• We have updated the guidelines regarding posting political content: please see the stickied thread on Website Issues.

They Fuck You Up, Your Mum & Dad

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/north_east/4362687.stm

Mother tried to gas sons in car

A mother has been sent to a secure psychiatric unit after trying to gas her three young sons by running a petrol lawnmower inside the family car.
The 32-year-old, from the Denbigh area, took her boys, aged 11, five and four, to a remote beauty spot the day before she had been due at an access hearing.

She gave them sleeping tablets, started up the mower but did not lock the doors and the boys escaped after 20 seconds.

She had admitted three attempted murder charges at Mold Crown Court.
The court heard the mother, who cannot be named, had been threatened with jail for refusing access to the father of two of her sons.

Cover-up

The day before she was due in court in May 2004, she bought petrol and a lawnmower and drove her children to the beauty spot.

She gave each a sleeping tablet and allowed them to play as she put the running mower in the car with them, the court was told.
She sliced two of her fingertips off as she did so.

The woman told her sons to close the windows and doors but did not lock the doors, meaning they were able to escape after about 20 seconds.
The court heard that, initially, the mother had tried to cover up the incident.

It only came to light in September 2004 when her new boyfriend - not the father of any of the children - reported it to police after the couple had rowed.

'Planning and determination'

The hearing heard that, a month later, shortly after she was charged with the attempted murders, the woman tried to kill herself by driving off Horseshoe Pass.

Judge Mr Justice Pitchford ordered the children's mother to be placed in a secure psychiatric unit, with restrictions, until her depressive illness has been cured.

He said: "You sedated three boys and enclosed them in your car with a lawnmower, spewing toxic fumes inside.

"Not even the severing of the tips of your fingers by the lawnmower deflected you from your purpose.

"Only your eldest son's good sense prevailed. One of that young lad's disadvantages in life is your dependence on him.

"I agree with the prosecution that there was planning and determination involved."

(c) bbc 05

(yes im trying to "do" an emps :D )
 
melf said:
She gave them sleeping tablets, started up the mower but did not lock the doors and the boys escaped after 20 seconds.

[...]

She sliced two of her fingertips off as she did so.

Both a criminal and criminally stupid. I'm shocked the poor kids lasted this long.
 
Posted on Fri, Apr. 08, 2005
Folsom Hearing

Police: Palatka woman burned young girl with iron 16 times

Associated Press

PALATKA, Fla. - A woman burned her boyfriend's 5-year-old daughter 16 times with a clothes iron and then the father didn't seek treatment for the girl's injuries for four days, police said.

The child's father, Leon Clark, 20, was arrested Thursday and charged with child neglect, while his girlfriend, Kasha McCloud, 20, was charged with aggravated child abuse.

McCloud was released Thursday night on a $5,004 bond, Clark on a $2,004 bond. They do not have listed phone numbers and there was no information available on whether they have lawyers.

The child had 16 iron-patterned burns on her legs and left arm and it is likely the girl will carry scars for the rest of her life, police Sgt. Scott Reinhold said.

"This is the worst child abuse case I've seen," Reinhold said. "The injuries are clearly inflicted and there just seems to be no reason for it."

McCloud was alone with the girl when she was burned on March 18 at Clark's apartment, Reinhold said. Clark did not report the incident and waited four days to take his daughter to the hospital emergency room, police said.

The hospital contacted the state Department of Children & Families, Reinhold said.

McCloud and Clark have both refused to talk to investigators, Reinhold said.

The girl was interviewed by doctors on a child protection team at the University of Florida's Department of Pediatrics in addition to DCF workers and placed into protective custody, Reinhold said.

During the interviews and in conversation with her foster mother, the child said that McCloud had burned her, Reinhold said.

Palatka is about 60 miles south of Jacksonville.

---

Information from: Palatka Daily News, http:// WWW.PALATKADAILYNEWS.COM

Source
 
Some people shouldn't be allowed to own gold fish, let alone

Police: Woman sold daughter for car
Second daughter allegedly forced into prostitution
Wednesday, April 13, 2005 Posted: 8:07 AM EDT (1207 GMT)


OKEECHOBEE, Florida (AP) -- A woman was arrested for allegedly forcing her 12-year-old daughter into prostitution and trading a 14-year-old daughter for a car.

The 39-year-old woman was charged with aggravated child abuse and sexual performance by a child. Both girls have been turned over to the Department of Children & Families.

The youngest girl and her mother were living out of their car, and would sell sex for food and an occasional shower at the men's homes, according to a report by Okeechobee County Sheriff's Detective K.J. Ammons.

The youngest daughter is three months pregnant, the report said; she was 11 when her mother first forced her to have sex with a man. The older daughter refused to be a prostitute and was allegedly sold for a car.

"She was sold to a man for a Mercury Cougar," Ammons said. "But he never gave the mother the vehicle." He was arrested in the case.

The youngest girl told detectives her mother took them out of school. "She said she was a good student and made A's and B's, and all she wants to do is go back to school," he said.

Link:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/04/13/daught ... index.html

I hope they put the mother under the jail. :evil:
 
Mother sentenced in infant's death
Gasps greet salsa dancer's three-year term


By JOE FRIESEN

Tuesday, April 12, 2005 Updated at 11:03 AM EDT

TORONTO -- There were gasps of disbelief yesterday as Clara Da Silva was sentenced to three years in prison for allowing her two-year-old daughter to "dry up like the soil in a summer drought" while she danced the night away in a salsa club.

The Crown had asked for eight to 12 years in prison, while the defence had suggested two years of house arrest. Ms. Da Silva, who pleaded guilty to manslaughter, can apply for parole in six months.

Ms. Da Silva's daughter, Adrianna, died of dehydration in September of 2002, after being left alone for more than 33 hours in 35C heat.

Mark Yetman, Adrianna's father, said outside the courtroom that the sentence was much shorter than he expected and should be appealed. "It's something I can't let her get away with," Mr. Yetman said.

"You beat up a guy on a street corner and you get five or 10 years. You kill my kid and it's totally fine."

In delivering his sentence, Mr. Justice David Watt of the Ontario Superior Court said it was important to denounce such reckless neglect of a child.

"While Clara Da Silva danced the night away in unflinching self-indulgence, she left Adrianna alone in her crib in a sweltering room with inadequate fluids on which to survive, to dry up like the soil in a summer drought, while the accused slaked her thirst for salsa dancing. On four separate occasions in four days, Clara Da Silva simply abandoned her daughter -- once for work, three times for pleasure," he said.

"Those who are similarly circumstanced and apt to consider an abrogation of their child-care responsibilities in favour of self-indulgence [must know] that the consequences will be theirs to bear and the price of their pleasure will be steep."

