Daily Archives: July 19th, 2009

HHS boss: Boy’s death ‘tragic’

 

http://www.omaha.com/article/20090717/NEWS01/707179865

By Juan Perez Jr. and Todd Cooper

WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITERs

The new leader of the state’s Health and Human Services Department called the death of 12-year-old Michael Belitz a “tragedy” and said officials still are investigating whether the department received warnings that the boy was at risk.

“We have gathered preliminary information from our records and will continue to review case files for additional information,” Kerry Winterer, the department’s chief executive, said in a statement today.

“While we are making every effort to be open, we want the information to be as thorough and accurate as possible.”

The department is reviewing its procedures, Winterer said, “to make sure they are working as intended to respond to concerns about a child’s safety and well-being.”

Earlier this year, Angela Manns left two messages for a state caseworker, Winterer said. The 46-year-old mother of four wanted to know what options she had to place her son in foster care.

Manns said she was experiencing stress in her life, officials said.

Officials said Manns didn’t give enough details in March to warrant a formal report, so the caseworker returned the calls, leaving one message that suggested Manns should contact the state’s hot line for foster care services and provide more information.

The caseworker never followed up. Manns never called the hot line. And authorities found Michael’s decomposed body Sunday in his mother’s bathtub.

Caseworkers are supposed to gather any relevant information they receive about allegations of abuse or related concerns, then forward them to hot line staff for a formal report and further assessment, according to the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.

Hot line staffers then analyze the information to determine how quickly they need to respond.

Michael’s two half sisters said this week they had voiced concerns about his environment to caseworkers on several occasions but never received a substantive response.

Manns, they said, was a short-tempered alcoholic who exhibited erratic behavior, though they said Michael never showed outward signs of physical abuse.

“I think (caseworkers) thought it wasn’t warranted enough,” said Michael’s half sister Carrie. “We didn’t know enough about what was going on for them to really check.”

Carrie said she started e-mailing her concerns about Michael to a caseworker in November 2008.

HHS officials said today that they couldn’t comment on concerns that Carrie said she provided or what action might have been taken in response because such information is confidential.

Winterer said the department’s child abuse and neglect hot line received a call about Michael more than two years ago — on Feb. 9, 2007 — but a subsequent investigation concluded the allegations were unfounded.

Caseworkers eventually spoke to Michael and his teenage half sister after that call, officials said. Michael reported no abuse and said he was happy at his mother’s home.

There were no other allegations of abuse or neglect recorded by the department after the 2007 hot line call, save for a report that was issued Monday when Michael was missing and presumed dead.

Manns was held without bail after her initial court appearance on Thursday afternoon. Her preliminary hearing was scheduled for Aug. 12.

Michael’s father, Leonard Belitz, quietly watched the proceedings from the back of the courtroom with Michael’s aunt.

“If I had any inkling that she would’ve gone this far with anything, I would’ve done something,” Belitz said. “The system can only do so much.

“If Michael said he was fine, what else can you do or say?”

Manns lied to police after her arrest, telling investigators that her son was in Tennessee, prosecutors said. Authorities allege that Manns actually bound Michael with duct tape, killed him and left his body in the bathtub of her north Omaha home.

Investigators also found a short-handled hatchet, a knife, goggles and two buckets with plastic liners. However, it did not appear that the body had been dismembered, said Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine.

Michael’s body was so decomposed, Kleine said, that coroner’s physicians may never know what caused his death. Experts determined that Michael had been dead at least two weeks.

Short of an explanation from his killer, Kleine said, investigators may never know how Michael died or how long it took. But Kleine said that will not inhibit the state’s prosecution.

“Just because the body is in a state of decomposition doesn’t mean we can’t still tell it’s a homicide,” Kleine said.

Kleine pointed out that prosecutors didn’t have an exact cause of death in the 2006 murder of Jessica O’Grady. A jury convicted Christopher Edwards of second-degree murder in that case, though O’Grady’s body has never been found.

Authorities also didn’t have a cause of death in the 1999 killing of 3-year-old Adam Gomez, Kleine said. Despite that, Raymond Mata Jr. sits on death row after he was convicted of dismembering Adam and feeding him to his dog.

In Michael’s case, Kleine said the body’s decomposition precluded some of the typical conclusions coroners reach, such as whether the victim had been beaten, choked or drowned.

