities and it is not clear whether Angelo received the necessary supervision that could have protected him.

”This is especially troubling given that Angelo’s parents had already pleaded no contest to child endangerment charges in the past, as a result of using PCP. The fact that little Angelo’s mom had an arrest warrant for failing to complete a drug treatment program looks like a warning sign that was missed.

”While the decision on whether or not to remove a child from a parent can be difficult, I think we should always error on the side of caution. This is especially true when you have parents who abuse PCP — a very dangerous and unpredictable drug.

”I expect the Kern County Board of Supervisors to initiate a full investigation by an outside agency to study whether there were any failures in protecting Angelo Mendoza from harm.

”Kern County should have the best operating practices at CPS that puts the safety and well-being of children as its first priority.

”Only through an honest assessment by outside experts would we be able to know whether everything that could have been done to protect Angelo was put in place by Kern Child Protective Services.

”If laws need to be changed in order to protect kids like Angelo, then Child Protective authorities shouldn’t be sitting idly silently. We need to hear from them immediately.”

Aneglo Mendoza Senior is set to be in court on Wednesday. He faces mayhem and torture charges.

Prioritize studies regarding foster care in North Dakota

 

http://www.inforum.com/event/article/id/241065/

Wednesday, the North Dakota Legislative Council meets to prioritize studies that were recommended by the Legislature during the last session. SB 2420 is one of these bills. It asks for studies on child support guidelines and also for a study on an ombudsman’s office for family consumers of services.

By: John Ford, Rugby, N.D.

Wednesday, the North Dakota Legislative Council meets to prioritize studies that were recommended by the Legislature during the last session. SB 2420 is one of these bills. It asks for studies on child support guidelines and also for a study on an ombudsman’s office for family consumers of services. This amendment was a direct result of lobbying on behalf of families that have children in foster care.

North Dakota has one of the highest rates of foster care placements in the country. Many of these foster care placements are in modern day orphanages, such as Dakota Boys and Girls Ranch or Home on the Range, or warehoused through agencies like PATH of North Dakota. One of the worst statistics we have here is that placements in these “homes” happen at twice the national average here in our state.

 There are few rules regarding who can be housed together in these facilities, and in the recent past, “at risk” children have been housed with convicted sex offenders. There are far too many cases where children have been removed illegally, or not returned to their homes when the allegations of abuse leveled at the parents have been overturned by judges.

Cases involving children in foster homes who are being deprived, as defined by NDCC 27-20-02(8), are allowed to continue by the Department of Human Services because, as Carol Olson, executive director of DHS, has explained, there is no place else to house these children. DHS has quietly convinced the Administrative Rules Committee to pass administrative laws that allow this practice to continue. When parents or the children themselves complain, theses complaints are not acted upon.

Oftentimes the same abuses that the parents of these children are accused of are “licensing issues” when they are committed by foster parents.

SB 2420 section 2 seeks a study for an ombudsman’s office as a place for complaints from parents and children to be investigated. It would be independent from DHS. There are currently 19 states in our country with ombudsman’s offices. Out-of-home placements are six times more likely here in North Dakota than in any of these states.

North Dakota prides itself on old-time family values, and we need to encourage our state legislators to embrace this value and prioritize this study for the sake of all family units in North Dakota.

Ford, Rugby, N.D., is executive director, North Dakota Coalition for Child Protection Services and Foster Care Reform.

Posted on Tue, May. 12, 2009

 

Two plead guilty to perjury in Danieal Kelly case

 

By Vernon Clark

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/breaking/20090512_Two_plead_guilty_to_perjury_in_Danieal_Kelly_case.html

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Two women pleaded guilty today to lying to a grand jury about the condition of Danieal Kelly, the 14-year-old with cerebral palsy who died of starvation inside a fetid West Philadelphia apartment in 2006.

Marie Moses, 35, and Diamond Brantley, 19 – both friends of Danieal’s mother, Andrea Kelly – each pleaded guilty before Common Pleas Judge Benjamin Lerner to one count of perjury after waiving their right to a trial.

Lerner said the crime, a third-degree felony, carries a maximum sentence of up to seven years in prison and a $15,000 fine.

A third friend of Kelly’s, Andrea Miles, 18, is being tried on the same charge as a juvenile because of her age at the time of the crime, officials said.

Lerner said defense lawyers had recommended a sentence that excluded jail time. He said he would likely sentence Moses and Brantley to a combination of probation, community service and court costs. He scheduled sentencing for July 2.

