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Monthly Archives: June 2009

Hawthorne-area boy’s death shows failings of system

 

http://www.dailybreeze.com/latestnews/ci_12604713

By Denise Nix Staff Writer

Posted: 06/16/2009 08:32:01 PM PDT

Years before 19-month-old Kobe Brown died, allegedly at the hands of his stepfather, his Hawthorne-area family was already known to social workers.

Kobe’s mother, Britney Portis, has a history of abuse and arrests, according to court documents related to the custody of Kobe’s older half-brother, identified only as Jayden.

Even so, those who work in the dependent court system say it is difficult – if not impossible – to know when they should intervene. Many families are troubled, they say, but very few experience such tragedy.

Although judges, social workers, attorneys and the like are constantly trying to make decisions that benefit children, there is no way to know the future.

“We try to figure out which families need which level of intervention, disruption, services or support,” said Leslie Heimov, executive director of the Children’s Law Center of Los Angeles, which represents children in dependency court proceedings.

“It’s a complicated balance and, unfortunately, there is no perfect formula,” Heimov added.

Kobe was one of 14 children who died of abuse or neglect in Los Angeles County last year, despite the fact that his family was already under scrutiny by child welfare officials, according to an April 21 Los Angeles Times article.

The report, based on normally confidential documents obtained by the newspaper, shocked county officials, who immediately called for reforms.

“Although each death and each child is completely important on its own, 14 out of 24,000 is less than a half percent,” Heimov said.

 She also noted that the Times article reported that an additional 18 Los Angeles County children who were not under DCFS scrutiny died during the same time from abuse or neglect.

That wasn’t the case, however, in Britney Portis’ household.

Portis was arrested in July 2004 for making terrorist threats after an anonymous caller to the child protection hotline reported domestic violence between Portis and Jayden’s father.

Then, in January 2006, Portis assaulted a boyfriend’s grandmother, pulling the woman’s hair from her scalp. She was arrested for battery.

Portis was convicted in 2006 for misdemeanor domestic violence and a felony of assault likely to produce great bodily harm.

However, court records show Portis never complied with the probationary terms imposed on her for the convictions.

In addition, a social worker found that, from July 2004 to August 2007, there were six reports filed related to abuse and neglect of Portis’ children.

Only one was substantiated – and that was for emotional abuse of Jayden related to Portis’ assault on the grandmother, according to court documents.

Four reports were determined to be unfounded and one was inconclusive.

Kobe and Jayden, who is about 5, had different fathers. They also had a 1-year-old half-sister, whose father is Deshawnte Wade.

Wade, 27, returns to Torrance Superior Court today for a pretrial hearing in the murder and assault of Kobe, who died from blunt force head trauma consistent with shaking, a deputy medical examiner testified at Wade’s preliminary hearing in March.

Wade told a detective that Kobe choked on a penny while in his care at their Chadron Avenue home May 4, 2008, the detective testified.

Wade also said he used back and abdominal thrusts to dislodge the coin, but didn’t call for help.

Portis testified at that same hearing that she returned home from the hospital, where she had taken Jayden, to find Kobe lying lifeless on the couch.

She called 911. Kobe was taken to a hospital, where he died two days later.

While Portis did not say during the hearing why she was at the hospital with Jayden that day, court documents show she took the boy there for a dog bite on his lip that he received the day before.

At the time, he was in his biological father’s custody, but under the care of a babysitter who had a dog.

After Kobe’s death, Jayden and their sister were placed in social workers’ custody. Jayden was released to his father, identified only as Craig, but the Department of Children and Family Services filed papers seeking to have them declared dependents of the court.

Los Angeles Dependency Court Judge D. Zeke Zeidler decided in August that Jayden and the sister should remain dependents of the court, but allowed Craig to retain custody of Jayden.

Craig, however, appealed Zeidler’s finding that he knew or should have known that Portis had unresolved violent tendencies and had engaged in “violent altercations” in Jayden’s presence. By leaving Jayden with Portis, Craig failed to protect the boy from risk of physical or emotional harm, Zeidler found.

Craig also took issue with the judge’s order that he attend parenting classes and keep all of Jayden’s medical and therapy appointments.

The 2nd District Appellate Court, in an opinion issued April 16, rejected Craig’s arguments, citing evidence that Craig could benefit from parenting classes and that he had a history of not getting Jayden proper care – like not seeking medical attention after the dog bite.

Craig said he left Jayden with Portis only because he had to work, but added that she “assaulted (Craig) so many times he could not recall all of them,” the opinion states.

Many of those incidents occurred around Jayden, he told a social worker.

In upholding Zeidler’s findings, the appellate court noted that Jayden could have easily suffered physical or emotional harm during the domestic violence incidents he witnessed.

Custody hearing for Lorrie Thomas’ children continues, fathers argue for their rights

 

http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2009/06/custody_hearing_for_lorrie_tho_3.html

by Shannon Murphy | The Flint Journal

Tuesday June 16, 2009, 3:01 PM

Arguments continued Tuesday about where to place the five children and two grandchildren of a woman accused in the death of her 9-year-old adoptive daughter.

In a Family Court hearing, attorneys for Lorrie Thomas’ children and their fathers argued that the children, who range in age from 15 to 2, should be living with family.

Thomas is in jail on charges of second-degree murder and child abuse in the death of her adoptive daughter and niece Shylae Thomas. Shylae’s body was found April 22 in a storage bin in Vienna Township. Authorities said she died of malnourishment.

Shortly after the discovery, Thomas’ remaining children, plus her eldest daughter’s two children, were placed in foster care homes around the area.

Fathers of four of the children were in court Tuesday and their attorney, Rochelle Thompson, said it’s “absurd” that the children still are in foster care and not with their fathers.

“There are no allegations of abuse of neglect against (these fathers),” she said. “All they want is their children and no one is looking at their housing.”

