Monday, May 25, 2009

Conecuh County couple charged in child abuse

EVERGREEN — A Conecuh County couple remained in jail in lieu of $1.5 million bail each Friday after authorities charged the foster parents with trying to kill a 2-year-old boy in their care.

Investigators said the boy remains in intensive care at Sacred Heart Hospital in Pensacola.

The child arrived May 11 in cardiac arrest, officers said, and medical workers said the boy was severely dehydrated. Doctors discovered the boy had a massive injury to his brain, and evidence of blunt-force trauma to his head and bruising on his body consistent with repeated intentional abuse, officers said.

Conecuh County District Attorney Tommy Chapman said he believes the case, in which the couple was caring for up to eight foster children at a time in their trailer, warrants an investigation into the foster care system in the county. And Chapman said if the state does not investigate, he will.

"This is likely the most horrendous child abuse case I have prosecuted," Chapman said. "This child certainly suffered."

Authorities arrested Joyce Ann Savage Sims, 41, and her husband, Lonnell Sims, 51, on Thursday after an investigation by Evergreen police and the Alabama Bureau of Investigation.

Investigators said officers responded to the Sims residence on Old Greenville Road at about 7:30 a.m. May 11 after a woman reported a child was not responsive.

Officers said they found the 2-year-old boy barely breathing and with a faint pulse. Emergency medical responders immediately called for Lifeflight, which took the boy to Sacred Heart, the officers said.

The child survived surgery, officers said, and after days of life support was breathing on his own Friday, though doctors told officials the child likely will need lifelong care due to significant brain damage.

Pediatric abuse specialist Dr. Randall Alexander told Conecuh authorities the damage was equivalent to the child being injured in an automobile crash or being dropped from a two-story building.

Investigators said Joyce Sims first said the child had a seizure while she dressed him for day care, then said he fell down stairs or fell from a swing, none of which explained the injuries. Officers said they believe the child likely had not had food or water for 48 hours prior to being hospitalized.

"Based on the information doctors provided us," Chapman said, "we authorized warrants for both foster parents, charging them with attempted murder and two counts of aggravated battery on a child."

Chapman called on state authorities to investigate the Conecuh County Department of Human Resources, writing a letter to state DHR Commissioner Nancy T. Bucker asking for a full review of foster parent selection, monitoring and training in the county.

Chapman also asked that authorities research DHR efforts to place children with family members. Investigators said relatives of the 2-year-old and two siblings, also in the Sims' care, had sought custody but were blocked by DHR representatives.

According to a letter Chapman released Friday, if the state agency does not report findings in 60 days, Chapman will convene a special grand jury and conduct his own investigation.

Alabama DHR spokesman Barry Spear said he had not seen the letter, and could not comment.

Authorities said 2-year-old and his siblings had been removed from their home by DHR in January due to their biological parents' alleged drug use. Their biological father died weeks ago of an apparent drug overdose and their mother has been in a rehabilitation program, officials said.

Two other children also were in the Sims' care at the time of their arrest. All have been removed from the household, investigators said. Officers said the state agency pays about $230 a month per child for foster care.

Photographs of the home showed a well-kept house with several televisions, one wide-screen TV and several rooms with twin beds. A small area in the back yard separated by a chain-link fence contained plastic toys and swings with overgrown grass and fire ant beds. A tall privacy fence concealed the play area in the back of the house.

Source

Board Approves Plan To Protect Children From Abuse

OKLAHOMA CITY -- A state board has approved a new plan designed to protect Oklahoma children from abuse and neglect by identifying programs available for at-risk parents.

Officials hope the plan approved yesterday by the Oklahoma Commission on Children and Youth will get more communities involved in nurturing families.

Department of Human Services Director Howard Hendrick says reports of child abuse and neglect have dropped in the past few years due to record child support collections and more participation in state programs.

But he says that has obscured a larger problem: poor relationships among parents and children.

One of the strategies in the new plan is more training for people in agencies that typically aren't involved in child welfare, like substance abuse counselors and similar professionals.

Source


Reducing child abuse and neglect here at home

When we think of human rights our minds most often drift to images in distant countries, women and children in refugee camps, child soldiers, forced labor, etc. The struggle for human rights continues right here in the United States, as millions of our own children face abuse and neglect. Each there over 3 million children are reported as victims of abuse and neglect, a toll which impacts the remainder of these children lives as their innocence is stripped away. Around four children a day in the U.S. die as a result of child abuse and neglect every day.

The cost of child abuse and neglect cost tax-payers around $104 billion, as more and more children are brought into protective custody and placed in the welfare system. While the child welfare has not only a role to protect and house children who have been victimized, they also have an important role in prevention. However the prevention efforts have recently come under considerable strain due to funding and regulatory constraints. Many have been asking for years if our child welfare system was adequately safeguarding and caring for children, however as budget cuts continue more and more children are being placed at risk. Those who seem to find the most struggle as the system continues to weaken, are teens, who often find themselves marginalized. Thousands of adolescents leave home every year due to abuse, many of which do enter the welfare system and find foster care; however some 125,000 teenagers continue to wait for placement. The wait added to the strain of abuse, neglect and feelings of abandonment are only an additional burden to some 25,000 of these vulnerable young people to completely leave the system each year, as they reach the age of 18. These young adults are cast out with little resources and assistance, already overwhelmed with feelings of self-doubt; now face an uphill battle into mainstream adulthood.

Without a strong and an adequate child welfare system in place, more and more at-risk teens are forced to turn to private organizations for assistance. However these non-profit organizations are also beginning to feel the strain and quite often lack the adequate funding and facilities to care for what is often an overwhelming number of teens in need. Quite simply there are more children and adolescents in need then there are resources and services for them. This gap in our welfare system is not something we can over look; it is not a dilemma that simply melts away as the children turn into adults.

"Child abuse casts a shadow the length of a lifetime." - Herbert Ward

While the bruises of the body fade in time, the scars of child abuse never fade. Children are never the same again after an abuser has entered their lives; they lose not only the innocence of childhood, but also the chance at a normal future. One cannot erase the memories of abuse; they live in conscious and the subconscious, invading every aspect of one’s life. Child abuse victims are given a life sentence, forced to live in the shadows of their abusers. Victims of child abuse, who do not receive adequate treatment and support, often continue in a perpetual cycle of abuse, others find themselves in a continual struggle to stay above the margins of poverty.

