Showing posts with label Florida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florida. Show all posts

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Lutheran Services Case Manager Arrested For Child Abuse On 2-Year-Old

FORT MYERS, Fla. A 27-year-old Lutheran Services case manager is accused of abusing a 2-year-old child, according to the Fort Myers Police Department.

Caitlin Nicoole Carroll, of Fort Myers, was arrested Thursday, police said. Carroll, who is the fiancĂ© of the child’s father, was taking care of the child at the time of a reported fall.
The child was taken to Golisano Children’s Hospital at Healthpark Medical Center with significant bruises to multiple parts of the face, ears and body. The bruises were inconsistent with the information provided by Carroll, police said.
The Department of Children and Families, the Child Protection Team and FMPD were alerted to investigate the case.
Lutheran Services Florida is a social service agency contracted through the Children’s Network of Southwest Florida. Spokesperson Terri Durdaller released the following statement to WINK News:

Lutheran Services Florida takes allegations of abuse seriously. DCF notified us they were initiating an investigation a few weeks ago and we took immediate action by placing Ms. Carroll on administrative leave that same day. It’s important to note that this case does not involve a child under state’s care. Ms. Carroll remains on administrative leave without pay and has no contact with any of our clients, which aligns with LSF’s policies and procedures.
Ms. Carroll has worked for LSF since 2013 with a blemish-free background. She is a respected case manager and this is shocking to the entire child welfare community. As a case manager in the child welfare system she helps families in difficult situations by connecting them to resources and services so they could address issues preventing them as parents from providing a safe home.
Carroll faces a charge of cruelty towards a child. She’s scheduled to appear in court at 8:30 a.m. on Dec. 18. Bond has not yet been set.

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Florida DCF Investigating Death of Infant Taken From Family


Facebook




Liz Rutenbeck is shown in this Facebook photo with son William Hendrickson IV. Police say the boy died when his father left him in a sweltering bedroom. Rutenbeck was in jail at the time.


Life was neither long nor joyous for William Hendrickson IV. In the eight months he was given, his mother was jailed after a domestic violence call, the Department of Children and Families received multiple calls concerning his welfare, both parents failed drug tests and 911 was called 14 times from his home. The day before he died in his father's sweltering bedroom in a Largo mobile home, a social worker visited, a police officer showed up and a crisis hotline was called. The death of William Hendrickson IV was not just a tragedy, but a fundamental failure by the state of Florida to protect him.






This is not pointing an accusatory finger at anyone other than the person largely responsible, and that appears to be the child's father. Instead, this is a plea for the appropriate authorities to recognize that Florida's system for saving at-risk children needs to be streamlined, better funded and err more often on the side of caution.
This baby's horrific outcome, despite the many red flags, was not unique. An 11-month-old died in Palm Beach earlier this year after caseworkers placed him with a woman with 11 abuse allegations whom they mistakenly thought was a relative. A woman in Miami who had a disabled son removed from her care after she viciously beat him was allowed to keep twin siblings and later admitted throwing the body of one of them into a McDonald's dumpster. A Bradenton child once in protective custody had seven broken ribs, a skull fracture and other injuries when he died in November after being reunited with his mother and stepfather.
These are among the sickening examples of the more than 500 cases of children who have died while on DCF's radar since 2008, based on a Miami Herald investigation. Clearly, mistakes by case workers have contributed to some of these tragedies. But Florida also has a systemic problem that must be confronted.
Earlier this year, the federal Children and Family Services Review was critical of the funding levels for child services in Florida. There is tremendous turnover among DCF employees on the front lines, and that leads to too many inexperienced workers and case loads far too heavy to manage. And all of that can be traced back to the meager resources provided.
The state also has vacillated over the years between quickly removing children from potentially dangerous homes and striving to keep families together, depending on which solution seems more politically palatable at the time. This is not a strategy that should be in dispute. While it is preferable to keep families intact, that decision must be made on a case-by-case basis and not be influenced by some predetermined policy dictated by state legislators.
William Hendrickson IV should be alive today. There should be scrapbook photos waiting to be taken of him with his first birthday cake smeared on his face. From the number of calls and visits to that home, it should have been abundantly clear that the child's health and welfare were at risk. While courts may ultimately have to make the call in some of these cases, police and social workers on the scene should have the ability to operate under this simple mandate: If that was my child, what would I do?
Saturday, August 12, 2017 11:04pm




Anoth
Another infant has died while under the watch of the Florida Department of Children and Families and one of its privately contracted providers, spurring child advocacy attorneys and lawyers who fight for at-risk children or those suffering abuse or harm to closely follow this case. - See more at: http://www.justiceforkids.us/florida-dcf-investigating-death-infant-taken-family/#sthash.OBg13utr.dpuf
Another infant has died while under the watch of the Florida Department of Children and Families and one of its privately contracted providers, spurring child advocacy attorneys and lawyers who fight for at-risk children or those suffering abuse or harm to closely follow this case.
Miracle Collins, only 7 months old, was taken from her mother in February after reports of domestic violence, according to news reports on a Tampa Police Department report. Eckerd Kids, a contractor to the Florida DCF, placed the child with a family friend. The child was sleeping on the couch, and later was found unresponsive.
A DCF critical incident team is investigating the death.