Department of Human Services officials said during the hearing that all four fathers were looked at and home studies conducted when the children were removed from their home. But, DHS said none of the fathers’ homes were appropriate.

At least one of the men has a criminal history, two live out of state and one owes child support. But Thompson argued none of that is a reason to keep them from their children.

Judge John Gadola adjourned the matter until June 30 so all attornies could review home placement studies. The children will remain in their current foster care homes.

Also on Tuesday, Gadola set Thomas’ parental termination trial Aug. 14. Gadola said he wanted to wait until the preliminary examination in her criminal trial was completed.

Thomas was in court Tuesday, but did not speak. Her attorney, Mark Clement, said after the hearing that he is ready to go to trial in the termination case and doesn’t believe Thomas should lose her parental rights.

Support Grows For Mom Of 550-Pound Boy

 

Calls Offer Aid For Jerri Gray, Son

 

http://www.wyff4.com/news/19782467/detail.html

POSTED: 6:38 pm EDT June 17, 2009

GREENVILLE, S.C. — Support for the mother of a 555-pound boy is coming from all over the country, despite the fact that she remains in jail.

Jerri Gray was arrested and extradited from Maryland to Greenville, after she fled the Upstate to avoid a family court hearing where the Department of Social Services planned to take custody of her son, prosecutors said.

She is being held on charges of child neglect and custodial interference.

Gray’s attorney said Wednesday that his office had taken many calls from all over from people offering financial support and other aid to Gray and her son. Efforts are under way to establish a fund to help the family in the long-term.

Attorney Grant Varner said, “We are hoping to complete the program — provide a complete treatment program, a full treatment program, a beneficial treatment program — whereas the Department of Social Services wants to put him on a treadmill and get him to lose 100 pounds and say, ‘Job done.’”

Marilyn Matheus, with DSS, issued a written statement saying, “This child is under medical care and progressing well. His medical team will determine his best course of treatmet and we will make sure he is provided what he needs.”

Previous Stories:

•June 13, 2009: Mother Of 555-Pound Boy Stays In Jail

•June 4, 2009: Mom Who Fled With 555-Pound Son Back In Upstate

•May 27, 2009: Mother Of 555-Pound Boy In Court

•May 22, 2009: Attorney: Don’t Assume Obese Teen’s Mom Is Guilty

•May 22, 2009: Mom, 555-Pound Son Found In Baltimore

Copyright 2009 by WYFF4.com.

DCF officials discuss suicide of 7-year-old Margate boy

 

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/breaking-news/story/1103119.html

Gabriel Myers: picture from Florida DCF webpage

Gabriel Myers: picture from Florida DCF webpage

BY AMY SHERMAN

asherman@MiamiHerald.com

A group of officials from the Department of Children & Families and other child advocates are holding a daylong public meeting Thursday in the aftermath of the hanging death of a child in foster care. The work group will listen to the experiences of two young adults who spent time in the foster care system.

A medical director at a school in Massachusetts is also expected to speak at the meeting in Fort Lauderdale. He will discuss the best practices for mental health in child welfare. DCF secretary George Sheldon formed the work group as part of the investigation into Gabriel Myers’ death and the practices of prescribing powerful drugs to foster children.

Gabriel, 7, hung himself in the bathroom of his Margate foster home in April. He had been prescribed several psychiatric drugs during his nine-month stay in foster care.

A Miami Herald article that showed Gabriel had been on several drugs, including anti-depressants associated with suicide risk, prompted DCF to investigate the practices of prescribing such drugs to children.

A recent state review of more than 100 foster care children receiving psychiatric drugs revealed that child welfare administrators are ignoring rules designed to protect the children. For example, caseworkers have failed to seek a second opinion from a psychiatrist before administering mental-health drugs to children younger than 6.

Four years ago legislators passed a law to reduce the amount of psychiatric drugs prescribed to children in state care. That law requires consent from a parent or judge, among other rules.

The work group will next meet July 6 in Tallahassee.

Punishment phase begins for man convicted in death of foster child

 

http://www.reporternews.com/news/2009/jun/16/no-headline—coleman_murder_trial/

By Jo Ann Eddleman Special to the Reporter-News

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

COLEMAN — The punishment phase for a Coleman man convicted of reckless conduct that led to the death of a 14-month-old foster child began this week in a Coleman County courtroom with 42nd District Judge John Weeks presiding.

Charles Yarbrough was convicted in October of conduct leading to the injury and death of Lacey Lynn Nichols, a foster child in his care. A six-man, six-woman jury was selected Monday afternoon, and testimony in the punishment phase began Tuesday morning.

The jury that heard the evidence in the original two-count murder and capital murder indictment convicted Yarbrough on the lesser charge of reckless injury to a child, but deadlocked on the punishment phase.

The failure of the jury to reach an agreement on the punishment resulted in a punishment phase mistrial. This new trial will present an abbreviated version of the evidence presented in the original trial before this new jury, which will then decide on punishment.

Yarbrough is facing two to 20 years in prison, or possibly a probated sentence of 10 or fewer years.

In a brief statement before Tuesday’s testimony began, Coleman County District Attorney Heath Hemphill verified there would be no punishment deal and said, “We expect the trial to last at least through Thursday.”

Witnesses at Coleman County Medical Center, where the child was taken by ambulance the afternoon of Jan. 9, 2006, said she was covered in bruises and was lethargic, prompting them to contact authorities. Witnesses said Yarbrough claimed Nichols had choked on play food, but medical personnel saw no evidence of that.

An autopsy found that the cause of death was a homicide due to blunt injury of head and brain.

Defense Attorney Bob McCool, assisted by attorney Olney G. Wallis, indicated he would be calling his witnesses by late today or Thursday morning.

I would like my readers to pay attention to the differences in the Virgina News Report about this crime and the North Carolina News.