Therefore it is critical that we address these system-wide problems and seek have lead to increased efforts by non-profits and legislators. Last year, Congress passed the PROTECT Our Children Act, the legislation helps law enforcement track and prosecute sexual predators targeting children. The act is a victory and success in helping to keep our children safe, but it is not a one stop solution and guarantee. One other such effort is Congressional Bill H.R. 618, an important piece of legislation which will require the President to call a White House Conference on Children & Youth in 2010. H.R. 618 was introduced in January; however it is still in the early stages of the legislative process. While our representatives are in the midst of debating the bill, it's urgent that individual citizens gather in support. Please write to your Congressional representatives today so that they'll see H.R. 618 all the way through! Contact information for your local representative can be found at
https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml.

While increased legislative measures and funding are a must, they are not the only keys to fighting child abuse and neglect here at home. Knowing the warning signs of abuse are fundamental for every adult in keeping our children safe from harm, awareness is the first step in prevention.

The ten most common signs of child abuse:

* Unexplained injuries. Visible signs of physical abuse may include unexplained burns or bruises.

* Changes in behavior. Abused children often appear scared, anxious, depressed, withdrawn or more aggressive.

* Returning to earlier behaviors. Abused children may display behaviors shown at earlier ages, such as thumb-sucking, bed-wetting, fear of the dark or strangers.

* Fear of going home. Abused children may express apprehension or anxiety about leaving school or about going places with the person who is abusing them.

* Changes in eating. The stress, fear and anxiety caused by abuse can lead to changes in a child’s eating behaviors, which may result in weight gain or weight loss.

* Changes in sleeping. Abused children may have frequent nightmares or have difficulty falling asleep, and as a result may appear tired or fatigued.

* Changes in school performance and attendance. Abused children may have difficulty concentrating in school or have excessive absences, sometimes due to adults trying to hide the children’s injuries from authorities.

* Lack of personal care or hygiene. Abused and neglected children may appear uncared for.

* Risk-taking behaviors. Young people who are being abused may engage in high-risk activities such as using drugs or alcohol or carrying a weapon.

* Inappropriate sexual behaviors. Children who have been sexually abused may exhibit overly sexualized behavior or use explicit sexual language.

Source&More Info

Sunday, May 24, 2009

When A Child Goes Missing....

This entry is dedicated to the National Missing Children's Day 2009

....A Child goes missing every forty seconds in the USA, over 2,100 every day.
800 000 are reported missing every year.
500 000 go missing without being reported.....

While I'm reading the various statistics on International missing children, it's hard to believe the numbers. The truth is that they're based on children "reported missing", but when you look at the number of children that 'staid missing', they are even more scary and unbelievable.

When a child goes missing everything will be turned upside down. Family will be questioned, in lots of cases they become suspects; no secret will remain hidden; no stone will be left unturned.
Even if every case where a child, thirteen or younger, goes missing, is considered critical, most of the time the children will not be found.

What happened to them? How come nobody ever sees them again? Did they really fall off the face of the Earth? Too many questions, never enough answers.

In some cases abducted children show up several years later, more often then not they are never found.

Personally, I'd rather find my child's body, then have to live without any knowledge. Some parents might feel the same, though others no doubt prefer to hang on to that last bit of hope.

Why that child? Why at that moment. Often its a matter of availability. For child molesters, the preferred victim also needs to fit his or hers personal profile, though they don't see the child as human. It could also be an estranged family member, or a person who lost a child and tries to replace a void inside.

These numbers only tell us about America, what about the rest of the world? How many children go missing every day in countries that do not have the resources to even start a minimal search. How many of those children are even registered as lost?

We need to find better ways to keep our children save, even from each other. Because if we can't save our little ones, then who are we living for?
Cat & Kris

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Recession Puts Children In Harm's Way

CBS' Sandra Hughes On How Financial Frustration, Budget Cuts Increase Child Abuse Risk

It’s the pictures that I can’t get out of mind. They are so horrible they will break your heart and make you mad all at once. I’m talking about the x-rays, scans and photographs that Amy Terreros and her team at Phoenix Children’s Hospital use as their tools in the battle against child abuse. I can’t forget the x-rays of a little boy whose caregiver brought him in to the emergency room because he supposedly choked on cereal and passed out.

Terreros, a pediatric nurse practitioner, and the pediatrician, Dr. Stephanie Zimmerman, didn’t believe the story. Whenever a case comes into the hospital and abuse is suspected, Terreros’ team is called in on a case. They work like detectives ordering medical tests and x-rays that will uncover the real story behind a child’s injury. On this case the x-rays uncovered more broken bones; one arm fracture, then another.

“How could this child be functioning?” I asked Terreros and Dr. Zimmerman. Terreros told me that the child probably wasn’t walking and then showed me the next x-ray. It showed a broken leg bone, and she said his other leg had been broken, too. In fact, this toddler had four broken bones all in different stages of healing. That was all I could take; tears sprang to my eyes. My cameraman Les Rose stopped shooting, and my producer Kristen Muller was also getting choked up. We’re all three parents and these images are a harsh reality we don’t see every day.

The team at Phoenix Children’s sees it all the time but something has changed. They say they are getting even more cases due to the impact of the recession on families. Terreros has seen a 40 percent increase in the number of cases her team investigates compared to the same time last year. In the past two months Terreros has had two cases she directly connects to the economy. In one, the child was staying with dad, who had been laid off and had never before been in the role of primary care-giver. The child ended up in the emergency room with a broken bone.

According to Dr. Rachel Berger at Pittsburgh Children’s Hospital, cases of shaken baby syndrome, when a baby is shaken so violently it can be permanently brain damaged or killed, have been on the rise lately.

Boston Children’s Hospital usually takes in 1,500 cases of child abuse annually. Last year, that number increased to 1,800.

Seattle Children’s Hospital says child abuses cases have gone up 30 percent. The recession, they believe is playing a role. In Beaufort, South Carolina, where unemployment in a five-county area is up 700 percent, child abuse cases have increased 64 percent over last year.