Danieal, weighing only 47 pounds, was found dead in her bed inside a filthy, sweltering apartment on Memorial Avenue near Viola Street on Aug. 4, 2006.

When the body was found, the girl was gaunt and had maggot-infested bedsores. Her bed was covered with feces as flies buzzed around her.

Assistant District Attorney Edward McCann said Brantley testified on Nov, 16, 2006, that she visited the home on Aug. 3, the day before Danieal’s body was found, and that the child “smelled like soap” and smelled “clean and fresh.”

McCann said Moses testified on that same day that the apartment was clean and that Danieal appeared “healthy” and looked like “her normal self.”

McCann said that paramedics and a worker from the Department of Human Services noted that the home was in deplorable condition with dirt, food containers, and piles of dirty clothes were strewn about.

He said one paramedic would testify that the apartment was among the filthiest he had seen in 10 years on the job, that the stench was nearly unbearable and that the home was unfit for human habitation.

McCann said that Danieal’s brother Daniel, then 14, would testify that, a day before the body was found, he told Andrea Kelly that Danieal was looking ill.

Daniel would also say the girl was pale and her lips were turning purple, McCann said. The teen would also say that he tried to give Danieal a glass of water but that she could not move, and that he told his mother that she should call police.

Andrea Kelly pleaded guilty April 29 to third-degree murder and child endangerment, and Lerner sentenced her to 20 to 40 years in prison. Kelly’s nine remaining children are in DHS custody.

Five others are facing trial in the case. Danieal’s father, Daniel Kelly, is charged with endangering the welfare of children.

DHS workers Dana Poindexter and Laura Sommerer are charged with endangering the welfare of a child and recklessly endangering another person.

Julius Juma Murray and Mickal Kumavaka, two workers for MultiEthnic Behavior Health Inc., a private agency, who were assigned to see that Daniel was safe and receiving needed services, are charged with involuntary manslaughter and endangering the welfare of a child.

McCann said Moses and Brantley were “obviously, clearly covering up for Andrea, they were her friends.” He said their testimony before the grand jury was “clearly at odds with reality.

FAILING KALAB

 

http://www.courierpress.com/news/2009/may/17/parents-child-welfare-system-created-short-life/

EVANSVILLE — The call to 911 came in shortly before noon March 31, 2008.

The man on the other end of the line was distressed because his 3-year-old son was hurt, badly. “OK. He’s not breathing right now?” a dispatcher asked Terry Lay as the Evansville man performed CPR at the family’s trailer in Eastbrook Mobile Home Park.

“No. His lips are purple, and he’s not doing nothing,” Lay replied.

In the background of that recording, a child can be heard gagging, struggling to breathe.

It was a fight Kalab Gene Lay ultimately would lose.

In some ways, that fight for life was a struggle Kalab had been fighting since he was born.

Kalab’s autopsy revealed a life scarred by abuse and neglect. His death was ruled a homicide because of multiple blunt force trauma from beatings delivered over a period of days. Signs of recent as well as previous abuse were evident, said Annie Groves, then Vanderburgh County’s assistant coroner.

“I think we realized right then and there the system wasn’t working. There’s no way that baby should have been given to those parents. Ever,” she said. “I’ve said all along the system had failed that little boy. The system that should have protected him did not.”

Kalab died April 1, 2008, and his parents faced formal charges three days later. It wasn’t a first arrest for either Lay or Amanda Brooks.

Kalab and his twin sister, Kayla, had been reunited with Brooks and Lay in January 2008 after the pair finished serving time on methamphetamine-related charges in separate Illinois prisons. Lay’s criminal history is a lengthy one.

The cruelty of Kalab’s death and his sister’s beating over a period of days in March 2008 cast a harsh light on the child welfare system charged with protecting those least able to protect themselves.

Kalab, less than 40 days from his fourth birthday, has the dubious distinction of being one of only two children to die at the hands of caregivers in Vanderburgh County in 2008. In December, Henderson, Ky., resident Carol C. Thomas checked into an Evansville motel, where she fatally shot her 3-year-old daughter, Brandi, before killing herself.

Tragically, Kalab’s death was the first in a frustrating and heartbreaking string of violent child deaths in Vanderburgh County.

“We were pissed. They took this child away from the parents who raised him in the foster home and gave him to the parents, and they killed him,” said Elaine Slicker, a founder of Break the Silence. The group, conceived in the “Your Turn” comments of courierpress.com, formed to raise awareness of child abuse and take action to stop it.