Carly Sawyer used to live in Onslow County North Carolina, where allegedly, there were roughly 25 reports made on her father to Onslow County DSS.  Most of my readers will remember that Onslow County North Carolina DSS is the same department that failed to protect Kayla Allen.

 The Virgina News report mentions previous reports and investigations for abuse, but the North Carolina News Report does not.  Can anyone tell me why North Carolina does not mention these reports AT ALL?

It has long been my opinion that DSS corruption is kept out of the news, this is a practice that has to change. I expect the news to report the whole story, not just part of it and the American people have the right to know if DSS was involved with a family before a child was killed.  I feel that North Carolina hides DSS involvement in children’s’ deaths.

VIRGINIA NEWS REPORTS

 

 

 Girl had been subject of custody fight, relative says

 

Carly Sawyer

Carly Sawyer

http://hamptonroads.com/2009/06/girl-had-been-subject-custody-fight-relative-says

By Patrick Wilson

The Virginian-Pilot

© June 14, 2009

CHESAPEAKE

The grandfather of the 5-year-old girl killed in a case in which her father and stepmother were charged remembered her Saturday as a happy child with long, curly hair.

“She was just a beautiful little loving, fun child,” said Robert Kimery of Zachary, La., the grandfather of Carly Sawyer. “Loved to laugh. Loved to play.”

Revolving around Carly, however, was a custody battle between two families, said Kimery, whose daughter Jennifer is Carly’s mother.

Carly died Thursday at Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters in Norfolk. A medical examiner determined that the cause was blunt-force trauma. Contributing factors included starvation, ligature restraint and medical neglect, police said.

Paramedics were called to her family’s house in the 1400 block of Oliver Ave. in Chesapeake about 5 p.m. Wednesday for a report of an unresponsive child. On Friday evening, detectives arrested Carly’s father, Joshua Sawyer, 24, and his wife, Brandy Sawyer, 21.

Joshua Sawyer was charged with second-degree murder and felony child neglect. Brandy Sawyer was charged with first-degree murder and felony child neglect.

Kimery said he and his daughter had little contact with Carly in the past 2-1/2 years after a court in Jacksonville, N.C., granted Joshua Sawyer custody of her.

Jennifer and Joshua Sawyer met and married in California when she was in the Air Force and he was in the Marines. They separated about three years ago and divorced after she was stationed in South Carolina and he was stationed in Jacksonville, with Carly, Kimery said.

Jennifer Kimery and a friend, on a visit to see Carly, took her back to Georgia where Jennifer was living. That upset Sawyer, Robert Kimery said.

She also filed a complaint of abuse against her ex-husband with Child Protective Services in North Carolina, he said.

Kimery said he and his wife were raising Carly in Louisiana to keep her away from Joshua Sawyer, until Sawyer got an order granting him temporary custody.

“They had a court order for me to return her,” Kimery said. “We took her back and he stated that we would never see her again.”

Kimery said he did not know Joshua and Brandy Sawyer had moved from North Carolina to Hampton Roads until his family learned Carly was in the hospital.

Three neighbors of the Sawyers on Saturday said they rarely saw them. In addition to Carly, the couple has a younger daughter and also lived with a young daughter of Brandy Sawyer’s.

The Sawyers are being held without bond at the Chesapeake jail, a jail spokeswoman said.

On her Facebook page, Brandy Sawyer complained recently of being depressed and stressed. In April, she wrote that she was 10 weeks pregnant and in another post said she “just wants to run away from life.”

In May, she wrote that she was feeling “really down and depressed.”

She also wrote on Facebook and in a comment on the Web site of the Jacksonville Daily News about a criminal case involving her sister, Dana Leigh Browning. (story at bottom of page)

Browning, 19, was arrested in November in Onslow County, N.C., on charges of concealing the birth of a child, failure to report a death and obstruction of justice. She is accused of putting her dead newborn girl in a plastic bag, then putting the body in the garbage and not notifying anyone, the Jacksonville Daily News reported. A court hearing is scheduled for June 30.

Sawyer also joined a Facebook cause called Stop Child Abuse.

In her most recent post, at 12:10 a.m. Friday, she wrote: “Carly passed away. We need prayers, holding onto nothing I feel like.”

A man who answered the phone at her mother’s house in North Carolina on Saturday said her mother was not home and asked that a reporter not call back.

Joshua Sawyer’s father, David K. Sawyer of New York, declined to comment when reached Saturday.

Patrick Wilson, (757) 446-2957, patrick.wilson@pilotonline.com

 

Chesapeake girl kept in box, denied food, warrants say

 

Carly Sawyer

Carly Sawyer

http://hamptonroads.com/2009/06/chesapeake-girl-kept-box-denied-food-warrants-say

By Alicia P.Q. Wittmeyer

The Virginian-Pilot

© June 17, 2009

CHESAPEAKE

In the last months of her life, Carly Sawyer was put into a cardboard box as punishment.

Sometimes she was tied up with mesh netting. Other times, her father, Joshua Sawyer, and stepmother, Brandy Sawyer, withheld food, or spanked her with a belt.

Chesapeake police filed search warrants Tuesday that provided new details about the murder cases against Carly’s father and stepmother. The affidavit for the warrant – which police use to convince a magistrate that they have probable cause to search private property – notes that Joshua gave a statement to police.

In the last days of her life, Carly arrived at a hospital with cuts, bruises and burns on her body and ligature marks on her wrists.

She was unconscious, and further examination revealed she had no brain activity, police have said.

The 5-year-old died Thursday. A day later, police charged Joshua Sawyer, 24, with second-degree murder and felony child neglect. Brandy Sawyer, 21, is charged with first-degree murder and felony child neglect.

Joshua Sawyer is scheduled to have a bond hearing this morning, a bond hearing for his wife is scheduled for Friday.

According to police, last Wednesday, one of the Sawyers called 911 after Carly became unconscious. It’s not clear who called – there are two search warrants, and one says it was Brandy. The other says it was Joshua.