That’s where we heard first hand about how financial frustration turns to abuse. A single mom didn’t want to be identified but she admitted to abusing her kids. Her husband is in prison. She is trying to make ends at a low-paying job. She knows that if she tried to move there wouldn’t be much opportunity for her elsewhere. The pressure is getting to her. She screams too much at the children, three girls and a young son. Her six-year-old daughter has been on the wrong end of much of her anger. The mom threw a hairbrush at her and gave her a black eye. She wrestled her to the ground of a parking lot when the girl was throwing a fit and someone called the police. She told the police she sometimes goes too far in disciplining the kids but she’s at the end of her rope.

Luckily for her, she found a program called Hope Haven of the Lowcountry in Beaufort, S.C.

Her children are getting intense counseling while she receives help with parenting strategies and conflict-resolution techniques. The mother is getting the tools she needs to deal with her anger in other ways. Still, sometimes she hears the kids say, “Stay away from mom, she’s not in a good mood,” and that makes her worry about the long-term impact on her children.

Not all child abuse experts believe the economy is causing a spike. Carole Jenny of Hasbro Children’s Hospital in Rhode Island says "I’m wondering if a lot of hospitals aren’t doing better case finding."

The numbers may be anecdotal right now and the Federal Government’s reporting lags behind so it can’t verify a trend. Still, more and more children’s hospitals are worried.

There is no denying that states have had to slash budgets and sometimes services that would treat and prevent child abuse. In Phoenix, where home values have dropped in half and entire neighborhoods look like ghost towns, the story gets worse. The state’s budget has been slashed drastically, and 15 percent of the Children Protective Services budget had to be eliminated. As a result, 181 frontline case workers, who identify “at risk” families and work on preventing child abuse, lost their jobs. The budget cuts also mean low-level complaints will not be investigated. The remaining workers have to take work-week furloughs, cut back on cell phone use, and visit fewer families.

“It was a gut wrenching decision to make. Nobody wanted to make that decision but it was necessary,” said Gary Arnold of the Arizona Department of Emergency Services.

What happens to those low level cases? How many become serious? They don’t know the answer to that question at Arizona’s Children Protective Services agency, but Amy Terreros of Phoenix Children’s Hospital thinks she knows.

“A child is left in an unsafe situation and then they come in here, critically ill.”

Source

Thomas: Broaden child-abuse reporting law

An anti-abortion group's hidden-camera video has motivated County Attorney Andrew Thomas to call for legislation that would broaden an existing law that mandates that medical professionals must report child abuse.

"There aren't going to be prosecutions in this case," he said, "but there need to be changes."

Thomas is recommending legislation "to make clear the statute applies to non-professional employees and workers at medical or abortion clinics, such as clerical and triage staff, not just licensed professionals."

The videos were designed to show that Planned Parenthood facilities may not be meeting their legal obligation to report the sexual abuse of minors.

In the tapes, a young adult woman posed as a 15-year-old girl. She told workers at two separate Arizona Planned Parenthood facilities that she was pregnant and that the father was an adult.

In reality, the young woman, Lila Rose, was not pregnant and was not a minor.

In the video, Rose and her friend start at a clinic on Seventh Avenue in Phoenix where a Planned Parenthood worker, her face obscured, tells the women that they will need to see a counselor.

Rose and her friend then describe the father of the child as being "a lot older than me."

They want to know if there will be a lot of questions if he pays for an abortion.

"No," the Planned Parenthood worker is shown saying. "We don't ask a lot of questions."

The worker then sends the young women to a second facility on Seventh Street in Phoenix.

There, they speak with a clinician who says, "I mean everything is confidential here, you know what I mean?"

Thomas called the video tapes a "ruse" because the women were posing as victims.

But he said there is a "glitch" in the law because it specifies "medical professionals" but not necessarily the triage workers who make contact with the clients.

Planned Parenthood said procedures have changed since the video was recorded in July. The changes were put into place before the group Live Action started posting their videos.

Now, clinicians are trained in how to talk to all patients.

Also, young women or girls who appear to be victims of a crime are told up-front that Planned Parenthood has a legal obligation to share suspicions with law enforcement.

Clinicians are now responsible for the reporting of any suspicions. Previously, that was likely to be a counselor's role.

After the tapes were released, Cynde Cerf, director of communication and marketing for Planned Parenthood Arizona, said that from Feb. 1 to March 20 of this year, Planned Parenthood Arizona reported 24 cases of suspicions of abuse.

Thomas said that Planned Parenthood went to the Phoenix Police Department before the tapes were released and asked to receive additional training on reporting suspected abuse of minors.

That training has not yet occurred.

Source

Report sheds light on Irish child-abuse horror

Commission describes decades of child mistreatment in Catholic-run institutions.


ASSOCIATED PRESS
Thursday, May 21, 2009

DUBLIN — Eleven-year-old Tom Sweeney kept skipping school. Eight-year-old Mannix Flynn got caught stealing a box of chocolates. Christine Buckley, barely a month old, was the child of an unwed mother.

In the Roman Catholic Ireland of old, such offenses were sufficient to land all three children — and more than 30,000 others throughout the 20th century — in Dickensian workhouses for girls and boys run with an iron fist by Catholic religious orders.

A 2,600-page report, published Wednesday after a nine-year investigation into child abuse by Catholic religious orders, painted a portrait of a system that protected child-molesting church officials while consigning generations of children to misery. Thousands of children were physically and sexually abused from 1930 to 1990, according to the report.

"A climate of fear, created by pervasive, excessive and arbitrary punishment, permeated most of the institutions and all those run for boys. Children lived with the daily terror of not knowing where the next beating was coming from," Ireland's Commission to Inquire Into Child Abuse concluded.

But several victims of the abuse — some of whom scuffled with police Wednesday after they were prevented from attending the report's release at a Dublin hotel — said the report didn't go far enough on what really matters: the names of their abusers. No priest or nun was named in the report — a fact many of the victims groups decried, because the findings would not aid those pursuing criminal prosecutions.

"It's deeply flawed, incomplete, a whitewash," said John Kelly of the Survivors of Child Abuse.

The report found that molestation and rape were "endemic" in boys' facilities, chiefly run by the Christian Brothers order. Girls supervised by orders of nuns, chiefly the Sisters of Mercy, suffered much less sexual abuse but frequent assaults and humiliation designed to make them feel worthless, according to the report.