While they wait for authorities to finish their investigation and return Michael’s body, all family members could do was gather in a relative’s living room and arrange his funeral.

Leonard Belitz sat on the couch, again next to his sister.

“I could never imagine having a son that would equal what he was,” he said.

Michael was the second child Belitz has lost through tragic circumstances. His 9-year-old daughter, Lisa, died in 1984 after a faulty furnace pipe poisoned the family’s Bellevue home with carbon monoxide. Belitz was 29; he nearly died with her.

“She was my baby girl,” Belitz said. But he said, “This is hideous.”

World-Herald staff writer Leslie Reed contributed to this report.

Father Of Bitten Baby Knew About Rats

 

Baby Dead, Covered In Apparent Rat Bites

 

http://www.koco.com/news/20083938/detail.html

POSTED: 1:49 am CDT July 17, 2009

UPDATED: 1:57 pm CDT July 17, 2009

WESTWEGO, La. — The father of a 3-month-old girl who was found dead Thursday, covered in rat bites, said in a radio interview that he knew his house had a rat problem, but he never expected his daughter would be attacked, according to TV station WDSU.

“It’s breaking my wife’s heart,” 21-year-old Robbie Hill told WRNO 99.5 FM.

Hill said that his other child, a 14-month-old boy, has been taken by Child Protective Services because of the conditions of his house.

“I did know they had a rat problem. I was doing what I had to do. I put out pellets, poison and traps,” Hill said in the interview. “They should have trapped up that rat before it did what it did to my baby girl.”

Natalie Hill was found dead in her crib at the family’s Westwego home around 7 a.m. Thursday. She was covered in hundreds of bites, and there was blood all over her crib, police said.

When asked why he didn’t move his family out of the house, Hill said, “I lived in that house over 18 years … I watched my mother die in that house. Who wants to stay jammed up in one room, jammed up with their kids? We were doing what we had to do.”

An autopsy will help detectives find out what happened.

“We’re unsure right now if the bites were the cause of death or if the baby expired before and the bites happened after,” Westwego Police Chief Dwayne Munch said Thursday.

If the child died because of rat bites, both parents could face criminal charges.

Hill said the infant was not sleeping in the same room as the parents, but was instead in another bedroom with the 14-month-old boy.

Hill also said he and his family are no longer living in the house.

“We moved out. The cops said we aren’t allowed to come back there,” Hill said.

8-Year-Old Died Of Twine Strangulation

 

Child Sent To Barn For Punishment, Later Found Hanging From Tree

 

http://www.wsmv.com/news/19563384/detail.html

Reported by Sara Dorsey

POSTED: 10:54 pm CDT May 25, 2009

UPDATED: 6:59 pm CDT May 27, 2009

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — A foster child who was being raised by a Rutherford County deputy and his family was found dead on Monday night hanging from a tree.

Police said Alex Cotten, 8, was found hanging from a tree during a fishing incident while his two brothers, foster father — who’s a reserve deputy — and another full-time deputy were with him.

“I just want questions answered, what’s going on, what happened to my son,” said Alex’s biological mother, Christy Kennedy, who has been fighting to regain custody of her three children. The boys have been in foster care for two-and-a-half years.

Kennedy received news Monday night that her middle child was dead.

“The phone call was (that) he got in a car wreck,” she said. “And then later on, when I got to the hospital, the foster family told me otherwise.”

Kennedy said the foster family told her Alex was killed in a hay baling incident. A Rutherford County incident report said he disappeared at a pond during a fishing trip after his foster father, Cam Sandstrom, made him go to the barn as punishment for being hyperactive.

The report said Alex’s foster grandfather, Sid Sandstrom, arrived 15 minutes later and found the boy hanging from a tree by bailing twine. Investigators are wondering if the child killed himself.

“It would be odd for a child that young (to commit suicide), but you never know what motivates a child or what they’re thinking,” said Dan Goodwin of the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department. “It could’ve been an accident. We don’t know. It could’ve been intentional.”

The official cause of death was strangulation from the twine. There were no other injuries.

“I’m not a psychiatrist, but my understanding is, is that an 8-year-old is not capable of forming the intent necessary to take their own life,” said medical examiner Dr. Bruce Levy. “At this point, the manner of death is still pending, because we don’t know if we’re dealing with an accident or something else … The first thing we’re going to do, obviously, is toxicology.”