When medics arrived, they thought Carly’s cuts and bruises looked suspicious and requested that police investigate, the warrants show.

The Sawyers told police that Brandy Sawyer had spanked Carly, and the girl had thrown herself to the floor. Later, Joshua Sawyer admitted to “using netting material as restraints, restricting the child to a cardboard box as a form of discipline, withholding food and spankings,” according to the warrant.

Handwritten, a detective added “with a belt” with his signature next to it.

“We knew that it was something to this effect,” said Carly’s grandfather, Robert Kimery, whose daughter Jennifer is Carly’s biological mother. “We just didn’t know to the extent.”

The medical examiner who looked at Carly determined the cause of her death was blunt-force trauma, although contributing factors included starvation, ligature restraint and medical neglect.

“Starvation doesn’t just come in a matter of a week or more,” Kimery said. “They’ve both done something to do this to her. It’s not just a one-time incident.”

Police seized two cardboard boxes, one bloody paper towel, a roll of blue mesh, a digital video camera, two insurance documents for Carly, nine photos of the girl, and a black leather belt from the two-story home that the Sawyers were leasing on Oliver Avenue, according to the warrant.

Police also searched for computers and computer equipment, although none are listed among the items seized.

According to the warrant, police found Brandy Sawyer’s page on the social-networking site Facebook, on which she refers to an e-mail account she used to send messages to her friends “about how stressed she was over the children.”

On her Facebook page, Brandy Sawyer wrote multiple times about being depressed.

Feeling “really down and depressed,” she wrote May 14. On April 24, she wrote “I give up omg I just give up.”

The page also includes multiple photo albums with pictures of her children – Carly and two other girls. There are pictures of Carly picking flowers, riding a bike and holding her baby sister. One is from Halloween, another from Christmas. One is titled “Pics of my angels.”

Child Protective Services is caring for the couple’s other two children, police said Monday.

Joshua Sawyer’s lawyer said he could not comment Tuesday. Brandy Sawyer’s lawyer did not return a phone call.

Alicia Wittmeyer, (757) 222-5216, alicia.wittmeyer@pilotonline.com

 

NORTH CAROLINA NEWS

 

Child dead in Norfolk, custody battle began in Jacksonville

 

http://www.jdnews.com/news/sawyer-64896-child-custody.html?

 

June 14, 2009 – 7:11 PM

A 5-year-old girl that was subject of a custody fight died Thursday in Norfolk, Va..

Carly Sawyer, whose father Joshua Sawyer was granted custody of her by a Jacksonville court, died of blunt-force trauma, a medical examiner told the Virginia Pilot.

Contributing factors were starvation, ligature restraint and medical neglect.

Paramedics were called to her family’s house in Chesapeake about 5 p.m. Wednesday for a report of an unresponsive child.

Joshua Sawyer, and his wife Brandy Sawyer, were arrested Friday evening and are being held without bond at the Chesapeake jail in Virginia, according to the Pilot.

Brandy Sawyer’s sister, Dana Leigh Browning, was arrested in November by the Onslow County Sheriff’s Department for conceling the birth of a child, failure to report a death and obstruction of justice after allegedly putting her dead newborn girl in a plastic bag, then putting the body in the garbage and not notifying anyone.

Browning is scheduled to appear in court June 30.

 

Brandy Sawyer’s sister, Dana Leigh Browning

 

Woman arrested on charges related to dead newborn left in garbage can

 

http://www.jdnews.com/news/body-60519-garbage-baby.html

 

November 6, 2008 – 2:40 PM

The alleged mother of a dead newborn girl found in a Hubert area garbage truck has been arrested by the Onslow County Sheriff’s Department.

Dana Leigh Browning, 19, of Freedom Way in Hubert, was charged today with concealing the birth of child, failure to report a death and obstruction of justice. Her bond was set at $9,000.

Sheriff Ed Brown said his detectives have developed information that others may have been involved with the child’s birth.

“When initially questioned, Mrs. Browning lied to investigators,” Brown said in a news release Thursday. “The mother has continued to be uncooperative throughout the investigation.”

Evidence obtained during the investigation positively identified Browning as the mother of the baby, authorities said.

Browning is accused of placing the baby in a plastic bag and putting the bag in the garbage without notifying anyone else, according to warrants.

An autopsy of the remains was conducted by the Onslow County Medical Examiner’s Office and reviewed by the State Medical Examiner’s Office in Chapel Hill. The examiners determined that the baby’s body was that of a full-term newborn, but were unable to determine whether the baby was born alive due to the state of decomposition of the remains.

An employee with MWM Hauling found the body in the back of his garbage truck Oct. 27 while at Sandy Oaks Apartments on Crystal Lane just off N.C. 172.

He told The Daily News that originally he thought the baby was some type of animal because he is used to seeing carcasses in the trash. But a closer look revealed the body to be dead baby. The baby was not clothed, a medical examiner said last week. Emergency workers responded and took the body to the morgue at Onslow Memorial Hospital.

Crime Stoppers of Onslow County is offering a reward of up to $2,500 for information leading to additional arrests in the case.

Anyone with information concerning this incident can contact Maj. Frank Terwilliger or Sgt. T. J. Cavanagh with the Onslow County Sheriff’s Department at 910-455-3113 or Onslow Crime Stoppers at 910-938-3273. Callers do not have to reveal their identities.

Contact crime reporter Lindell Kay at 910-219-8456. Read Lindell’s blog at http://onslowcrime.encblogs.com

Cops question mom with history of abuse accusations in baby’s death

 

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2009/06/15/2009-06-15_cops_question_mom_in_death_of_2monthold.html

BY Simone Weichselbaum

DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Monday, June 15th 2009, 4:00 AM

Cops were questioning a Brooklyn mother Sunday night after the death of her 2-month-old baby, police said.