"In some schools a high level of ritualized beating was routine," the report said.

Sweeney, who spent five years in two Christian Brothers-run institutions, says he suffered sexual abuse and beatings. He said he has bitter memories about more everyday humiliations — such as being forced to wrap his urine-stained sheets around his neck and parade in front of other children when he'd wet his bed.

"It's something you'll never forget, the way you lived in these industrial schools," he said.

Additional information from The Washington Post.

Source

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Boy, 4, walks home from Pittsburgh school midday

PITTSBURGH (AP) - Pittsburgh school officials are trying to figure out how a 4-year-old boy slipped away from his preschool in the middle of the school day and walked to his home about a mile away.

The boy's mother, Markeya McCary, says she was shocked when her son showed up at home Monday when he was supposed to be at the Greenway Early Childhood Center.

School officials had noticed he was missing and had already begun to search for him when they learned he had made it home.

McCary says her son told her he left because someone tried to lock him in a closet. School officials are investigating that claim and trying to figure out how the boy was able to slip away from school.

Source

Calif. man accused of biting out son's eye

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) - A 4-year-old boy may be permanently blinded because his father bit out one of his eyes and mutilated the other, police said.

Police said 34-year-old Angel Vidal Mendoza appeared to be under the influence of PCP when he attacked the boy April 28.

Mendoza's son, Angelo Mendoza Jr., was placed in the care of Child Protective Services. According to an affidavit, he told investigators "my daddy bit me on my eyes and hands."

Doctors at Mercy Hospital said it wasn't clear if Angelo will regain vision in his right eye.

After attacking the boy, police said, Mendoza rolled his wheelchair outside and hacked at his own legs with an ax.

The boy's mother wasn't home at the time.

Mendoza is accused of mayhem, torture and child cruelty.

A court hearing set for Wednesday was postponed. Deputy Public Defender Joel E. Lueck said Mendoza was hospitalized, recovering from the wounds on his legs.

Judge Colette Humphrey issued a gag order prohibiting attorneys and investigators from commenting about the case.

Members of the family declined to comment.

Source

Police look for missing Bethesda teenager


BETHESDA, Md. - Police are asking for the public's help in finding a missing Bethesda teenager.

Amber Naomi Halpern, 18, was last seen April 30 at her home in the 5100 block of Westport Road.

Halpern is black, 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs about 140 pounds. She has mid-length dark hair and brown eyes.

She was last seen wearing a pink hooded sweatshirt, black pants, and beige boots.

Police say this is the second time Halpern has disappeared in recent weeks. Halpern was reported missing on April 28, but returned home on April 30. She disappeared again later that day.

Halpern is 18 years old but functions at the level of a 13-year-old, police say. Halpern also suffers from bi-polar disorder.

Police and family are concerned for Halpern's welfare and say she does not have her medication.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the 2nd District Investigative Section at 301-657-0112 or the Montgomery County Police non-emergency number at 301-279-8000.

All callers may remain anonymous

Source


Massive Search for Tori's body.


WOODSTOCK, Ont. — A massive search was underway Wednesday for the body of missing Ontario girl Victoria (Tori) Stafford in southwestern Ontario, police said, after two suspects appeared in court charged in connection with the Woodstock girl's murder.

"We won't stop searching until we are able to locate the whereabouts of Victoria," said OPP Det. Insp. William Renton. "I can't stress the importance of returning her to her loved ones."

He said the public would be notified when her remains had been found.

"This is certainly not the end anybody or anyone was hoping for," said Oxford Community Police Chief Ron Fraser, also speaking at the news conference.

The search is concentrated in a rural area called Rockwood, northwest of Guelph, Ont., 70 kilometres northeast of Woodstock. Police would not confirm the location.

"There's quite an operation working out of our local (Ontario Provincial Police) station and a firehall — which are right next to each other," said Chris White, mayor of the Township of Guelph/Eramosa, from his home in Rockwood, Ont., about eight kilometres east of Guelph. "It seems like they've turned that into a headquarters. They're probably utilizing all the resources they have."

Court documents show that Michael Thomas C.S. Rafferty, 28, has been charged with one count of first-degree murder and one count of abduction. Eighteen-year-old Terri-Lynne McClintic is also charged with abduction and accessory after the fact to murder.

The couple is scheduled to appear in court via videolink on May 28.

It's alleged that Stafford was killed on April 8, the same day she went missing after she was seen on surveillance camera footage walking away from her school willingly with an unidentified woman.

McClintic's charge is in connection with knowing about the homicide and "enabled him (Rafferty) to escape," the documents said.

According to Global Toronto, Rafferty broke down sobbing in court early Wednesday and said: "I didn't do it." McClintic, who wore glasses and her hair in cornrows, kept her head lowered as she was led into court.

As police escorted Rafferty out of the courthouse, he covered his head with his shirt and said nothing. A crowd had gathered, while some shouted at the accused. One person was heard yelling "where's Tori?" as police pushed the group back, yelling loudly for the crowd to "back off, back off."

One of Tori's uncles had to be physically restrained outside the courtroom after he began shouting at Rafferty as he was being led away to a police van.

The pair were arrested after midnight at a rundown house in Woodstock.

Tori's mother's best friend, Sarah Leeper, told the National Post that this was the "worst-case scenario" as she headed toward Tara McDonald's home.

When contacted at home early Wednesday by Canwest News Service, Tori's uncle, Rob Stafford, said the family had "no comment" about the arrests.

Barb Derbowka, Victoria's second cousin, said she is "at a loss for words over how people can be so cruel."

Police raided the house of a woman and her daughter just after midnight Wednesday.

Reporters and neighbours have gathered outside the home on Wilson Street. The house is under police guard.

Neighbour Craig Racine said a woman named Carol and her daughter, Terri-Lynne live in the home, which he said was in a rough area of town. Racine said the house regularly has broken up furniture on the patio. He would not comment on whether he was the one who tipped off the police about the suspect, but said he recognized a composite sketch of the woman shown on TV.

Tori's 29-year-old aunt, Rebecca Stafford of Sherwood Park, Alta., said Wednesday she feels "disbelief" at the charges.