Though a common practice, placing children with non-relatives is not without its issues and benefits, noted Robin Rosenberg, deputy director of Florida’s Children First, a statewide advocacy organization focused on children’s rights.
“It can be a wonderful thing or it can have bad results if they’re not adequately supported to take care of the child,” Rosenberg told TampaBay.com. “Sometimes it imposes on really well-intended people but doesn’t give them adequate support.”
- See more at: http://www.justiceforkids.us/florida-dcf-investigating-death-infant-taken-family/#sthash.OBg13utr.dpuf

Another infant has died while under the watch of the Florida Department of Children and Families and one of its privately contracted providers, spurring child advocacy attorneys and lawyers who fight for at-risk children or those suffering abuse or harm to closely follow this case.
Miracle Collins, only 7 months old, was taken from her mother in February after reports of domestic violence, according to news reports on a Tampa Police Department report. Eckerd Kids, a contractor to the Florida DCF, placed the child with a family friend. The child was sleeping on the couch, and later was found unresponsive.
A DCF critical incident team is investigating the death.

Though a common practice, placing children with non-relatives is not without its issues and benefits, noted Robin Rosenberg, deputy director of Florida’s Children First, a statewide advocacy organization focused on children’s rights.
“It can be a wonderful thing or it can have bad results if they’re not adequately supported to take care of the child,” Rosenberg told TampaBay.com. “Sometimes it imposes on really well-intended people but doesn’t give them adequate support.”
- See more at: http://www.justiceforkids.us/florida-dcf-investigating-death-infant-taken-family/#sthash.OBg13utr.dpuf

Another infant has died while under the watch of the Florida Department of Children and Families and one of its privately contracted providers, spurring child advocacy attorneys and lawyers who fight for at-risk children or those suffering abuse or harm to closely follow this case.
Miracle Collins, only 7 months old, was taken from her mother in February after reports of domestic violence, according to news reports on a Tampa Police Department report. Eckerd Kids, a contractor to the Florida DCF, placed the child with a family friend. The child was sleeping on the couch, and later was found unresponsive.
A DCF critical incident team is investigating the death.

Though a common practice, placing children with non-relatives is not without its issues and benefits, noted Robin Rosenberg, deputy director of Florida’s Children First, a statewide advocacy organization focused on children’s rights.
“It can be a wonderful thing or it can have bad results if they’re not adequately supported to take care of the child,” Rosenberg told TampaBay.com. “Sometimes it imposes on really well-intended people but doesn’t give them adequate support.”
- See more at: http://www.justiceforkids.us/florida-dcf-investigating-death-infant-taken-family/#sthash.OBg13utr.dpuf

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Get To Root Of Crisis In Foster Care DCF's Track Record

Jonathan K. Jaberg, Largo
Get to root of crisis in foster care Aug. 12, editorial
DCF's track record


In this editorial, the Times rightfully called out the Department of Children and Families for failing to adequately place the thousands of children who are removed from parental care every year in Hillsborough County and across the state. What the editorial did not point out is that many judges assigned to handle these cases often act as little more than a rubber stamp for a failing system.


Since 2011, of the more than 4,000 cases in which children were removed from their parents in Hills­borough, only 66 were overturned and only one case this year has reversed the initial determination by the DCF to remove a child. That means that judges have determined the DCF made the right call 99.98 percent of the time. No agency is that good.

That percentage would be less alarming if we were dealing with highly trained professionals who are doing thorough risk assessments and placing children in safe, appropriate homes. The reality is that poorly trained social workers employed by the Sheriff's Office have one of the worst jobs out there. That's why they have such historically abysmal staff retention.


When explaining to people how difficult it is to be a child protective investigator, I use the analogy of the police. When the cops show up, at least someone is happy to see them, usually the person who called. Nobody is happy to see the DCF. Yet that doesn't mean we can allow these removals to go unchecked. Too often, there are services that could have been offered to prevent the need for a removal.

Courts have had a difficult time deciding what to do when the DCF falls down on the job. Does that mean you put a child at risk? Of course not, but let's ask our judges to stop assuming they made the right call every time. Our children deserve better.

Christopher Mulligan, Brooksville
The writer is a third-generation Florida lawyer who primarily handles cases involving children.
Reforms and resources

I have worked with at-risk youth and child protection systems in the Northeast. I am a Guardian ad Litem in Pinellas County and have fostered a teen.