In December, Brooks, 34, pleaded guilty to neglect of a dependent resulting in death. During that hearing, she also pleaded guilty to battery resulting in serious bodily injury to a person less than 14 years of age in connection with what has been described as the “savage” beating of Kayla.

Lay, 41, will stand trial in September on charges of murder and neglect of a dependent resulting in death as well as neglect of a dependent resulting in serious bodily injury.

“They just had that baby for three months, and they killed him, and that sparked anger in everybody,” Slicker said. “And it’s just kept happening with more babies and more babies … It was like: Boom! Boom! Boom! All of the sudden, we’d had enough.”

The momentum of community activism has been fueled by child abuse and neglect deaths in Vanderburgh County since Kalab’s: In the first three months of this year alone, three children ages 16 months and younger, have died, reportedly as a result of action or inaction by parents or stepparents.

Their stories are three among thousands. Since Kalab died, an estimated 1,650 American children have died of abuse or neglect, and such fatalities are considered underreported.

Still, substantiated child abuse and neglect deaths outnumber those attributed to accidental falls, choking on food, suffocation or fires in the home combined, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

“It’s senseless. I literally can’t understand it,” said Groves, who was elected Vanderburgh County coroner in November. “What we’re starting to see is it’s not one-time abuse. It’s not that they snapped. These children had other signs of abuse, not just recent. They also had past trauma.”

Although conceived with the best intentions, the child welfare system operates under a cloak of secrecy designed to shield the privacy of the children and families it serves.

Five years ago, efforts to examine the sequence of events culminating in Kalab’s death likely would have gone nowhere. Records and investigative documents would have remained inaccessible to public scrutiny.

However, a bill championed by Rep. Dennis Avery, D-Evansville, in 2004 requires disclosure of investigations into the death or near-death of a child as a result of abuse, abandonment or neglect. Illinois and Kentucky are among approximately 27 states with similar provisions.

Using the Freedom of Information Act, the Courier & Press obtained a copy of Kalab’s file — 3,000 pages of records and documents encompassing his history in child protective services.

The court records and notes and reports of caseworkers, counselors and medical professionals in both Illinois and Indiana tell the story of a boy doomed within a system torn between the sometimes conflicting priorities of protecting a child’s best interests and reuniting him with his parents.

More than 80 percent of victimized children are abused or neglected by their own parents, according to the U.S. Administration for Children and Families. One-third of those victims grow up to abuse or neglect children of their own.

In Kalab’s life, the cycle apparently began decades before his birth, when his parents entered a system in which they seemed unable to break free.

The friends who introduced Terry Lay, then 33, and Amanda Brooks, 26, at a party eight years ago likely could not have foreseen where the meeting would lead: The pair quickly forged a relationship, a union troubled by financial difficulties, arguments, drug addiction and incarceration.

Brooks, a high school dropout and married mother of two, had suffered abuse and neglect as a child, and she seemed condemned to repeat the cycle when she was charged in 1997 with neglect of a minor in Delaware County, Ind., according to Kalab’s file.

Lay was a high school dropout and felon with a lengthy criminal record who had fathered two children, been convicted of their neglect and relinquished his parental rights to them.

Shortly after meeting Lay in 2001, Brooks and her then-husband divorced. She retained custody of their two boys, who divided their time living with her, their father and their maternal grandparents, according to case records.

Despite their rocky parenting histories and lack of financial stability, the couple wasted littl time starting a family: They had five children together in six years.

Their first son arrived in May 2002. His birth was followed by a daughter the next April, and then twins, Kalab and Kayla, in May 2004. Brooks gave birth to a daughter by another man in 2006, and she and Lay had a son, their fifth child, in 2008.

In 2004, the couple established a home together in a two-story beige unit in the Kermit Coffee public housing complex in Eldorado, Ill., a city of about 4,500, roughly 10 miles from Harrisburg, the Saline County seat.

Their apartment was at the end of a long building split into separate family units. It faced a parking lot and a basketball court.

Brooks later would tell medical professionals and caseworkers she was taking birth control about the time the twins were conceived and was unaware she was pregnant until she was more than four months along.

She admitted using methamphetamine during the first half of her pregnancy and said she smoked about half a pack of cigarettes daily.

Doctors described her prenatal care as “late and scant.”