"I'm waiting to hear back from my family for more information about what's going on. It's been a long time coming for some answers," said Stafford.

Tori, as she is called by friends, has been missing for six weeks.

She was last seen on a surveillance camera willingly walking away with an unidentified woman after school on April 8. Police released a composite sketch of an unidentified white female, believed to be 19 to 25 years old, with long, straight, black hair past her shoulders, worn in a ponytail. She was wearing a white winter jacket and tight black jeans.

Rodney Stafford said at the time of the release that he "strongly believes" the woman is someone he knew in high school. Her mother, Tara McDonald, however, said she did not recognize the woman.

Oxford police classified her disappearance as a missing-person case for 10 days until it was later determined she had been abducted.

McDonald has held daily news conferences outside her home since Tori's disappearance. The briefings have been, at times, emotionally charged, with Tori's parents fighting and McDonald admitting to her former addiction to the painkiller OxyContin.

She told reporters she used OxyContin two to three times a week, but started going to a methadone clinic two years ago, because she wanted to gain control of her life.

She said Tori and her brother Daryn, 10, never knew she was taking drugs, and it never affected her ability to care for her kids.

Both the girl's parents were given lie-detector tests by police, and were never declared suspects.

On many occasions, McDonald told the media she believed Tori was taken because of her attractive physical appearance, and made repeated pleas to the captors to "just drop her off somewhere.'"

There are various online Facebook groups dedicated to finding the Grade 3 student, with one group having more than 120,000 members.

A reward of $50,000 was offered by the Oxford Community police for information leading to the arrest of Tori's abductors.

Woodstock is located about 50 kilometres west of Toronto.

National Post with files from Lisa Hepfner, CHCH News, Global Toronto,Edmonton Journal and Canwest News Service

Source

The Victoria Stafford file: Time Line



The Victoria Stafford file: Time Line


April 8: Victoria Stafford is last seen in the afternoon walking home from school, but she never arrives. An Amber Alert is not issued.

April 9: Surveillance camera footage from a local high school surfaces, capturing what police say was the child and an unidentified woman. Victoria does not appear to be struggling in the video. The woman is described as between 19 and 25, white, five-foot-two and about 125 pounds with a black ponytail. Stafford's grandparents offer a $10,000 reward for her return.

April 10: Police appeal for woman in video to come forward.

April 11: Const. Laurie-Anne Maitland of the Oxford Community Police says that there have been many questions about why an Amber alert was not issued. "At the time of the call coming in, we didn't have what was required for an Amber alert — not even close." A Facebook group — Find Victoria Stafford — already has 10,000 members.

April 12: Hundreds gather in Woodstock at 8 p.m. to hold a vigil for Stafford. Tori's mother makes a tearful appeal for her daughter to contact her family. "Anywhere, anyway that she can get back to us, if she can call or get away, find a way to come home," said Tara McDonald.

April 13: Police call off the ground search after finding no clues. Const. Maitland says: "I think the feeling among police is, yes, she is (alive), and I am happy to report that feeling."

April 14: Stafford's classmates return to school for the first time since her disappearance.

April 15: Parents reveal they took lie detector tests on the weekend. America's Most Wanted features Stafford's case as its top story.

April 17: It is announced that Ontario Provincial Police take over the search. Det. Insp. William Renton says the case is now officially classified as an abduction, not just a missing person. Tara McDonald speaks to a throng of media outside her home and says she believes her daughter is still alive. "I'm her mother, I know her better than anyone else on the planet," she said.

April 21: Police release a composite sketch of the woman in the video.

April 22: Rodney Stafford says he believes he recognizes the woman in the sketch, but Tara McDonald says she is not familiar with her.

May 3: Rodney Stafford lashes out on Facebook. "If by chance the persons responsible for the disappearance of Victoria are reading this I hope you are scared, nervous or whatever your sick minds are feeling right now. But know this . . . Daddy and the world are coming for Victoria."

May 4: Police release video footage of a dark coloured station wagon being driven on the same street where Victoria Stafford was last seen walking with a woman.

May 8: Tara McDonald says she is tired of gossip and rumours that she is somehow involved in the disappearance of her child and urges people to focus on Tori.

May 12: McDonald reads an open letter to her missing daughter, and urges her to stay strong.

May 15: Stafford's parents fight publicly in a daily media conference. Stafford lashed out at his ex-wife for displaying a lack of emotion, while she countered he was able to cry for the cameras because he feels guilty for being an absentee father. McDonald later spoke in more detail about her past addiction to drugs, saying she used OxyContin two to three times a week but started going to a methadone clinic two years ago because she wanted to gain control of her life. Suspicions that her daughter's disappearance is related to a drug debt are unfounded, McDonald said.

May 20: Two arrests are made. Michael Thomas C.S. Rafferty, 28, and Terri-Lynne McClintic, 18, appear in court. Both are charged with abduction. Rafferty is charged with murdering Stafford on April 8. McClintic is charged with knowingly aiding and enabling Rafferty. Rafferty and McClintic are scheduled to appear in court on May 28 in Woodstock, Ont.

Source

Should We Believe A Child?

DA’s Corner by Mike Little

My office just finished up the prosecution of a child molestation case in one of our courtrooms this week.

The case dealt with the molestation of a child who was eight years old at the time of the incident. The molester was a stranger in this case.

Frankly, that’s rather unusual. Most child molestations are committed by persons who are well known to the child victims.

That’s one of the main reasons that we must be so diligent in not only protecting our children from strangers but also observing and listening to our kids even when they haven’t been around strangers.

Child molesters rarely look like our stereotypical image of what many of us believe that a child molester looks like. They are rarely scruffy looking guys in a trench coat.

They don’t have labels or name tags which identify them as child molesters. It’s sad but true that they don’t generally “look the part.” That’s why we all have to be vigilant and observant.

But what if a child says that someone touched them inappropriately? Should we believe them? After all, don’t children lie?

These are all questions that might have run through your mind. Since we just tried a child molester in one of our courtrooms and a young child was a key witness, I feel that this is an appropriate time to address these questions.

First, if a child tells you that someone has touched them inappropriately, it is very important to remain calm. If the child senses that you are excited or upset, the child might feel that they’ve done something wrong and clam up.