Ms. Da Silva, 25, dressed in a long black cardigan and pinstriped pants, her dark hair streaked with fading red highlights, sat with her hands folded in front of her, leaning on her elbows, occasionally chewing a fingernail or removing her glasses to wipe her eyes as the sentence was read. She did not turn to face her family as she was handcuffed and led away by court officials.

Adrianna Da Silva, a premature baby who spent the first months of her life in hospital, was found dead in her crib on the evening of Monday, Sept. 9, 2002. There was blood around her mouth, spilt milk or vomit on the floor near her crib and she had a diaper rash so severe it was equivalent to a second-degree burn.

Adrianna had been left alone while her mother danced at a club the previous night and then slept at the home of a man she met dancing.


Ms. Da Silva claimed that her purse had been stolen and that she could not go home without her wallet or keys. She even reported the theft to police and made an elaborate attempt to tell co-workers of the alleged theft, which she said prevented her from going to work that day. Her purse was found in her apartment.

She also told concerned co-workers at the printing company where she worked that her daughter was being cared for by a babysitter. After she was driven home on the evening of Sept. 9, Ms. Da Silva changed her clothes, went to a local cheque-cashing business and withdrew $140 before returning to her apartment and asking a neighbour to call 911. She said her daughter wasn't breathing and felt "like rubber."

When police began investigating the death, Ms. Da Silva invented a babysitter named Kelly, whom she said had been looking after Adrianna. After an exhaustive search, police concluded, and Ms. Da Silva admitted, there was no babysitter.

Judge Watt said her guilty plea was a mitigating factor in her sentencing, even though it came not at the first, or even an early opportunity, he said.

But Ms. Da Silva had a complete understanding of her daughter's needs, he said, always providing several bottles of milk when she was left with her regular babysitter, and cannot claim any psychological reason for failing to provide her daughter with the basic necessities of life.

She repeatedly chose not to provide a babysitter for her child and repeatedly chose not to return home. Her conduct represents an egregious breach of trust, Judge Watt said.

"She followed the first person singular all the way and all the time," he said.

Although there was no pattern of physical abuse, there was an enduring pattern of neglect, including the severe diaper rash and a failure to keep doctor appointments, he said.

Earlier, a witness testified that when she asked Ms. Da Silva how she could go salsa dancing so often with a young child at home, Ms. Da Silva told her that her baby slept a lot.

Judge Watt said it is difficult to assess the extent of her feelings of guilt, describing her remorse as "a cup only half filled, more with pity for Clara Da Silva than anything else."

Source

:furious:
 
And at the other end of the age spectrum you kids can then start acting like parents and do thing slike this:

last updated: 4/15/2005

Couple accused of leaving elderly woman covered in ants inside RV

By The Associated Press

(4/15/05 - MONTGOMERY, TX) — A couple suspected of leaving the woman's elderly mother lying in dog food and covered with ants inside a trailer without electricity remained jailed Friday.

Lisbeth Seeley, 56, and her common-law husband David Pilgrim, 47, were charged with injury to the elderly, said Montgomery police Sgt. Stewart Hightower.

Both were being held without bail Friday, Montgomery County Jail officials said.

Police found Seeley's mother, 86-year-old Reba McNiel, inside the couple's 25-foot recreational vehicle March 30, Hightower said.

An anonymous caller alerted authorities after noticing a suspicious looking RV parked at a shopping center parking lot.

McNiel was being treated for malnutrition and dehydration at a hospital, Hightower said.

Investigators say Seeley told them her mother had been living in the couple's trailer with them since October.

The pair left the elderly woman alone during the day while they were at work, police said.

Officials with Family and Protective Services also are investigating.


---------------------------
(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Source
 
Mother charged in stabbing deaths of children

Police: Autopsies show children fought back

HOFFMAN ESTATES, Illinois (AP) -- The mother of a 9-year-old boy and 3-year-old girl who were fatally stabbed more than 200 times each inside their suburban Chicago home was charged Friday with two counts of first-degree murder, authorities said.

Tonya Vasilev, 34 -- a heavy bandage covering her left wrist -- appeared in court Friday afternoon and answered the judge's questions in a soft, shaking voice. The judge appointed a public defender to represent her and ordered her held without bail.

Investigators believe she was at home Wednesday night when Christian and Gracie Vasilev were killed. The children's father and a friend who had been living with the family discovered the bloody scene when they arrived home that evening.

Police found the boy lying just inside the front door and carried him outside, where they tried in vain to resuscitate him, said Hoffman Estates Police Lt. Rich Russo.

The little girl and the children's mother were both upstairs. The girl was dead, and her mother had what appeared to be minor cuts on her hands. Police recovered several knives believed to have been used to kill the children.

"It really doesn't get much worse than this," said Russo, who would not discuss a possible motive for the killings.

The autopsies showed that both children tried to fight off their attacker, he said.

The stabbings came five years after the couple's 3-month-old daughter died in a fire at an Elk Grove Village town house where the family then lived. The cause of the 2000 fire remains undetermined, but foul play was never suspected, said Larry Hammar, deputy chief of the Elk Grove Village Police.

Hammar said his department will investigate that fire again. The mother was home at the time of the blaze.

Village police said at the time that Tonya Vasilev left the baby in a carrier in the laundry room while she went to check on another of her children. She noticed smoke coming from the window a short time later.
Inserted by Midnight: The fire investigation is being re-opened for investigation as well.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/04/29/childr ... index.html
 
Not as extreme as the above but.....

Bizarre News US Woman Forces Son To Carry Dog Poo To School

May 6, 2005, 9:55:03
Bizarre

How bizarre; A woman in the US has been sentenced to 120 hours of community service after placing dog poo in her stepson's schoolbag.

Deborah Machnick, of Orange County, is reported to have taken the tough love approach when raising the boy, forcing him to carry around a bag of dog excrement as a punishment for failing to clear-up after his pet.

The 49-year-old pleaded no contest to charges of child abuse last Wednesday (20.04.05).

Meanwhile her long-suffering son, who testified against his step mother, has since left home and joined the military.

Source
 
This is just weird:

Father Arrested in Slaying of Two Girls By MIKE COLIAS,

ZION, Ill. - A man was arrested on murder charges Tuesday in the Mother's Day stabbings of his 8-year-old daughter and the little girl's best friend, who were killed after they went biking in a park.

Jerry Hobbs, who was recently released from prison, had led police to the bodies just off a wooded bike path early Monday, claiming he spotted them while searching for his daughter, the girl's grandfather, Arthur Hollabaugh, told The Associated Press.

Hobbs, 34, was questioned through the day about the deaths of Laura Hobbs, 8, and Krystal Tobias, 9.