DCS said because of the ongoing investigation, the boys are being removed from the house — a routine precaution. A Department of Children and Family Services representative said Alex’s brothers are now staying with extended family of their foster parents.

The Sandstroms are in the process of adopting the boys, the family said.

Vickie Cotten, Alex’s biological grandmother, said she’s concerned about the other two boys.

“They weren’t watching,” said Cotten. “Would it have happened if they would’ve been watching him?”

Deputies said the case will be investigated as a homicide until details lead them in a different direction. One part of the investigation into Alex’s death will focus on the medication he was taking for ADHD and if it was a factor in his death.

The three boys’ father had previously signed over his parental rights. Kennedy had her parental rights terminated by a judge last week.

 

Child’s Strangulation Death Ruled Accidental

 

8-Year-Old Boy May Have Been Swinging With Rope Got Tied Around Neck

 

http://www.wsmv.com/news/20093097/detail.html

Reported by Jeremy Finley

POSTED: 4:59 pm CDT July 17, 2009

UPDATED: 7:01 pm CDT July 17, 2009

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — New details may lift a shadow of doubt that has been hanging over a foster family in Rutherford County.

A child in the custody of a foster family died from a hanging in late May, but the medical investigation came to the conclusion that the death was a tragic accident.

The state’s chief medical examiner, Dr. Bruce Levy, told the Channel 4 I-Team that 8-year-old Alex Cotten’s death in late May was a “tragic, accidental death.”

Cotten and his brothers went to live with his foster family, the Sandstroms, after investigators found their biological parents were not providing the children with enough food.

Alex’s father gave up his parental rights, and his mother later lost hers the week before the child died.

Just before his body was found, Alex had been reprimanded by his foster father, leading to the question of if the boy had taken his own life.

The medical examiner says no.

“We literally believe he was just playing with a rope like kids might do and just got caught in this tragic situation,” said Levy.

Levy asked Rutherford County investigators to go back to the scene. While they were there, they discovered the twine rope had knots in it and was tied to the tree with piece of wood, like a makeshift swing. But there were no knots to indicate a noose.

“We believe while he was swinging that the rope tangled around his neck. It’s just tragic,” said Levy.

Levy believes the foster family is in no way to blame for the boy’s death.

“I think understanding that this is a tragic accident is important. In my experience, I’m not sure that these people will feel better because of it because it’s a tragic loss either way,” said Levy.

The Sandstrom family didn’t want to comment but said they were in the process of adopting Alex and his brothers when the incident happened.

A Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department representative said this case isn’t yet closed

Grand jury looks at CPS

 

http://www.thereporter.com/ci_12866027?source=most_viewed

By Danny Bernardini

Posted: 07/18/2009 01:01:00 AM PDT

Child Protective Services in Solano County was hit with a slew of complaints by the county grand jury Friday regarding how investigations are conducted by the agency.

In its report, the Solano County grand jury points out several problems, including how potential offenders are notified, suspects being prematurely labeled as offenders, how appeals are handled and paperwork issues.

Those discoveries were made during the investigation of the policies and procedures regarding citizens whose names are placed on the Child Abuse Central Index (CACI).

When Child Protective Services receives a complaint of alleged child abuse, a social worker investigates. The worker then must classify the category of abuse and determine whether or not to place the accused on the CACI.

It is also decided if an in-person contact with the family within 24 hours is needed or if a visit to the family within 10 days is appropriate.

A referral is then sent to another social worker who further investigates and interviews those involved. That worker then must determine if the accusation is unfounded, inconclusive or substantiated.

If deemed unfounded, the case is closed. If found inconclusive or substantiated, the child may remain with the family, be removed or placed in the custody of the courts.

Being deemed inconclusive places the name of the accused on the CACI for at least 10 years. If the claim is substantiated, the name of the accused is put on the CACI for life.

Those people put on the CACI are notified by first class mail after their names are sent to the Department of Justice. Being placed on the CACI may prevent someone from being employed where there may be contact with children.

That list contains more than 800,000 names and is not routinely purged of erroneous or unsupported entries, the grand jury said. People can appeal being on the list, but that doesn’t mean the name will be removed.

Because of this, the grand jury recommended the accused be notified before being put on the list, so they have the chance to respond.

The jury also suggested contacting the accused through certified mail with a return receipt to ensure that person is aware they will be placed on the CACI. It was also discovered that in some cases, the accused was not interviewed before being placed on the CACI.

For the full report, visit www.solanocourts.com.