You don’t have to say anything. Just listen… and listen carefully. When a child first discloses abuse to an adult, that disclosure and the details thereof are generally admissible in court if there is a future prosecution.

It is a good idea to jot down everything you can remember about the child’s statement to you.

However, this should only be done after the child has finished talking to you. You want to be a good listener first and foremost.

It is okay to ask questions of the child if it’s necessary to protect the child from future danger but be sure and let the child say everything they wish to say before asking any questions.

Try to keep your questions to an absolute minimum. Don’t lead the child into saying anything.

Don’t ask any questions in such a way that the child might think that you are suggesting a certain answer. Be sure and remember that truth is paramount.

Assure the child that they did the right thing in confiding in you. Next, call the nearest law enforcement agency and report what you have been told. Then, call Child Protective Services and report what you have been told. Law enforcement and CPS will know what to do next.

Should you believe a child when they disclose alleged abuse? After all, practically all children are told over and over again that they need to tell an adult if someone touches their body inappropriately.

Why should we tell them to inform us about those things if we’re going to automatically assume that they are not being truthful?

It is my opinion that you should give a child at least the same chance at being credible that you would give an adult.

Maybe that answer surprises you a bit but I’ll tell you why I feel that way in the next issue.

Meanwhile, stay safe!
Source

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

To whom do I report CHILD ABUSE?

Q. I think my aunt is abusing her niece. She beats the child for everything and refers to her as one who has no place in society. I am upset but, because she used to beat me too, I am afraid to say anything to her.

A. You can call the nearest Child Development Agency or the police to report any instance of child abuse. I do recommend that you see a psychologist/counsellor to deal with the anger and/or resentment issues that you may be dealing with.

Q. I have come to realise that in Jamaica we are taking the rights of the child issue so seriously that we are spoiling the children. I think that they have the right to do what parents say. If I want my child to jump, I should be able to tell my child to jump. My child is my child. Don't I have rights too?

A. You have the right to love and care for you children in ways that will not harm them. Once you are not abusing your children, it should not be a problem that you expect them to do as you say. There will be times when a command will be quite in order, but also it is important that depending on the issue you give your child choices. If there are issues that relate to, for example, the child moving to a new school or the family changing it's plans about a trip, it is recommended that you share with your children basic reasons why changes are taking place while not making them feel responsible.

Q. I would love to adopt a child. I am 45 years old, the owner of a small business and not married. Can I adopt even though I am not married?

A I think you can. You need to get in touch with the Child Development Agency. There are regional offices throughout the island and they will be happy to talk with you and conduct an interview at a convenient time. You can also call them at 1-888-991-3353.

Dr Orlean Brown-Earle, PhD, is a child psychologist and family therapist. Dr Brown-Earle works with children with learning and behaviour problems throughout the island and in the Caribbean. Email questions to helpline@gleanerjm.com or send to Ask the Doc, c/o The Gleaner Company, 7 North Street, Kingston.

Source

After 20 years, child abuse case goes to court in Anchorage

TRIAL OF SEAN WRIGHT: Woman, 31, returns to Alaska to tell her story.

It took her 10 years to tell what happened, and another 10 for the case to go to trial, but the woman, now 31, says she remembers it all.

Even in a system where the time between charges and verdict can be years, the Sean Wright child sex abuse trial is unusual.

"This is surreal," the woman said Monday as she prepared to walk into an Anchorage courtroom and, for the first time in more than a decade, see the man police say molested her starting when she was 9 years old.

Even after all these years, she still feels uncomfortable talking about it and doesn't want her full name used. Her first name is Nellie.

Back then, Nellie was a gawky kid who says she woke up early every morning to make sure her alcoholic mother got to work on time. Today she is a polished attorney from Boston with a circle of friends who have become her family -- a family without demons.

On the stand Monday morning, Nellie never looked directly at Wright, sitting at the defendant's table. Even though so much time has passed, she said the pictures of her mother's boyfriend sneaking into her bedroom still live in her mind.

Ten years ago Wright was charged with 19 counts of sexually molesting her and two other girls, allegations he denies. He has been fighting the charges and the state's efforts to bring him to trial ever since. Because of the statute of limitations, charges against one victim have been lost, leaving two, now grown women, and 13 counts.

The charges surfaced in 1999 after Wright's stepdaughter -- abused long after Nellie had left Alaska, according to prosecutors -- told her mother she didn't want Wright touching her anymore.

By then, Nellie was 21, living in Everett, Wash., and working as a paralegal.

When the statements by Wright's stepdaughter got the investigation started, Alaska State Troopers, familiar with child abuse patterns, tracked Nellie down. When they told her about the new charges, Nellie started to sob on the phone.

Did he also touch you? the investigator asked.

Yes.

Suddenly, the secret she had hidden was coming out. She gathered family, friends and boyfriend at her apartment to tell them. She spoke to her stepmother. Then her father. He was the biggest hurdle, she said, for the same reason she didn't tell him when she was a child. Even at age 12, she knew her father would go after Wright and get himself in trouble.

After court Monday, sitting with his daughter, it was clear she was right to be concerned "I would have killed the son of a bitch," her father said.

Wright was charged in 1999, but he was out of state and it was years before the law caught up with him. There's a dispute about how hard they did or didn't try.

He was extradited from Minnesota in late 2004 and spent most of 2005 in jail. He bailed out and has been free on bail ever since, living in Alaska, working on the North Slope, working out of state, and moving on with his life. He has a new wife.

In 2007, Wright filed a federal lawsuit against the prosecutors and an Alaska Superior Court judge saying the law should have caught up with him sooner and therefore violated his constitutional right to a speedy trial. That case is still unsettled.

No one seems able to explain exactly why five years elapsed between his eventual capture and his trial.

And no one told Nellie in 1999 it would take 10 years. For all that time, she has had to plan class schedules, vacation time, much of her life around being available to show up in court.

On the stand Monday, Nellie detailed for the jury her mother's alcoholism, her parents' divorce, losing their home to foreclosure, eviction and a treacherous existence where she and her older brother bounced from house to house.

Rich & Rare whiskey and Xanax became staples of her mother's life.

When her mother met Wright, he was a positive influence. He made her happy. He supported her. He helped battle her demons, Nellie said. In the end, when her mother collapsed in 1995 with throat cancer complications, it was Wright who was by her side soaking up her blood, trying to save her life. It was Wright who ended up with her mother's ashes.