The first four Lay children all eventually were diagnosed with developmental delays.

Lay told social workers he was unable to find a job that paid enough to feed his family, so in addition to the handouts he could get from local churches, he began making and selling methamphetamine.

Kalab, weighing just more than five pounds, was born shortly after Kayla on May 10, 2004, when the twins arrived two weeks early at Heartland Medical Center in Marion, Ill.

Physicians soon became concerned about Kalab: He seemed unable to keep food down and was transferred to Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital in St. Louis for surgery to correct an intestinal blockage.

The infant had two feedings the evening of his birth before he began vomiting. Medical personnel determined Kalab was in abdominal distress and failing to thrive.

Months later, Dr. Deanna St. Germain of Union County Hospital in Anna, Ill., wrote the intestinal blockage likely was because of “in utero exposure to methamphetamine.”

Kalab remained at Cardinal Glennon for two weeks. During that time, his parents’ seeming indifference began to concern a variety of those involved in his case.

Dr. David McCay, a pediatric resident at Cardinal Glennon, noted the Illinois Department of Child and Family Services already was involved with the family before the twins’ birth. Caseworkers, however, told the hospital there was no reason not to return Kalab to his parents.

Hospital social worker Nan Winters contacted the Illinois Department of Child and Family Services in Saline County, Ill.

She learned an investigation of the family had started five months before the twins were born, but there was not an open case.

Caseworker Marilyn Waite reportedly assured Winters she had made several visits to the home and found it to be very clean and the “family had necessary baby supplies,” according to documents in Kalab’s file.

A hospital spokesman said Winters and other personnel at Cardinal Glennon declined to comment about their reports regarding Kalab’s treatment there, citing patient privacy and a need for parental consent.

Despite the Illinois Department of Child and Family Services assurances of a safe home, McCay repeatedly noted difficulties reaching Kalab’s parents, who did not make the three-hour drive from Eldorado to St. Louis for Kalab’s surgery and apparently did not visit during his hospitalization.

In a social services supplemental report taken at the hospital, Winters wrote that for at least two days, Brooks failed to pick up Kalab, even though he was ready for discharge.

Brooks reportedly told Winters she was having trouble arranging transportation because the family did not have a car, but Winters noted she had informed Brooks of free transportation and other services available through the hospital.

Ed Mackey lived a few doors down from the couple in the Kermit Coffee housing complex.

Since Brooks and Lay had no telephone, Mackey said hospital staff repeatedly called his phone in efforts to reach the couple regarding Kalab’s hospitalization.

“They just kept calling here and asking for the mother,” Mackey said.

“And I remember Terry and Amanda just fighting all the time, but I don’t know what about. All I know is, eventually, Amanda called the hospital back and just said ‘Do what you have to do,’ but I don’t know what she meant. I know they didn’t have a car, and eventually a relative came and got her and they got (Kalab).”

In the days after Kalab came home from the hospital, Mackey and another neighbor, Mary Stallings, said Amanda acted in ways characteristic of a new mother, coming over to show them the newborn twins.

As the weeks passed, however, both grew wary of the couple’s lifestyle.

Mackey said Lay was unemployed and always borrowing his phone.

“He would call all the churches for money, and I think one priest was getting tired of it,” Mackey said.

“I remember (Lay) telling him he wasn’t pulling his chain, he had mouths to feed and was waiting on a check.”

Mackey said Lay told him he’d been hurt working a construction job and was awaiting a settlement check.

But when the check came in the mail, Lay was in jail. Mackey remembered Brooks trying to get a ride to the jail so she could have him sign it and cash it.

Stallings has lived in the apartment next door to Brooks’ and Lay’s former one for more than 30 years and said she’s lived in the housing complex longer than anyone. Although she said she usually keeps to herself, Stallings recalled seeing Brooks outside with her young children and also seeing the twins shortly after they were born.

Stallings “had suspicions” about possible drug use in the home.

“I had suspicions about what was going on there, but I didn’t associate with them,” Stallings said. “I didn’t say anything to anyone about it, because you don’t do that around here.”

Those suspicions were confirmed July 9, 2004, when Stallings said her daughter woke her before dawn, saying she’d seen police entering Brooks’ and Lay’s apartment as she came home from work.

Eldorado police officers had gone to apartment E5 after smelling ether coming from the complex at 1900 N. Main St.

Armed with a search warrant, police found three adults and four children sleeping in the midst of a meth lab and inhaling fumes from the meth-making process.