Investigators grilled the unidentified Crown Heights mom, who has faced child abuse accusations before, after little Tuquan Bennett-Shuler was taken to Kings County Hospital.

Police reached the Brooklyn Ave. building about 4 p.m. after Tuquan’s panicked father tried to get neighbor John Mercano to help revive the infant.

The neighbor, whose wife is a nurse, dialed 911 when he realized the newborn was near death. “I tried to help,” said Mercano, 62, who lives down the hall from the family. “I tried to be a good Samaritan.”

Police said the they were investigating whether the mother was drunk or high. The baby had no outward signs of trauma.

Police sources said the mother had four previous incidents involving the Administration for Children’s Services. ACS officials said they are investigating the death, but would not comment on any previous trouble.

Dad Kenneth Shuler was also being quizzed at the 71st Precinct stationhouse.

“[The father] was saying the mother smothered the baby because the baby was crying too much,” Mercano said.

simonew@nydailynews.com

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2009/06/15/2009-06-15_cops_question_mom_in_death_of_2monthold.html#ixzz0IjkkZTMR&C

SPCA column – How an 11 year old child can stab a dog to death and threaten his foster parent

 

http://www.nj.com/bridgeton/index.ssf?/base/news-5/12450390103400.xml&coll=10

Monday, June 15, 2009

By BEV GRECO

Special to The News

If you happen to be a regular reader of this column, you may recall that about a month ago I highlighted the correlation between domestic violence, child abuse and animal abuse. One week later, the CCSPCA Cruelty Department received a call from the state police about the alleged stabbing death of a dog, two days prior, by a child in foster care.

In the first article, I made mention of how children in unstable home environments, or with a history of being abused, are more prone to becoming abusers themselves.

The current report was that the child was having a meltdown because she did not want to stay in the foster home where she had been placed the week before. We were all too familiar with this scenario, as we had had a 16-year-old drown a kitten back in April for the very same reason. Acting out in order to draw attention to one’s self is normal behavior for kids in crisis.

The trooper called to report the possible stabbing, describing the day’s events leading up to the dog’s death. We were, quite frankly, appalled. Police had been called out earlier in the day because the child had tried to run away, there were physical threats made to the foster parent and damage done to the house. When the police were called out later that same day, the foster parent stated that the dog had been stabbed with a solar driveway stake and had died. The litany of the child’s offenses in a few short hours was unfathomable. How is an 11 year old capable of such intense hostility?

The day after the report came in, we were able to interview the child. Mystery solved. Having been in foster care for eight years, she had been in no less than 27 homes. She suffered from a laundry list of maladies, including prior sexual abuse and post traumatic stress disorder. At 11, this kid had experienced more of life’s nightmares than most people will see in the course of a lifetime, and, yet, she was intelligent, articulate and admitted to her offenses openly. She insisted however, that she had not done harm to the dog. She was adamant in fact, that the dog was extremely thin and was fed only leftovers and scraps. She was actually well versed in proper care and needs of animals.

The dog had been buried at the time of death and had to be exhumed and necropsy performed (animal autopsy) for evidence. The veterinarian found no signs of trauma to the body. In fact, the young adult lab mix had perished from poor nutrition, intestinal parasites and a lack of medical attention.

We’re still shaking our heads. Within a few short days, we went from the shock of having a child capable of such unspeakable hostility to being astounded that the foster parent would further imperil this child by making false accusations.

The foster parent ended up being charged with animal cruelty. The dog at least got justice in that the proper party is being held responsible for his death É but what happens to this kid? Foster home number 28?

If they treat the dog like this…how in the hell do you think they treat the children in their care…I hope they are also charged with making a false police report, AND THAT THEY LOOSE THEIR FOSTER PARENT LICENSE….because they sure don’t need them!!! 

Foster parents battle Hardin social workers

 

 http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20090615/NEWS01/906150346/Foster+parents+battle+Hardin+social+workers

 

Couple seek placement of grandsons with them

 

By Deborah Yetter • dyetter@courier-journal.com • June 15, 2009

When her son and daughter-in-law were jailed last year on methamphetamine charges — leaving their two children behind — Patricia Schroer and her husband, Richard, both state-certified foster parents, tried to open their Valley Station home to the boys.

“I wanted my grandchildren,” Patricia Schroer said.

But a year later, the Schroers, who want to become foster parents to the boys, ages 4 and 16, said they are still battling social workers from Hardin County, where the boys’ father and mother were arrested.

Advocates said that the case suggests that difficulties continue with the Hardin County social service region, which has a lengthy history of alleged problems dating back a decade.

“It’s an old song with different lyrics,” said David Richart, a Louisville youth advocate and consultant who helped compile a 2006 report that detailed numerous alleged abuses by social service workers in the area.

The older Schroer grandson is in a Nelson County foster home. His brother has been with the Schroers for a year, although the couple has no legal authority to care for him.

State officials said the couple could, on their own, go to court and seek guardianship of the boys. But the Schroers said there’s no guarantee they would get guardianship and since the older boy is already in foster care in another home, they would like the state to place him in their home too.

With foster care, the Schroers said they would be able to get financial assistance — the state pays about $25 per day per child and provides health coverage — along with legal authority to do things such as enroll the boys in school and obtain medical care for them.

“What is wrong with this picture?” asked Patricia Schroer, who said state workers from Hardin County have stonewalled the couple’s efforts and rarely return telephone calls or respond to requests for information.

“There’s no cooperation,” said Richard Schroer, a substitute teacher who is the boys’ stepgrandfather. “It’s like they do whatever they want,” he said.

(2 of 4)

Case raises questions

Hardin County social service officials were not available for comment because of confidentiality requirements, state officials said.

Jim Grace, head of child protective services for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, said he couldn’t speak about specifics of the case for the same reason.

But in general, he said, the cabinet always tries to work with families and place children with the nearest relatives when possible.