Both girls had been beaten and stabbed repeatedly in the woods and left to die, Lake County Coroner Richard Keller said. The girls were found side-by-side and did not appear to have been sexually assaulted. They appeared to have been killed Sunday evening near the area where they were found, he said.

Lake County State's Attorney Michael Waller said in announcing the charges Tuesday that he could not discuss possible motives for the killings, but prosecutors said more details would come out when Hobbs appears in bond court Wednesday morning.

Authorities said Tuesday that additional charges could be filed, but they did not specify what they might be."This horrific crime has terrorized and traumatized the Zion community and I think it's safe to say people of good will everywhere," Waller said. Outside the Tobias home, Krystal's 15-year-old brother, Albert, said he had never met Hobbs but knew Hobbs was searching with his own family the night his sister was killed.

"We never thought a father would do that to a daughter," Albert Tobias said. "They were just babies. They didn't do anything wrong." In front of the Hollabaughs' house, "No Trespassing" and "Keep Out" signs printed in black and orange had been posted on a fence.

Hobbs has an extensive criminal history dating back to 1990 in Texas, including prior arrests for assault and resisting arrest, according to state Department of Public Safety records. Before being released April 12, he had served two years in a Texas prison for chasing neighbors with a chain saw during an argument with Laura's mother, Sheila Hollabaugh, according to Wichita County, Texas, Assistant District Attorney Rick Mahler.

No one was hurt in the 2001 incident, and someone subdued Hobbs by hitting him in the back with a shovel, Mahler said. Hobbs was sentenced to 10 years of probation but failed to appear for required meetings, so his probation was revoked in 2003 and he was imprisoned. Hobbs had been living with the Hollabaughs after his release, Arthur Hollabaugh said. He said he worried authorities might be trying to railroad Hobbs in their search for the girls' killer.

"Jerry just got out of prison for aggravated assault, and I think they're holding that against him," Hollabaugh said. "I don't think he did it." Hollabaugh said authorities confiscated clothes and a computer from the house.

He described the search for his missing granddaughter and said the two men were in the woods shortly before dawn Monday when they spotted Laura's bike part way down a ravine in the brush. Minutes later, he said, Hobbs was screaming that he had found the bodies. "I went and I seen them from a distance," Hollabaugh said. "It was clear they were laying there."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/girls_dead
 
I'll add as background that the town where this happened, Zion, IL, is a place with a colorful history. It was founded as a Christian Milennial community under the leadership of noted (notorious?) faithhealer John Alexander Dowie and his Christian Catholic Church. He was quite the guy in 19th century evangelism circles. Things started to go downhill for him when he realized he was Elijah. :D (Nice photo at the link!).

John Alexander Dowie arrived in the United States from Australia in the 1890's to address a religious conference in San Francisco concerning his teachings regarding his Christian faith and belief in faith healing.

His religious message was well received and by 1895 Dowie had founded the Christian Catholic Church in Chicago. He established a printing firm to publish the weekly paper "Leaves of Healing", ran 13 healing homes (similar to half-way houses) and started a worldwide mission program. After much controversy and conflict in Chicago, Dowie decided to establish his own community whereby the church membership could worship in a Christian environment. He purchased 6,800 acres of farmland in Lake County and the City of Zion was founded in 1890*.

Between 1900 and Dowie's death in March of 1907, the development of the city and the establishment of the authority of the church. All economic, social, political, educational and religious activities were coordinated through church leadership.

Dowie had generated a large following (about 6,000 by 1901) and he had recruited the finest minds in the Chicago area to provide managerial skills for the new city. As the population grew and the monetary contributions came in, the worldwide distribution of the "Leaves of Healing" readped positive replies. The Zion Bank and the Zion Land Investments issued stock and land was leased to the newcomers while being held in trust by the church.

Dowie moved the Zion Lace Factory in its entirety from Nottingham, England, and fought labor unios and the U.S. Government in court to have the lace workers and their families enter the United States. Thus the first lace factory in the U.S. was located in Zion and laces were shipped all over the world.

http://www.dowie.org/john_alexander_dowie.htm
 
This is rather OT, and if Emperor wants to move it to another thread or start another thread he's welcome to.
I live within 25 miles of Zion. I told my children they were not to go to any of the wooded lots they like to play in until this killer was caught. But I wonder if they've caught the right person because as much as I hate to admit it, Northern Illinois has a record of arresting 'murderers'after a henious, horrible murder and then years later finding they have an innocent person who has been serving time for a crime they didn't commit.

*David Dowaliby was convicted of the murder of his in 1990 of the murder of his adopted daughter,7-year-old Jaclyn Dowaliby, solely on the basis of testimony by a man with a history of mental illness, who claimed to have seen someone with a nose structure resembling Dowaliby’s on the night the victim disappeared, near where her body was found five days later. The witness, Everett Mann, who previously had been diagnosed as suffering from a bipolar disorder, made the purported identification from a distance of 75 yards in an unlighted parking lot on a moonless night. David Dowaliby was finally exonerated after serving several years in prison.
Link: http://www.law.northwestern.edu/depts/c ... waliby.htm
(Yes, I am familiar with bipolar disorders,my ex-husband has bipolar-1 and so does our son).

*Ryan Harris, age 11, was murdered and sexually assalted in Chicago on July 27, 1998. Police questioned two boys, ages 8 and 9, for 12 hours without their parents, lawyers, or any other advocate present until they got a confession. Motive being her new bike. Then DNA evidence showed semen present at the scene. The suspects who had "confessed"
were physically too young to have produced it.
This is all that saved them from prosecution. Link: http://www.injusticeline.com/confess.html

*Kevin Fox was charged with his daughter's murder in October. Her body was found in a creek about a mile from their Wilmington home in June. Fox gave investigators a statement they regard as a confession. His attorneys say that statement was coerced. Prosecutors have said they have no physical evidence in the case, but Fox's family says that is because they have not tested it, and as soon as they do, they will likely
find the DNA of someone other than Kevin Fox. Fox's attorneys have been waiting since mid-June to test the victim's fingernails. If the DNA on her fingernails belongs to someone else, Kevin Fox could be exonerated. Kevin Fox remains in jail held on a $25 million bond -- a bond that his attorney points out is equal to the reward money for the capture of Osama Bin Laden. The judge finally demanded that the prosecution provide the evidence to the defense for processing. The DNA is presently being tested at an out of state lab.
Link: http://abclocal.go.com/wls/news/041105_ ... y_fox.html

It's disturbing because charging in and making an arrest and then railroading the defendant, bending and twisting the evidence and sweeping truths under the rug do not make us any safer. The murderer is still out there, among all of us and our children. I can't understand why these people can't see this!
 