Outside the courtroom Monday, Nellie said she told only one person about the abuse back when it started -- a neighborhood friend. The friend told her mother, who then told Nellie's mother.

When Nellie and her mother talked, it was a typical night at home. Her mother was drunk and yelled at her. But, soon afterward, she kicked Wright out of the house.

It didn't last. He was back a week later.

Nellie still thinks about her mother's reaction. Was it denial? Did the alcohol ruin her judgement? Did she not believe, or just not care?

Wright's defense attorney John Bernitz is trying to paint a picture of Nellie as a competent, accomplished lawyer who never liked Wright and is lying. He said her brother was once accused of inappropriately touching a neighborhood girl, so if anyone abused Nellie, perhaps it was him.

On the witness stand, Nellie often touched her mother's ring, on her right hand. She talked about the mother she tried to nurse out of alcoholism, the mother she feels she failed when she was 12 years old and opted to live with her father Outside.

She never lived with her mother again because when her mother passed out at night and when her older brother wasn't in the house, Wright sneaked into her bedroom, she told the jury. She stopped wearing a nightgown and started wearing heavy sweats to bed. But he would remove those to get at her.

Nellie blames herself for what happened to the second little girl 10 years later. If only she had stood up for herself, if only she had told. It's one more regret she carries with her.

Asked on the witness stand what she thinks of Wright now, the grown-up Nellie said she had mixed feelings. He was there to take care of her mother and that meant the world to her. She will be forever grateful for that, she said.

When pressed, though, she settled on, "I hate him."

The trial continues today.

Source


Child's near-drowning leads to child abuse charges

SARASOTA - A Sarasota mother has been accused of child abuse after her 4-year-old boy nearly drowns in a pool.

The near-drowning occurred on April 27th at an apartment complex in the 3200 block of Bee Ridge Road, near S. Lockwood Ridge Road in Sarasota.

Deputies say 25-year-old Kristen Young was sleeping by the pool while her 3-year-old and 4-year-old boys were playing in the pool. The older boy took off his floaties and fell in the deep end of the pool.

A maintenance man and Young pulled the boy from the water and helped revive him. The boy was taken to Sarasota Memorial Hospital and kept overnight. Hospital physicians do not believe the child will suffer any lasting effects from the incident.

Interviews with the two children led investigators to believe the boys were abused, and say they lived in filth and were unsupervised. Interviews with the maintenance man, numerous neighbors and property management all confirmed that the children were often seen unsupervised around the property and near busy Bee Ridge Road.

Investigators described Young's residence as "filthy and unsanitary", and that Young had no control over the children in her home. The children were observed repeatedly swearing at their mother.

The two boys were removed from the mother's custody. Young was arrested Sunday and has been charged with a felony count of Child Abuse.

Source

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Child abuse on the rise, but criminals are going unpunished

Reports of child abuse and infringements of child rights in Sri Lanka have more than trebled since 2005, while wrongdoers are seldom brought to justice, according to Jagath Wellawatta, head of the National Child Protection Authority (NCPA).

In 2005, the authority received 315 reports of child abuse and child abuse-related incidents; in 2008, there were 1, 271 such reports. In the first three months of 2009 alone more than 250 cases of child abuse were reported.

Mr. Wellawatta told The Sunday Times that the police tend to give these cases low priority in view of the current security situation in the country. He said it was a matter of grave concern that child abuse and the abduction of children were on the increase.

Year Child abuse cases
2005- 315
2008 -1, 271
2009- 250
(First 3 months)

"The police are very focused these days on national security," he said. "The National Child Protection Authority has its own police division, but we have only 15 officers, not enough manpower to take on all the child abuse cases in the country."

Although many police stations have a Women and Children's Bureau, with a bureau police officer in charge, most stations are understaffed, and child problems tend not to get the attention they demand.
This lack of police action has had unfortunate results; there have been violent confrontations between suspects and the police, often ending in shootouts and deaths. Mr. Wellawatta also pointed out that police inaction often resulted in the public taking the law into their own hands.

"Suspects in such cases seldom end up in court," he said. "What's happening is that these suspects remain at large, instead of being in police custody, and often end up being killed in shootouts with the police. Sometimes innocent people get killed. Meanwhile, the families of the child victims feel some satisfaction, saying justice has been done. They say they have no confidence in a legal system that repeatedly fails to bring such criminals to justice."

The NCPA report says that delays on the part of the police and the Attorney General's department has meant that some cases are not heard till five and 10 years later.

"Child abuse cases are stacking up at the Attorney-General's office. Each case goes back and forth between the police and the AG's office for months on end, even years, until the documentation is completed," Mr. Wellawatta said. A sense of shame on the part of the victims and their families is another reason why many cases of child abuse go unpunished.

He said victims prefer to avoid the publicity and social embarrassment, as well as the considerable psychological trauma, involved when cases come to court.

"There have been cases, especially rape incidents, in which both the child and the parents are reluctant to come forward and testify," he said.

The NCPA recommends that awareness-raising programmes about child abuse and the need to report them be held for children, parents and teachers.

Meanwhile, the NCPA said it was working with the police to facilitate interaction between the police and the AG's department, and speed up the legal process.


Source


Vanderburgh County abuse and neglect deaths

March 2009

6-month-old Darik Scott Morell Jr., suffocation caused by co-sleeping, died March 23, both parents charged with class A felony neglect of a dependent resulting in death.

February 2009

4-month-old Abigail D. Johnson, blunt force trauma, died Feb. 9, grand jury indictment of both parents for class A felony neglect of a dependent resulting in death.

January 2009

16-month-old Terrell Lamont Hillman, blunt force trauma, died Jan. 27, stepfather charged with murder and neglect of a child causing death.

April 2008

3-year-old Kalab Lay, blunt force trauma, died April 1, both parents charged with murder and additional counts related to the alleged beating of his twin sister, who survived.

2007 — None

2006 — None

May 2005

18-month-old Xander Ross, head injury, died May 17, mother's boyfriend pleaded guilty to class B felony battery causing serious bodily injury to a child younger than 14 before the child was removed from life support. Sentence: 15 years.