“We try our best,” Grace said. “If there’s an appropriate relative, that’s always preferable.”

But the Schroers claimed the state mishandled the case from the start when child-protection workers failed to find abuse or neglect on the part of the boys’ parents — though both are incarcerated following felony drug convictions. Without that finding, it makes it more difficult to remove the boys from their parents’ custody.

It also bars the Schroers from a program called Kinship Care, which the state promotes as a way to help grandparents or others with the expense of caring for children of relatives. Kinship Care provides $300 per month per child — but only in cases with a finding of abuse or neglect that leads to removal of children from the home.

Richart said that he was “dumbfounded” that workers didn’t at least find neglect on the parents’ part, based on the fact they are incarcerated after admitting to serious drug charges.

“It sounds like they completely dropped the ball,” he said.

Children’s advocates said the case raises many questions, including whether the state has solved problems in the Hardin County social service office, the subject of several highly critical outside reports, including one from a grand jury.

“It seems like Hardin County won’t go away,” said Terry Brooks, executive director of Kentucky Youth Advocates. “Is the welfare of the kids the bottom line or is it bureaucratic control?”

Alleged abuses detailed

Brooks’ agency, working with Richart, produced the 2006 report detailing alleged abuses by workers in the region.

Their report led to a cabinet inspector general’s investigation that found that state social service workers lied in court, falsified documents and bullied families under their supervision.

(3 of 4)

A subsequent Hardin County grand jury investigation resulted in a scathing report on the misconduct of social service workers but found that too much time had elapsed to charge any individuals.

Richart, who consults with families involved in child-welfare cases, said he continues to receive calls and complaints from that area.

“It’s not just about this one case,” he said. “It’s a whole organizational culture.”

Grace said he’s not aware of any particular problems with the Hardin County region, one of nine social service areas across the state.

“We have incidental things that come up there like we do in other places,” he said.

The Schroers said they are frustrated by the state’s lack of action on the case — especially regarding the grandson in their home.

“We have made several attempts to get Hardin County to get the paperwork going to get legal, temporary custody of this little boy,” Richard Schroer said. “They have refused to do so.”

All the couple has is a brief, handwritten note that the boys’ mother wrote from jail, requesting that the Schroers gain custody while the parents are incarcerated.

The couple said they have temporarily stopped accepting other foster children in order to focus on this case and care for the 4-year-old.

Yearlong tribulationThe Schroers said the ordeal began in June 2008 when they learned that the boys’ parents had been arrested on drug charges. Patricia Schroer said she picked up the boys and brought them to her home, hoping to obtain temporary custody.

But soon afterward, the older boy ran away and returned to the Hardin County area, where he was picked up by police as a runaway, she said. Schroer said state social service officials told her they planned to place him in a foster home in Hardin County — to which the Schroers agreed, believing that to be a good, temporary solution.

Instead, he was placed in Nelson County and for several months the Schroers had no idea where he was despite repeated calls to his social worker. Patricia Schroer said she learned of her grandson’s whereabouts in November after he borrowed a cell phone from a friend at school and called her.

(4 of 4)

“He said, ‘Nanny, could I please come home?’ ” she said. “That’s when I learned he was in Nelson County.”

The Schroers arranged for the teenager to visit at Christmas and on weekends. After the first of the year, they began asking to have him placed in their home. But the judge handling his case wanted him to finish the school year, which they accepted, the Schroers said.

But with the school year over, neither the Schroers nor the 16-year-old know when he will get to live with them, they said.

Social workers aren’t able to tell her, Patricia Schroer said, and the boy — who thought he would get to come to the Schroers’ home after the last day of school — is increasingly concerned.

“He’s anxious, he wants to come back here,” she said. “He wants to be with family.”

Frankfort may reviewPatricia Schroer said she made several calls to the state cabinet ombudsman — who is supposed to help resolve complaints — but got no response. After her most recent call, someone from the office called back and said it agreed to “look into” her complaint, she said.

Grace said officials in Frankfort look into any cases brought to their attention and likely would review this one.

But the Schroers said the ordeal has left them exhausted and suspicious of child-welfare officials.

“Where is the protection for the children?” Patricia Schroer said. “It just blows me away.”

Reporter Deborah Yetter can be reached at (502) 582-4228.

INNOCENTS BETRAYED

 

As L.A. County spun its wheels, children died

 

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-childabuse14-2009jun14,0,7157276.story?page=1

 

 

 

 

Sarah Chavez was returned to the home of her great-aunt and great-uncle in Alhambra despite having shown signs of abuse. She later died, primarily from a severed lower intestine, caused by a blow to her abdomen, the coroner found. She had just turned 2. The uncle was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter and child abuse. The aunt pleaded no contest to being an accessory.

Sarah Chavez was returned to the home of her great-aunt and great-uncle in Alhambra despite having shown signs of abuse. She later died, primarily from a severed lower intestine, caused by a blow to her abdomen, the coroner found. She had just turned 2. The uncle was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter and child abuse. The aunt pleaded no contest to being an accessory.

 

 

Sarah Chavez was returned to the home of her great-aunt and great-uncle in Alhambra despite having shown signs of abuse. She later died, primarily from a severed lower intestine, caused by a blow to her abdomen, the coroner found. She had just turned 2. The uncle was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter and child abuse.

The aunt pleaded no contest to being an accessory.

Agencies have long failed to share information that could save lives. Repeatedly, ghastly cases shock officials, who call for action, which eventually fizzles. An effective database remains elusive.

By Garrett Therolf

June 14, 2009

By the time he was rescued last year, the 5-year-old South Los Angeles boy was so malnourished his kidneys were failing. His hands were so badly burned he could barely open them.