It doesn't explicity say the children are hers, but she appears to be a guardian or does this with the approval of the parents. Remember, it gets HOT in Southern California. Also, I guess, while it is definitely a crminal offense and something she should not ever be doing, this sounds like it has at least a little to so with being desperately poor and not having a lot of good options (or judgement). She may not be evil, but still...yikes.

Article Published: Tuesday, May 24, 2005 - 12:00:00 AM PST


Two kids ride in car trunk

Driver arrested on her way from Glendora to Palmdale

By Amy Raisin Darvish, Staff Writer

ACTON -- A woman was arrested after the California Highway Patrol found nine people in her Toyota Corolla -- including two in the trunk -- as she made her way from Glendora to Palmdale, authorities said.

A CHP officer arrested Lavern Dunlap, 35, of Glendora shortly after 8 p.m. Friday on the northbound Antelope Valley Freeway, north of Escondido Canyon Road, said Officer Wendy Hahn of the CHP Newhall station.


"I have never of heard of this," Hahn, a 24-year CHP veteran, said. "There was no room left in the car, so she puts two of the kids in the trunk. We're trying to get people to buckle up, and this is what we find."

Ironically, Hahn noted, the CHP is in the midst of a seat-belt safety campaign with the slogan "Click It or Ticket."

Another motorist reported seeing a woman on the side of the freeway closing the trunk of her Toyota Corolla with two children inside. Hahn said a CHP officer caught up to the car and found nine people in it: Dunlap behind the wheel, an adult passenger in the front seat with a child on her lap, four children in the back seat and two more in the trunk.

None of the occupants was wearing a seat belt, Hahn said. The children in the trunk -- a 15-year-old boy and a 10-year-old girl -- were "sweating profusely," according to the report filed by the arresting officer.

In that report, the officer wrote that Dunlap told him she often puts one or two children in the trunk when she cannot fit everyone into the car. The spare tire, normally stored in the trunk, had been moved to front passenger floorboard, Hahn said.

Dunlap, who told officers she was heading to her sister's home in Palmdale -- an estimated 60-mile drive from Glendora -- said she made repeated stops to check on the children in the trunk.


Dunlap was booked at the Santa Clarita sheriff's station on suspicion of cruelty to a child likely to cause great bodily injury or death. She was released on her own recognizance the following afternoon and is scheduled to appear next month in court.

The children were released to the adult passenger who, with the assistance of the CHP, took them to the original Palmdale destination, Hahn said.

Amy Raisin Darvish, (661) 257-5254 [email protected].

Copyright © 2005 Los Angeles Daily News

http://www.dailynews.com/Stories/0,1413 ... 74,00.html
 
This has got to be the most depressing thread in the entire internet. :cry:
 
I think you're probably right Krobone. Page after page of shaking your head in disbelief at just how messed up some people are. Dunno what else to say, except that for all their many imperfections, I thank my lucky stars when I think about my parents.

Well. As originally posted by Emps in 'Day of the Animals' http://www.forteantimes.com/forum/viewt ... 412#545412
the news accounts were that pit bulls who killed this boy were rambunctious, but friendly, would never hurt a living thing, etc. etc. Now there's a little more coming out about the particulars, and as seems often the case, it was a bit more involved than the family pet suddenly going into a homicidal frenzy. I don't know, I don't think I'm being too harsh to the mom ("it was his time") putting this here, am I? It's the kid's fault, it's the dogs' fault, hell, it may even be the shovel's fault. But not hers. Right, dear.

Mother of mauling victim feared family dog
Shut boy in basement while she ran errands


Sunday, June 12, 2005 Posted: 1:56 PM EDT (1756 GMT)

SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) -- The mother of a 12-year-old boy killed in his own home by one of the family's two pit bulls says she had been so concerned about one of the dogs that she shut her son in the basement to protect him.

Maureen Faibish said she ordered Nicholas to stay in the basement while she did errands on June 3, the day he was attacked by one or both of the dogs.


She said she was worried about the male dog, Rex, who was acting possessive because the female, Ella, was in heat.

"I put him down there, with a shovel on the door," Faibish said in an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle. "And I told him: 'Stay down there until I come back.' Typical Nicky, he wouldn't listen to me."

Nicholas apparently found a way to open the basement door.

Despite her concerns about Rex that day, Faibish told the newspaper: "My kids got along great with (the dogs). We were never seeing any kind of violent tendencies."


Faibish found her son's body in a bedroom. He was covered in blood from several wounds, including a major head injury.

No charges have been filed.

"It's Nicky's time to go," she said in the interview. "When you're born you're destined to go and this was his time."

Ella was shot to death by a police officer the day of the attack.

Rex was taken to a shelter, but Faibish said she wanted him put down.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/06/12/fatald ... index.html
 
she had been so concerned about one of the dogs that she shut her son in the basement to protect him.

Son gets locked in the basement while the dogs have the run of the house.
Shouldn't it have been the other way around?
 
More to the point, why would you keep the animal around at all if you were worried about what it might do to your kid? Give it away, sell it, whatever, but get it out of the house!

And she does sound rather blase about it, doesn't she? If I'd just lost a child, especially in such a horrendous way, I'd be absolutely off my head.
 
I am no anti-drug & alcohol crusader of any stripe...but crystal meth is evil. I'd much, much rather have someone I care about become a heroin junkie than become addicted to meth.

The kids were carrying their
belongings with them along a state highway.

Case of kids kicked out of home shocks prosecutor

6/10/05

'This is one of the ugliest things.'

By: Cara Connelly, KY3 News

MARSHFIELD, Mo. -- A mother and her live-in boyfriend are charged with child endangerment after investigators say they kicked her two kids out of the house. The investigation began after a passerby found a 12-year-old boy and his 6-year-old sister walking along Highway CC near Niangua.

The kids were dragging suitcases, shopping bags and garbage bags full of clothing. They were about a quarter of a mile from their home, scared, crying and hungry.


"Thank the good Lord this was someone that wasn't going to hurt children," said Webster County Prosecuting Attorney Cynthia Black, praising the man who picked up the kids.

Police say the children said their mom, Roxanna Osborne, woke them up and told them to pack and leave immediately. The kids say their mother gave them $5 and went back to sleep.

"The children also told deputies that their mom and her boyfriend used drugs in their home. They described in shocking detail the pipes and drugs they used," said Black. "They also referred to some spoons with burn spots on them, and spoons with burn spots typically refer to meth use."

A detective’s probable cause statement filed with the charge also outlines accusations of abuse. The kids told officers they were burned with cigarettes, hit with belts and verbally abused. The kids also said they are afraid that, if their mother and her boyfriend get sent to jail, she will kill them.

Osborne and Timmy Young face two charges each of child endangerment. The prosecutor thinks what the mother did is unbelievable.