February 2004

7-week-old Kyle L. Howell, pseudoephedrine overdose, died Feb. 20, mother pleaded guilty to class C felony reckless homicide. Sentence: 8 years; 6 years on appeal, time served, work-release and Drug Abuse Probation Services. Released: 2008.

2003 — None

2002 — None

August 2001

11-month-old Faith Lee, head injury, died Aug. 1, stepfather found guilty of murder. Sentence: 55 years. Appeal on hold.

February 2001

8-year-old Lindsey McManus, gunshot wounds to the head, died Feb. 26, father found guilty on three counts of murder (daughters Lindsey and Shelby and their mother). Sentence: Death. Federal appeal filed.

FEBRUARY 2001

Nearly 2-year-old Shelby McManus, Lindsey's sister, gunshot wound to the head, father found guilty on three counts of murder (daughters Lindsey and Shelby and their mother). Sentence: Death. Federal appeal filed.

January 2001

10-month-old Trichistan Parchman, blunt force trauma, died Jan. 23, father found guilty of class C felony involuntary manslaughter and class D felony neglect of a dependent child. Sentence: 8 years. Appeal denied. Discharged from parole 2006; mother, guilty plea to class A misdemeanor neglect.

Sentence: 1 year, suspended.

Sources: Vanderburgh County Coroner's Office, Vanderburgh County court records, Courier & Press archive

Source

Failing Kalab | Chapter 1

Parents, child welfare system created short, chaotic life


— 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.

Source


Child Abuse Prevention Services Golf Outing Benefit on June 8

Each year, Child Abuse Prevention Services (CAPS), Long Island’s leading non-profit dedicated to violence prevention and child safety education, recognizes a local individual who has demonstrated their commitment to improving the lives of children. This year, their John Davis Memorial Award will be given to Plandome resident Steve Leondis, founder of Hoops on the Hill, during the CAPS 11th annual Golf Outing benefit, Monday, June 8 at Glen Head Country Club. The event supports the non-profit’s prevention-through-education student programs which are offered at no cost to all schools in Nassau and Suffolk counties.

“Steve truly epitomizes what one person can do to make a real difference in the lives of children,” said Alane Fagin, Executive Director of CAPS, “and turned his passion for basketball into an opportunity for growth for boys and girls, ages 5-17. We applaud Steve for his continuing efforts toward improving the lives of children on Long Island.”

Leondis’s interest in basketball goes back to his college days at Yale where he was voted to the “All-Ivy” league team as well as being voted “Rookie of the Year.” He also finished as Yale’s third all-time leading scorer and second all-time assists leader. He founded Hoops On the Hill in 2006 to provide area youth with basketball instruction at the Manhasset/Great Neck EOC Hagedorn Community Center. It became evident, as the program blossomed, that the children were not only benefiting athletically, but also academically, socially, emotionally and spiritually. The program has expanded to include a children’s choir, help older teens secure after-school employment, academic tutors and opportunities for children to serve others less fortunate in the US and Mexico.

Professionally, Leondis serves as vice president for Horizon Air Freight in Queens. He and his wife Lynn have three children.

The Roslyn-based Child Abuse Prevention Services was founded in 1982 and is Long Island’s leading resource on the prevention of child abuse and neglect, bullying, sexual harassment, date rape, and also teaches school-age children about Internet safety. It is a non-profit organization underwritten by private donations, grants and legislative appropriations. Information about programs, educational materials and volunteer opportunities are available at www.capsli.org or by calling 516-621-0552 or 631-289-3240.

The CAPS 11th annual Golf Outing on June 8 begins at 10 a.m. with golfer registration and brunch; the shotgun start is at 12:15 pm; cocktails and a buffet dinner begin at 5 p.m. To register as a golfer or sponsor, or for event particulars, call CAPS or visit their website.

Source

Grand jury indicts in alleged stabbings, child-abuse cases

HOUMA — A grand jury indicted three Terrebonne Parish residents this week for their alleged roles in a March 4 robbing and stabbing off Park Avenue.

Jurors, who met behind closed doors and heard evidence from prosecutors, also indicted suspects in rape and cruelty-to-juvenile cases.

The decisions mean enough evidence exists to prosecute but does not indicate guilt or innocence. An indictment allows prosecutors to proceed with cases against the accused.

Shelby Norman, 24, 524 Roanoke St., Houma, and Ronald Poindexter, 33, 416 Morgan St., Houma, are accused of stabbing two men during a robbery at 121 Bennet Court in Houma.

Police found the victims at 7:30 a.m. on the narrow street off Park Avenue.

Rene Chaisson, 48, who lives in an apartment at the address, was moderately injured with wounds to his leg and upper body, said Lt. Jude McElroy, Houma Police chief detective.

Joseph Medice Jr., 46, who was visiting Chaisson, was critically injured with wounds to his chest, arms and torso.

Medice was robbed during the attack.

Norman turned himself over to police March 6, two days after the incident, and Poindexter was arrested at his home the same day, McElroy said. Each faces two counts of attempted-first-degree murder.

During the investigation, Tiffany Marie Diggs, 22, 128 Stovall St., was arrested for allegedly refusing to cooperate with detectives and is accused of planning the crime. She also faces two attempted-first-degree murder charges.

Norman, Poindexter and Diggs remained Friday Terrebonne Parish jail. The suspects could face 10 to 50 years in jail for each of count.

The grand jury also indicted Tiffany Gasery, 31, Mobile Estates Drive, Gray, for cruelty to a juvenile. She is accused of beating her 8-year-old son March 13 after he threw up on her floor.

Terrebonne Parish sheriff’s deputies responded to her son’s school after employees there reported finding severe bruises on his back. Deputies said Gasery beat him with a belt.

Gasery has been released from jail on $50,000 bond. If convicted, she could face a fine of up to $1,000 and up to 10 years behind bars.

Richard Paul Naquin, 42, 20874 La. 1, Golden Meadow, was indicted for allegedly having oral and anal sex with a 9-year-old boy. He was arrested in March and charged with aggravated rape.

If convicted, Naquin could face life in prison.

Naquin is being held at the Terrebonne Parish jail in lieu of $1 million bond.

Staff writer Matthew Pleasant can be reached at 857-2202 or matthew.pleasant@houmatoday.com.


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