Child welfare officials traced his history, trying to make sense of what had happened. According to documents obtained by The Times, they learned that eight separate agencies in Los Angeles County had pieces of information on the household:

One had evidence that the mother and her girlfriend were abused and neglected as children. Others knew both had committed violent crimes. Still others were aware that both women had been ordered into mental health treatment and that the sickly boy had missed appointments with county doctors.

Over the years, these agencies had come into contact with the boy or his caregivers 108 times — yet no one had pieced together how much danger the child was in. Indeed, county social workers had closed a 2005 child abuse investigation because the evidence was “inconclusive.” They might never have stepped in but for a concerned stranger who delivered the child into their hands.

It was a lesson in how poor communication had put a child’s life at risk — but it was hardly the first. For at least 18 years, Los Angeles County has repeatedly received urgent and sometimes gruesome reminders that its agencies don’t share vital information about potentially abused or neglected children, according to a Times investigation.

There have been numerous calls for reform — but little action. In the passing years, an unknown number of children have been harmed or killed.

At least a dozen reports have landed on county leaders’ desks since the early 1990s saying agencies that work with troubled families must improve their ability to talk to each other. County supervisors have freely admitted that the system is broken, and even have voted several times to establish computer systems to open communication channels.

Solutions have been doomed by bureaucratic infighting, turf wars, privacy concerns and limited political attention spans. When horrific deaths or abuse drop out of the news, the board and department heads often focus elsewhere, leading to long stretches of inaction — until another case gives them a terrible jolt.

“I couldn’t believe it,” former Supervisor Yvonne B. Burke said last year, upon learning of the 5-year-old’s ordeal. “Our system has to be just tighter. . . . This is a time when we really have to be vigilant.”

She joined her four colleagues in once again ordering county workers to draft a plan to improve information sharing. The plan has yet to materialize.

Meanwhile, county officials recently acknowledged that at least 32 children in L.A. County died from abuse or neglect in 2008. That set off another round of questions about what was needed to make kids safer.

“If we had a computer system that allowed us to the see the domestic violence, medical or mental health history in some of these families, some of these children might have been saved,” said Trish Ploehn, director of the county Department of Children and Family Services.

To those who have followed the issue over the years, these words are sadly familiar.

Baby boy starves

The evidence was there for all to see in 1991.

A baby boy, Travon S., had starved to death. On sheets of paper stretching across two walls, then-Sheriff’s Det. Ron Waltman diagramed in rich detail how Los Angeles County had repeatedly failed the child.

His audience included dozens of people — officials from the coroner’s office and Family Services, supervisors’ appointees, health authorities and others. Police had known about violence between the parents and drunken brawls with neighbors. County doctors had treated the child, even dispatching health workers to find him after missed appointments. Family Services workers had investigated allegations of child abuse.

Ten agencies in all had connected with the family 52 times over the years, starting before Travon was born — but, as Waltman made abundantly clear, none were talking to the others.

“People just snapped to attention,” Deanne Tilton Durfee, the longtime director of the county’s child abuse task force, recalled in 1995. “It was beautiful to see how dumb we really were.”

County supervisors tapped Tilton Durfee to push for changes in Sacramento. The next year, legislation was passed intended to make it easier for mental health, medical, educational, criminal and family services agencies to share records. For Los Angeles County, such a computerized system would cost little to operate — about $600,000 a year.

 But the effort quickly lost steam.

For nine years — from 1992 to 2001 — the system was stalled as L.A. County agencies squabbled over who should pay what for the system and which staffers should be allowed to use it, said Tilton Durfee.

Four more years went by as the union representing social workers argued that the system would unreasonably increase workloads, Ploehn said. The union did not respond to a request for comment.

Finally, in 2005, the Family and Children’s Index was ready for use. But it proved an enormous disappointment — even to those who built it.

In response to privacy concerns among supervisors and lawmakers, it provided a minimal amount of information. And even that was cumbersome to retrieve.

For instance, Family Services could get records from the Department of Mental Health only if the two agencies were already working together on a case. Then they had to form a three-person committee to investigate. Then investigators had to contact mental health workers for details because information in the computer was so limited.

Individual agencies were free to decide which cases to enter into the index. They were not guided by the factors that Family Services investigators used to compute risk.

“It was junk in, junk out,” said Waltman, who has left to work for the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Department.

Many agencies — including schools, the county coroner, probation and the Los Angeles Police Department — provided no information at all.

That proved a problem as investigations increasingly were carried out by less experienced social workers, many of whom lacked personal contacts in other agencies.

Today, just 11% of caseworkers for the Department of Children and Family Services use the index, according to department statistics.

A child’s suicide

In 1998, a 12-year-old boy killed himself at an emergency shelter for foster kids, the MacLaren Children’s Center in El Monte. Jason Pokrzywinski had been under the watch of an aide when he slipped away and inhaled propellant from a can of hairstyling foam.

Though the death may not have been preventable, investigators found that mental health professionals, physicians and social workers at the facility were not sharing information even as they worked side by side.

Children’s advocates mobilized. Members of the county’s Commission on Children and Families — a volunteer panel appointed by county supervisors — enlisted the board’s support in developing a new system to link various agencies to prevent neglect and abuse.

Then turf battles erupted. The commission and Tilton Durfee’s task force, which have a long-standing rivalry, did not work together.

Federal authorities balked, saying the new system would compete with an existing network they had paid for that allowed child welfare authorities across the state to share information. They threatened to pull their money.

The county could have forgone federal funding or tried to incorporate its new system into the federally sponsored one. Instead, supervisors abandoned the commission’s idea altogether, according to commission members.

Every year since then — and twice in 2001 — the commission has recommended creating a better communication system, dressing the same idea in different phrasing. In 1999, they called it an “Internet Passport;” in 2003, “Health and Information Education Local Information Exchange,” or HELIX.