"We see lots of nasty things and we expect to see nasty things, but this is one of the ugliest things and one of the saddest things because a 6-year-old and a 12-year-old were so very, very upset and distraught,” said Black.

The kids are physically fine and are now in the custody of a relative but Black said they are obviously traumatized. Officers arrested Osborne and Young at their home.

This is the second time in a little more than a year that Young has been charged with child endangerment. He was arrested and pleaded guilty in May 2004 for using a chainsaw to smash the windows of a van belonging to the woman who was then his girlfriend -- while her three children were inside.

Osborne and Young are jailed in lieu of $200,000 bond each. They are scheduled to be in court next Wednesday.

Black said she likely will file more charges against both in Webster County. In addition, evidence in Young's case has been handed over to the U.S. attorney’s office for possible federal charges.

http://www.ky3.com/newsdetailed.asp?id=8227
 
:furious: put the parents down.
Where's Judge Dredd when you need him?





(the comic JD,not the lisping pussy)
 
The San Francisco woman whose boy was killed by the dogs (above) has been charged. My guess is that her *explanation* of "But, it was just his time and besides he didn't listen to me!" isn't going go real far with the jury & judge.

Mom charged in fatal dog mauling

Friday, June 24, 2005; Posted: 9:05 a.m. EDT (13:05 GMT)

SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) -- The mother of a 12-year-old boy fatally mauled by the family's pit bulls was charged Thursday with child endangerment.

Nicholas Faibish was killed June 3 by one or both of the family dogs when his mother went out to run errands.

Maureen Faibish, 39, found her son in a bedroom, covered in blood from several wounds, including a major head injury.

One of the dogs was shot and killed by a police officer shortly after the attack. The other remains in animal control custody.

"His parent made the decision to leave (Nicholas) alone in a situation that endangered his life and ultimately led to his death," prosecutor Kamala Harris said in a statement.

Maureen Faibish told the San Francisco Chronicle she had been so concerned about one of the dogs that she shut her son in the basement to protect him. She said the male dog was acting possessively because the female was in heat.

An arraignment will be scheduled for next week. Faibish faces a maximum ten years in prison if convicted.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/06/24/dog.ma ... index.html
 
Woman Gives Birth To Drunk Baby

New Mom Charged With Child Neglect

POSTED: 12:22 pm EDT July 15, 2005
UPDATED: 1:52 pm EDT July 15, 2005

# BARTLESVILLE, Okla. -- An Oklahoma woman who allegedly drank so much that she gave birth to a drunk baby is charged with child neglect.

A police affidavit says Melissa Tanner had a blood alcohol content of .29 percent when she gave birth June 30. Police said the baby girl was born with a blood alcohol level of .21 percent.

Hospital staff had to use an oxygen bag to help the baby start breathing and gave her medication to counteract any narcotics.

Police said Tanner told them she and another person had just polished off a case of beer, and that she regularly drank during pregnancy. A sheriff's investigator said the baby has fetal alcohol syndrome.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lists the syndrome as the leading preventable cause of mental retardation and physical deformity. The severity of the girl's disability won't be known until she is older.

-----------------
Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press.

www.wnbc.com/news/4728037/detail.html

TSG page with mugshot (which is worse than you might expect ~brr~):
www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0715051tanner1.html
 
Baby found in Wal-Mart toilet dies, mother now faces murder charges
(Macon, GA-AP)

August 19, 2005 -- Authorities say after five days on life support, the baby girl born in a Wal-Mart bathroom died Friday.

Bibb County Sheriff's office Captain David Davis says charges against the baby's mother, Amy Dianne Shorter, have been upgraded to murder.

He says the newborn died around 11:30am at the Medical Center of Central Georgia.

Authorities are expected to perform an autopsy on the newborn on Monday to determine the exact cause of death.

The 26-year-old Shorter previously was being held in the county jail for aggravated assault and first-degree child cruelty.

The trash-covered newborn was found in a toilet early Sunday afternoon by a customer employees of a Wal-Mart in Macon.

Sheriff's investigators have talked to the mother, but Davis says they have been unable to establish a motive.

Absolutely horrible. :cry:
 
11 Kids Made to Sleep in Cages in Ohio

WAKEMAN, Ohio - Sheriff's deputies removed 11 disabled children from a home where they were made to sleep in cages less than 3 1/2 feet high, authorities said.

ADVERTISEMENT

The children's adoptive and foster parents, Mike and Sharen Gravelle, denied that they'd abused or neglected the children during a custody hearing Monday in Huron County. No charges had been filed as of Monday night.

"The impression that we got was that they felt it was OK," said Lt. Randy Sommers of the Huron County Sheriff's Office.

The Gravelles said a psychiatrist recommended they make the children sleep in the cages at night, County Prosecutor Russell Leffler said. The cages were stacked in bedrooms on the second floor of their house, he said.

The children, ages 1 to 14, were described as having conditions that included autism and fetal alcohol syndrome.

The children were found by a children's services investigator on Friday when he stopped by the Gravelles' home outside Wakeman, about 50 miles west of Cleveland. Deputies returned to the house that evening.

Some of the cages were rigged with alarms, Sommers said; others had heavy furniture blocking their doors. The children didn't have blankets or pillows.

One of the boys said he'd slept in the cage for three years, Sommers said. And a neighbor recently reported seeing the children working long hours in the family's yard, he said.

The children were placed with four foster families Monday.

A woman who identified herself as Sharen Gravelle's mother but refused to give her name said the children were happy and loved. "This year they have played and had fun and laughed like no other children have, which they have never been able to do," she said.

The Gravelles do not have a listed telephone number.

Sommers said there were no apparent signs the children had been malnourished or beaten, but they were sent to a hospital for examination. Their conditions were not available Monday.

In March, a couple who had recently moved from Ohio to Florida was charged with neglect when their adopted teenager was discovered malnourished in a crib-like cage. The then-17-year-old weighed 49 pounds, investigators said.

The twin-bed-sized crib had been prescribed when the boy was much younger and lived in Ohio. It had been fitted with a lid, chains and a padlock, investigators said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050913/ap_ ... d_children
 
Vegan Couple Free On Bond In child neglect case

Couple free on bond following split verdict in child neglect case
By Emanuella Grinberg, Court TV
Thu Nov 10, 5:50 PM ET



MIAMI (Court TV) — Joseph and Lamoy Andressohn, a vegan couple convicted this week of child neglect, are free to walk the streets until their sentencing in December, a judge has ruled.

Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Stanford Blake ordered the Andressohns free on $75,000 bond Thursday. They had been under house arrest pending their conviction Monday on four counts of child neglect for malnourishing four children, ages 4 to 9.