Kalab, Kayla and their two older siblings were malnourished and in poor physical condition when they were removed from the residence.

According to numbers from the Department of Justice, after their parents’ arrest, the Lay children joined an estimated 783,000 American children in the foster care system.

Number of foster children in Florida on mood-altering drugs underreported, state study finds

 

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/breakingnews/sfl-gabriel-myers-dcf-b051409,0,3897786.storyJon

Burstein | South Florida Sun-Sentinel

7:45 PM EDT, May 14, 2009

FORT LAUDERDALE – The number of foster children in Florida prescribed mood-altering drugs has been significantly underreported, according to the early results of a statewide study sparked by a 7-year-old boy’s suicide in Margate.

The revelation came Thursday at the end of an intense, day-long hearing by a panel appointed to scrutinize Gabriel Myers’ tumultuous journey through the child welfare system that ended with him hanging himself at his foster home on April 16. Gabriel had been prescribed two psychotropic drugs.

Since then, the state Department of Children & Families has been reviewing case files on the more than 20,000 foster children in Florida. Before Gabriel’s death, just under 10 percent — 1,954 — were listed as being on mood-altering drugs, said John Cooper, the department’s acting assistant secretary for operations.

That number will rise markedly when DCF releases the findings of its current study next week, Cooper said.

“I don’t know by how much, but it will be significant,” he said.

In Gabriel’s case, he only was listed in the database as being on Adderall, an attention deficit/hyperactivity drug, that he had been taken off of months before his death, said DCF Secretary George Sheldon. The two drugs that Gabriel was taking when he died–Symbyax and Vyvanse–had not been approved by either his parents or a judge–a violation of state law.

Child welfare officials acknowledged that failure Thursday to the six-member panel as they traced the last 10 months of Gabriel’s life. Throughout the eight-hour hearing, questions arose about communication between social services providers and whether vital information about Gabriel’s behavior and background was being shared and acted upon quickly.

No one checked to see why Gabriel had been prescribed Adderall before moving to Florida from Ohio or if he had been on any medications prior to that. No one obtained a copy of his child welfare history from Ohio until after his death.

In his last month, Gabriel saw his world turned upside down–going to a new foster home, changing therapists, changing after-school programs and his mother being transferred from the Broward County Click here for restaurant inspection reports Jail to an Ohio jail. His behavior worsened during that time with him destroying property and threatening to hurt others.

“Was Gabriel spiraling out of his control or was his environment spiraling out of control?” asked panel member Bill Janes, DCF assistant secretary for substance abuse and mental health.

Sheldon, who attended part of Thursday’s hearing, told the panel he wants every aspect of Gabriel’s case investigated and people held accountable.

“We got to get every component of this system right,” he said. “When you deal with children, no one can have a bad day.”

Jon Burstein can be reached at jburstein@SunSentinel.com or 954-356-4491.

 

RELATED  LINKS

Behind Gabriel Myers’ sweet smile lay a sad, scarred soul

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/breakingnews/sfl-042509-gabriel-myers-hang-dcf,0,3526476.story

State officials investigating whether 7-year-old suicide victim was given mind-altering drug

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/breakingnews/sfl-gabriel-myers-hanging-b042409,0,6377809.story

Margate 7-year-old’s sad journey began 10 months ago

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/breakingnews/sfl-gabriel-myers-hanging-deathbn042209,0,4111498.story

7-year-old boy prescribed powerful drug before suicide

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/community/news/margate/sfl-boy-suicide-psychiatric-drugs-bn042209,0,2251150.story

Man charged with beating disabled foster child

 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-ap-il-fosterchildkilled,0,4306108.story

Associated Press

8:20 AM CDT, May 15, 2009

CRETE, Ill. – A south suburban Chicago man has been charged with tying up and beating a mentally disabled foster child who later died.

The Will County state’s attorney’s office says Fred D. Johnson II of Crete was arrested early Thursday on charges of aggravated battery of a child and unlawful restraint. Officials allege he tied 12-year-old Kevin Johnson to a bed frame with straps.

Prosecutors say 43-year-old Fred Johnson caused Kevin’s death by striking him on the head and body.

They say Kevin Johnson and eight other minors he was related to were living with Fred Johnson. The others have been removed by the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services.

Johnson is also charged with failing to seek medical attention for one of Kevin’s siblings.

——

Information from: Southtown Star, http://www.southtownstar.com

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