Last fall, after the rescue of the 5-year-old from South Los Angeles, county officials seemed to be taking the idea seriously once again. About a dozen officials — including supervisors’ aides — took a foundation-sponsored field trip to study a successful system in Allegheny County, Pa., home of Pittsburgh. The system is known as Data Warehouse and connects 80 separate computer systems with one central database.

By whatever name, the idea never got off the ground in L.A. County

Injuries, then death

On Oct. 10, 2005, a toddler with a severely broken arm was taken to Garfield Medical Center in Monterey Park by her great-aunt.

Severely dehydrated, Sarah Chavez stared blankly and did not respond to pain. After rebuffing doctors’ requests to do a CT scan and other tests, the aunt took the girl home.

The next day, Sarah was dead. She had just turned 2.

The primary cause was a severed lower intestine, caused by a blow to her abdomen, the coroner found.

A month later, the partly decomposed body of an infant boy, Mikeal Wah-hab III, was found on the bed of an empty room in a cheap Monterey Park motel, covered with a beige blanket. The coroner said he died of a head injury.

Michael J. Gennaco, a special counsel hired by the supervisors, reviewed both deaths for the county, finding — yet again — that no one was piecing together information across agencies. His findings were detailed in two confidential reports addressed to the supervisors and reviewed by The Times.

According to Gennaco, Sarah Chavez had come to the attention of police and social workers on Jan. 1, when her mother gave birth to a stillborn infant into a toilet.

Police learned that the toddler was living with her great-aunt and great-uncle in Alhambra. After visiting the home, officers noted in their report that the girl showed signs of abuse, taking pictures of bruises under each eye and a cut on her nose. She was placed in foster care.

When it came time to present the evidence of abuse to a court, however, a new social worker was handling the case. Without ready access to the police report and photos, she did not cite or produce them.

The court referee ordered Sarah reunited with the great-aunt and great-uncle.

The uncle was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter and child abuse. The aunt pleaded no contest to being an accessory.

“It appears that various DCFS personnel were unaware of vital information concerning Sarah,” Gennaco wrote. “It is also apparent that various [other] agencies . . . may have been unaware of basic information concerning Sarah, either because information is not routinely shared, or because it is not easily accessible or obtainable.

“Whatever the reason, the failure to access or communicate important child welfare information — either within DCFS or between agencies in the child welfare system — is a fundamental flaw that placed children in the system at risk.”

Gennaco noted similar failings in the death of the infant found in the motel.

Weeks before, the baby had been judged healthy by Family Services investigators who examine children living on skid row.

What the investigators did not know was that the family had had contact with at least four agencies in the prior two months — housing, social services and mental health agencies as well as a nonprofit that processes mental health benefits.

An employee at the nonprofit told his boss that he was concerned about the father’s ability to care for the child.

Family Services investigators knew nothing about what these agencies had observed.

Seeing no obvious signs of abuse and finding no records of a hotline call alleging abuse, the investigators found no cause to check further even into the records of Family Services own database. Had they done so, they would have learned that an older sibling had been removed from the family three years earlier after testing positive for cocaine exposure.

The boy’s father, charged with assault on a child, pleaded not guilty. A pretrial conference is set for next month.

Supervisor Gloria Molina took a deep personal interest in the infant’s case, launching a system in which county departments began to effectively share information about children on skid row. But she was unable to expand the program, in part for lack of money.

Gennaco’s final report was delivered May 19, 2006. Instead of acting on his broader concerns, the board quietly ended his assignment reviewing child deaths.

He had been doing the work for free.

Evidence of torture

In the end, the evidence was etched on the South Los Angeles boy’s emaciated body: cigarette burns on his genitals, whip marks, scars on his hands from a hot stove.

Strangers stepped in before the county did. Within days of one another, one called after hearing the 5-year-old complain about his burns in a Metro Rail station, and another called from a college admissions office where the mother had applied, saying the boy appeared hurt. A third person plucked him off the street and delivered him to authorities.

Until he was rescued, the sum total of what social workers were able to glean from fellow agencies was that the mother had gone to prison in 2005 and the boy had received all necessary vaccinations. Family Services should also have known from its own records that the mother and girlfriend were abused as children — a risk factor for becoming an abuser.

“I was angry and hurt because we had spent nearly 20 years trying to avoid this very situation,” Tilton Durfee said. “It was so clear that this case was preventable.”

In a way, the 5-year-old was lucky. He lived.

At least three other children died in 2008 who might have been saved by a better computer system, according to Family Services Director Ploehn.

They included a 2-year-old Pomona girl who died of malnourishment, a 2-year-old Los Angeles boy whose mentally retarded mother left him with a violent stranger and a 6-month-old Carsonboy who suffocated when his mother put a sock in his mouth.

In each case, social workers lacked vital information possessed by other agencies that probably would have led them to remove the child from the home.

At a recent meeting during which the latest deaths were discussed, county supervisors expressed shock at the recurrent tragedies.

“Who let these children fall through the cracks?” asked Supervisor Mike Antonovich.

 

Out of the Loop

garrett.therolf@latimes.com

 

 

County supervisors’ stances

 

 

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-la.2.a11-2009jun14,0,5525428.story

June 14, 2009

 

Where they stand

 

No specific plan to improve information-sharing during child abuse investigations has the support of a majority of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors:

Mike Antonovich and Gloria Molina: Working on a proposal modeled on a system in Allegheny County, Pa., that allows child abuse investigators full access to detailed case histories. The plan is still in draft form.

Don Knabe: Declined to comment and asked his staff to refrain from comment.

Mark Ridley-Thomas: Still studying the issue and has not committed to a specific plan but said he believes a child’s safety should have priority over privacy concerns.

Zev Yaroslavsky: Citing privacy concerns, he opposes efforts to provide child abuse investigators with electronic access to a person’s full case history with the county.

Where they stand

 

 

Files detail deaths of 14 children

 

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-child-death,0,2767521.story

The abuse cases came from families that had been under scrutiny by L.A. County child welfare officials.

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