A six-person jury also acquitted the couple of the more serious charge of aggravated manslaughter Monday for the death of their 6-month-old daughter, Woyah, who prosecutors said was starved to death with a raw-foods diet.

Attorneys representing Joseph, 36, and Lamoy, 30, also asked Blake to dissolve a contact order, which barred the couple from seeing their children, who were taken from them in 2003 and placed in the care of Joseph Andressohn's sister, who testified against them.


The couple caught their first glimpse in more than two years of their two oldest sons when the boys testified against them via closed-circuit camera.


While under house arrest, the Andressohns gave birth to another girl, Joyah, in June 2005. The child was subsequently removed from their care, but they were allowed visitation rights.


Prosecutors presented five days of evidence to bolster their theory that the Andressohns fed their children an insufficient diet of uncooked fruits, vegetables and liquid concoctions of wheatgrass, almond and coconut juice, in spite of signs that the children were severely underweight.


Sentencing is set for Dec. 15, when the judge will also rule on the contact order.

Vegan
 
The embarassment of being named "Woyah" would be enough alone to kill someone.
 
Just in case anyone needs the law clarifying:

Judge: Caging Kids Was Abuse

UPDATED: 1:55 pm EST December 22, 2005

NORWALK, Ohio -- A local judge ruled that keeping children in cages is a form of abuse and decided to hold another hearing at a later date to determine permanent custody for 11 adopted children.

NewsChannel5 reported Huron County Juvenile Judge Timothy Cardwell ruled that Michael and Sharen Gravelles' children lacked proper care, but threw out allegations of neglect, NewsChannel5 reported.

The judge, however, said eight of the children were victims of abuse.

WEWS reported the Huron County prosecutor may still file criminal charges.

Ken Myers, the Gravelle's attorney, read a statement from the couple.

"We are disappointed by the ruling. We love our children very much and will do everything possible to bring them home," Myers read.

The statement also asked that the media and others respect their privacy.

The special-needs children were removed from the Gravelles' home on Sept. 9. They will remain in foster care until Cardwell holds another hearing to determine their future.

Thursday's written ruling noted there was no evidence that the Gravelles did not feed or clothe the youngsters. But forcing the children to sleep in cages constituted abuse, Cardwell wrote.

The Gravelles have not been charged with a crime and have denied abusing the children. They say they built the cages in 2003 to protect the children from each other and themselves.

The children, ages 1 to 15, have health and behavioral problems such as fetal alcohol syndrome and a disorder that involves eating nonfood items.

The cages had alarms that would go off if the children got out of them at night.

A school-age Gravelle child testified that the couple forced him to stay in his "box" for up to two weeks for taking peanut butter, bread and cereal from the kitchen.

He said another time he was forced to live in the bathroom for nearly three months for urinating in his enclosed bed. He also testified that he liked the Gravelles as parents and felt safe in their home.

Asked if he wanted to live with them again, he said, "I don't know."

Elaine Thompson, a social worker hired by the Gravelles, testified that the boy only slept in the bathtub, which helped improve his problem wetting the bed.

Thompson discredited much of the boy's testimony, including that the parents shoved the heads of two children in the toilet as punishments.

She said she approved the cages but never asked the children how they felt about them during their weekly counseling sessions.

One expert hired by the county testified that 11 special-needs children were too many to have in one home. But an employee from the agency that helped place the 11th child in the Gravelle home disagreed, saying she had no reason to believe the couple couldn't handle the children.

Child welfare workers had heard rumors in 2003 that the couple kept some of the children in cages. The children were taken from the Gravelles in September after an investigator from the Huron County Department of Job and Family Services visited the home and examined the wood and chicken-wire cages she compared to a kennel.

www.newsnet5.com/news/5610921/detail.html
 
' They F*ck You Up, Your Mum and Dad '.

Yeah, well, but to be remembered is the fact we f*ck them up too.

Guess all of us, as parents and children, would do it differently and hopefully a lot better, given the chance.
 
Warner couple convicted for filthy home

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2006

Warner — A couple who lived with five children among animal waste, rotting food and loose insulation have been convicted of 10 counts of child endangerment.

Henniker District Court Judge Brackett Scheffy said Wendy and Byron Ruff’s Warner home was “deplorable.”

“It is not a difficult matter to keep a home free of non-domesticated and non-house-trained animals,” Scheffy wrote in his ruling Monday. “It does not require even an ordinary level of intelligence to know that the waste products of a variety of animals, many of which were in poor and diseased condition, are dangerous to the well-being of children and adults.

“The display of pornography on the walls of a home in which young children, one of them a pre-teen girl, reside, shows a callousness to their welfare that fails to meet any rational standard of behavior,” Scheffy added.

The Ruffs are scheduled to be sentenced on Thursday. They face up to a year in jail or a $2,000 fine for each count.

The couple plan to appeal. They were charged in August after the town’s health inspector condemned their home, finding it full of garbage and animal waste, with no food for the children. The state veterinarian seized 37 animals, including pigs, chickens, goats, geese, rabbits, dogs and cats from the property.

The family moved back in after they and volunteers cleaned up and made some repairs. The Ruffs were charged with child endangerment shortly after their return to the house.

The Ruffs argued that photographs and other evidence gathered during the inspection shouldn’t be used against them because the police officers who accompanied the health inspector did not have a criminal search warrant.

Lawyers said most child endangerment cases brought in New Hampshire arise in situations where children suffer serious injury or death. But Scheffy found that the law does not require that a child be injured or dead before the law applies.

“It is enough to prove the acts were knowing and purposeful,” he wrote. “The defendants do not have to provide much in the nature of amenities to their home but they do need to provide rudimentary cleanliness.”

The children have stayed with their parents throughout. Scheffy wrote that while the court proceedings have dragged on, the children’s needs have not been addressed.

There is a stunning irony in the fact that thousands of dollars have been spent on the . . . animals that were taken from the home and carted off to food, safety and clean living conditions while the Ruffs’ children were permitted to return to that same home and on the same day,” he wrote.

It is rare to see a criminal conviction when the state has not won custody from the parents, said Jack Lightfoot of Children and Family Services, a nonprofit group that provides assistance to abused and neglected children.

Ellen Schemitz, the director of the Children’s Alliance of New Hampshire, a child welfare advocacy group, said the case highlights problems with the civil child protection law.

“This case, and the way it was handled, highlights the difficulties that the state faces in protecting kids,” she said, “and suggests that perhaps we need to re-examine whether our statutes are sufficient for protecting children, when it’s easier to protect animals than kids.”

Source
 
Parents Charged in Cruelty Case

The father and stepmother of a 14-year-old boy have been charged with four counts of child cruelty in McDonough after the boy's punishment caused him to cough up blood, police said.

Investigators said 35-year-old Adrian Wesly Burton forced his son several times over a period of weeks to kneel on concrete bricks while holding a shovel over his head. The discipline eventually caused the boy's legs to bleed and become infected, according to Henry County police.

Investigators said Burton would sometimes punch the teen in the stomach if he moved while standing with the shovel over his head. When the teenager started to cough up blood, his stepmother intervened and convinced Burton to stop, police reported.


Police executed a search warrant Thursday night at the family's home on Kohl Drive in McDonough and arrested both the father and the stepmother, Tamani Miller Burton. Each is charged with four counts of cruelty to children. One of the charges is in the first degree regarding the 14-year-old son, while three are in the third degree regarding three step-siblings. The other children, who range in age from 2 years to 15 years old, watched the teen being punished, authorities said.

http://www.11alive.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=74564
 
The Times January 19, 2006

Daughter shut away for three decades in bathroom

From Richard Owen in Rome

A 73-YEAR-OLD woman is being investigated for “kidnapping and maltreating a family member” after allegedly keeping her mentally disturbed daughter locked in a darkened bathroom for 30 years.

Police said that Annina Gentilezza had kept her daughter, Giuseppina, now 52, a prisoner in the top-floor council flat at Pescara, on the Adriatic coast. They raided the flat after being tipped off by Signora Gentilezza’s daughter-in-law.

They found Giuseppina curled in a ball in a tiled room measuring 7ft x 9ft containing a lavatory, bidet, sink and washing machine. Wires hung from the ceiling where the light had been disconnected. The room contained a camp bed and plastic dog bowls in which Giuseppina was allegedly fed leftovers.

Police said that instead of being washed Giuseppina was “hosed down” on the balcony. Nicola Zupo, the officer who led the raid, said that Giuseppina was sometimes left out on the balcony as a punishment, especially in the winter, and beaten. She was allowed out once a month with her mother and stepfather, but only to collect her invalidity pension.

Psychiatrists at a local hospital where Giuseppina has been taken said that she was beginning to talk. “She doesn’t want to go back home,” a hospital spokesman said.

Giuseppe De Felice, Signora Gentilezza’s second husband and the father of her two sons, who is also under investigation, denied the allegations: “Those bowls really are for the dog. We never hurt her, she sleeps in her own room, she eats with us and watches television with her mother in the evening.”

www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,13509-1995482,00.htm
 
Posted 1/18/2006 12:22 AM Updated 1/18/2006 12:30 AM

Underground network moves children from home to home

By Wendy Koch, USA TODAY

TRENTON, Tenn. — At the end of a long tree-lined driveway, amid 18 acres that include a greenhouse and gazebo, sits a historic plantation home where, a state indictment says, children were beaten and forced to sleep in a totally enclosed baby crib.

Tennessee is charging the owners, Debra and Tom Schmitz, with abusing some of their 18 children, most of them disabled. The state says Debra Schmitz threw a knife at one child, held two children underwater for punishment and forced five to dig holes in the ground that would be their graves.

The couple, whose trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 30, are also charged with child trafficking for moving a girl to Arizona without permission from state child-welfare officials.

The Schmitzes strongly deny the charges, which stemmed from complaints by the children and nurses who worked in their house. "The children were our entire life. They were our everything," Debra Schmitz says.

What they don't deny, and what the trial may help spotlight, is their role in a largely unknown aspect of the nation's beleaguered child-welfare system: an underground network of families that takes in children others do not want. Some families do so legally, and eventually adopt the children, but others may violate child-welfare laws by failing to notify authorities, according to interviews by USA TODAY with families, officials and child-welfare experts. (Related story: No state fully compliant with welfare)

"There are homes all across the United States that transfer kids from one place to another. No one's keeping tabs on this. ... These kids just come and go," says Sheriff Joe Shepard of Gibson County in rural northwest Tennessee, where the Schmitzes live.

"Dump and run — it happens all the time," says Ronald Federici, a neuropsychologist in Alexandria, Va., and author of Help for the Hopeless Children who has adopted seven children. He says one adoptive family abandoned a child in his office. He says there are hundreds of e-mail chat rooms in which people who adopted children are trying to find new homes for them outside the public system.

"They don't want to sell the kids. They just want to get rid of them," he says, explaining the children may have health problems the adoptive parents never expected. "It's not the merchandise they bought." He says many of these parents are looking for the cheapest and fastest placement.

Yet, many couples who take in large numbers of children "are incredibly well-motivated," says Kent Markus, director of the National Center for Adoption Law & Policy. He says many view caring for special-needs kids as a "calling."

Some of these families know each other because they practice so-called attachment therapy (AT), a controversial regimen of discipline. Adherents such as the Schmitzes say attachment therapy helps kids develop bonds with their new parents, but one critic describes the techniques as "fairly brutal." If one family has trouble with a child, it sends him to another home practicing this therapy.

Debra Schmitz says 80% to 90% of her Internet network revolved around attachment therapy. Other self-described practitioners include Michael and Sharen Gravelle, an Ohio couple who, a judge ruled in a custody hearing last month, had abused their 11 adoptive kids by making some of them sleep in cagelike bunk beds.

The Gravelles face a hearing today that could determine custody of the kids, now in foster care. (Related story: Enclosed beds cause controversy)

"A lot of people do it (take in children) for the money," says Federici, referring to government subsidies that can exceed $1,100 monthly for a child with disabilities. "Others collect kids."

Yet many of the families in this private network say they don't do it for the money but to save the children, especially those with special needs, from bouncing around the public system. "These kids will rot in the foster-care system," says Charlene Stockton, a Tennessee adoptive mom of 17 children, several of whom have Down syndrome, congestive heart failure and dementia. She adopted a girl from Vietnam via "someone who knew someone who knew someone."

The Schmitz network

State officials say the Schmitzes lacked legal custody of at least seven of the 18 kids in their care, who ranged in age from 1 to 17, says Didi Christie, an attorney with the Tennessee Department of Children Services. "They were operating under the radar. No one would know what was happening" to these kids, says Christie, adding that some of them were home-schooled. A Tennessee law requires all parents or guardians to notify authorities if they place children with a non-relative for more than 30 days.

A biological daughter, Melanie Schmitz, recalls the family piling into a motor home to pick up a child at a truck stop in Illinois about five years ago, one year before they moved from Wisconsin to Tennessee. "It was kind of a secretive thing," Melanie, now 21, told The Jackson (Tenn.) Sun, a Gannett paper that has tracked the case.

Debra Schmitz denies she picked up a child at a truck stop. She says Melanie, from whom she's estranged, was an "angry teenager" who wanted to run away from home. Her attorney, Barney Witherington, says the Schmitzes notified state authorities when they took each child and retained an attorney to adopt each one.

The children, removed from the Schmitzes' home in June 2004, are now in foster care. District Attorney Garry Brown says some may testify against the Schmitzes, who were accused of child abuse in 2000 when they lived in Wisconsin. An extensive investigation followed, but no charges were filed then.

Also testifying will be Brenda Filkel and Sherry Dvorak, licensed practical nurses who worked at the Schmitz home, Dvorak says. In an affidavit attached to a search warrant, they say Debra Schmitz was often drunk "by suppertime." They also say they saw six children — ranging in age from 8 to 14 — being thrown into "the cage" by older kids at the Schmitzes' instructions and that, as punishment, kids were deprived of leg braces, eyeglasses and a walker.

Filkel says she saw "records of swapped, traded and interchanged children" in the Schmitz home and that Debra Schmitz told her she could get a child through a website within three weeks without having to go through the Department of Children Services. Filkel and Dvorak took in some of the children after they were removed from the Schmitzes' home.

Children may testify

Five of the children will be subpoenaed to testify for the defense, says Tom Schmitz's attorney, Frank Deslauriers. He says he'll also seek testimony from the two nurses and neuropsychologist Federici, who says he was initially hired by the prosecution to examine the kids.

Federici says seven kids say nothing bad happened at the Schmitzes' and they want to return. He says the others talked about being spanked and about Debra Schmitz's drinking.

Federici, who has reviewed the Schmitzes' financial records, says the couple eventually received subsidies for each child, taking in $8,000 to $9,000 monthly. The monthly subsidies ranged from $364 to $817 for nine of the children, Christie says. She says one adoptive family helped pay for an addition to the Schmitzes' home after they took in a child and another paid child support.

Karen Sue Tolin, an adoptive mom in Michigan, says she didn't pay the Schmitzes for taking her daughter Erin but only provided supplies for incontinence as well as other materials. "This is not a money thing," Tolin says. "They had resources we didn't," she says, including mental health care that Erin, who has fetal alcohol syndrome, needed.

Debra Schmitz, a stay-at-home mom, says she didn't receive a penny for the last seven kids she took and spent everything on the children. "I wore rags, but my kids always looked wonderful," she says. Tom Schmitz works for a firm that rents and sells portable bathrooms.

No data exist on how many children are moved from family to family outside the public child-welfare system. Yet the Schmitzes, who took in children from at least seven states, are not the only people in this private network:

• In 2000, Denise Thomas of Littleton, Colo., was put on probation for a year after attempting to sell her daughter, adopted from Russia, on the Internet. She has said she was simply trying to recoup some of her adoption costs.

• In February 2004, Diana Groves of Bloomington, Ind., a single woman who had taken in 13 children, was charged with child abuse, in part for duct-taping some of the kids to a wall and hitting them with a tennis racket. Brad Swain, a detective in the Monroe County Sheriff's department, says Groves acquired the kids by "loose word-of-mouth" and received financial support from private individuals. Groves, who has three separate, unrelated felony convictions, has pleaded innocent and is free on bond while awaiting trial.

• In December 2004, Frances Ellen Matthews of Kenton, Tenn., was found guilty of a child-abuse charge. She says she took in children through private arrangements. She was caring for 16 children, many with severe disabilities, at the time of her arrest. Ten have been returned to her home.

Disrupted adoptions

Like many large adoptive families, the Schmitzes took in children adopted abroad by other people. Parents who no longer want an adopted child may seek a word-of-mouth placement because they may not get placement help from adoption agencies or they may want to avoid paying child support, which may be necessary if a child enters the foster-care system.

"Most agencies in the U.S. won't take a child from overseas, so families are stuck on their own," says Susan Meyer, a Florida adoptive mom of 28 children and founder of the Foundation for Large Families. She says states, burdened with U.S.-born children, also don't want to take these children into the public foster-care system.

Meyer adopted an autistic girl from the Ukraine, whom she found "through friends" after the child had moved from family to family following a disrupted adoption.

Similarly, Madeline Lynch, an adoptive mother in Auburn, Mich., has taken in four girls from Russia, the fourth of whom she heard about "through a friend of a friend." She took the girl more than a year ago and plans to adopt her.

Deslauriers, Tom Schmitz's attorney, says his client took in two Chinese children unwanted by the adoptive father — an attorney — who said they were not smart enough. The Schmitzes had four other foreign-born children — two from Russia, one from Vietnam and one from Mexico, state officials say.

Therapy is debated

The Schmitzes also took in kids from families sharing their interest in attachment therapy, which may include extensive chores, strict discipline and holding kids while looking into their eyes and feeding them chocolate and other treats.

The Schmitzes advertised themselves online as AT experts, says Christie, a state attorney.

"There was a support group," Debra Schmitz says. "It was not anything untoward or illegal. We just all talked." She says parents asked: "Can you take my child for a week? Pretty soon, they can't handle them at all, and the kids stay."

Many of the websites she used disappeared after her arrest in June 2004, says Shepard, the sheriff.

Debra Schmitz says many of her kids had reactive attachment disorder, an inability to trust, empathize or bond. Federici says only two or three do. He says most suffer from severe brain damage or psychiatric disorders that make them inappropriate court witnesses.

Federici says Schmitz's "overzealous discipline" was not formal AT, but he argues most of the criminal charges against the couple are false. "It was a zoo there, but the state of Tennessee allowed it," says Federici, citing the numerous home studies state officials had done.

Twice, for short periods, the Schmitzes took in Marianna, an adopted girl from Matthews, who also espoused AT. Matthews also took care of at least one Schmitz child. "We help each other out," Matthews says. "I've had quite a few people say: 'If you don't take this child, I'm going to kill her. You're my last resort.' "

Theresa Showell of Phoenix, who's studying to become an attachment therapist, took in a girl, Bethany, from the Schmitzes because they had trouble dealing with her. She plans to adopt Bethany. She's also taken in four children from Russia and a fifth child who initially came for a two-week stay. She believes AT's cuddling and intensive structure help her children.

Critics say some AT techniques amount to child abuse. "It's fairly brutal. It's like turning a home into a boot camp," says Larry Sarner, legislative director of the non-profit Advocates for Children in Therapy. His group says some families "swap" children in part to keep them "off-balance."

"Attachment therapy is a young and diverse field," says a new report by a task force of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children, a non-profit group based in Charleston, S.C. "The benefits and risks of many treatments remain scientifically undetermined."

Markus says children with severe behavior problems may cause some families to cross the line of acceptable parenting. "I've heard lots and lots of cases where parents have to take extraordinary steps just to (physically) protect them selves," Markus says.

www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-01-18 ... dren_x.htm
 
Back
Top