I'm heartened that last year Florida strengthened its child protection laws by placing the interests of abused or neglected children ahead of biological parents' interests. It would have been sensible to concomitantly prepare for the influx of children who would remain out of inappropriate homes as a result. That didn't happen.


From my experience, here are the missing pieces that require funding:
• More compensation and support for foster care families, which in turn will encourage more folks to become foster parents.

• A significant increase in wraparound and in-home services. (New Jersey did this in the 1990s with impressive results).

• Compensation for family members who meet low-income guidelines who otherwise cannot afford to take in a grandchild or niece but would be willing to do so if the support were there.

http://www.tampabay.com/opinion/letters/wednesdays-letters-sarcasm-isnt-a-leadership-trait/2289724

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Courthouse Protester Seeks Custody Hearing In Viera

For several days, the 39-year-old father has paced back and forth with a cardboard sign asking a judge to 'free my babies' as hundreds of people carried out their daily business at the Moore Justice Center in Viera.



Korvary Rojas, of Fort Lauderdale, said he is also protesting against the Department of Children and Families at the Viera courthouse and added he is hoping to regain custody of his two daughters, ages 2 and 3, in a pending family court review.

Rojas has been at the courthouse since Tuesday, but was asked by Brevard County sheriff's deputies on Thursday to leave the courthouse premises after a call to a helpline raised concerns about his wellbeing. Several deputies turned up within minutes of the call and surrounded him in front of the courthouse. No arrest was made.

“They told me to go home, that I can't be standing there. These are my babies,” he said, “free my babies. I don’t know what else to do,” the handyman told FLORIDA TODAY.

The Department of Children and Families removed the two children from Rojas’ home in June 2015. A June 3 hearing was held at the Moore Justice Center in Viera for Rojas to present his case.

“The court heard testimony from the father in regards to a home study managed in Fort Lauderdale,” said David Ocasio of DCF in a written statement to FLORIDA TODAY.

“It was deemed that there were still concerns regarding the dad's ability to properly care for the children. A judgement has not been made on whether or not to overrule the home study.”



Rojas said one deputy prayed for him. Others asked why he was there. He was also joined by another fathers' rights advocate,  David Henry, on Thursday. "I've been out here night and day," he said. "But I've been suffering like a dog for a year since they took my children. I thought I was supposed to come back here to pick up my babies but nothing happened," he said, adding that he questions the care the two are receiving in DCF custody.

"I just want my babies."

http://www.floridatoday.com/story/news/2016/06/09/courthouse-protester-seeks-custody-hearing-viera/85644284/

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Palm Beach Defense Attorney: DCF Has a Reputation for Breaking Up Families

According to criminal defense lawyer Andrew Stine, DCF has earned a reputation for using underhanded tactics to remove children from their homes.

The Department of Children and Families (DCF) has a nefarious reputation throughout Florida for illegally removing children from their families, reports Andrew D. Stine, Palm Beach defense attorney. DCF will receive a report through the “hotline” regarding child abuse, child endangerment or child neglect and then use underhanded tactics in their investigation of the allegations. Several investigation tools used by DCF allow for the “child” to be interviewed, without the parents even knowing about the investigation let alone the interview.
Schools are a favorite place for DCF to use this underhanded tactic in their bag of investigative tools. DCF likes to show up at elementary schools, middle schools and high schools to meet with the child and interview them. Another underhanded tactic that DCF likes to employ is by using the child’s friend to corroborate the story being told by the child, and this usually occurs without any parental notification about the “friendly witness.” Lastly, DCF likes to also use the “complaining” witness to show the foundation for why the child should be removed from the family home. The “complaining” witness however, on many occasions has a pecuniary interest in the outcome. This is because the “complaining” witness, on many of the DCF matters, is likely a parent of the child that is involved in a custody battle, owes back child support or wants to get the child support payments reduced and uses DCF as a tool to “pressure” the other parent into submission. DCF, of course, does not have the ability to see the motive behind the complaining witness because DCF is hell bent on removal of the child. Removal of the child is what ensures that DCF will remain a needed governmental agency and thus continue their employment.

Many allegations made in DCF cases stem from domestic violence allegations between the parents, caretakers or family members living with the child. DCF will always employ a “team” member to a Florida home, where children reside, if there are allegations of domestic violence. DCF has a firm belief and has convinced many circuit court judges that if domestic violence is allegedly occurring in a Palm Beach County home that in fact the children should be removed because the “impending harm to the child” is inevitable. DCF believes “all” incidents of domestic violence, even false allegations, will eventually harm the mental process of the child and eventually the violence will resonate over to the child and the child will become a victim of the violence.
The defense, against allegations made by DCF of domestic violence affecting the children, is that the children did not see, hear or witness the allegations of domestic violence between the parents, caretakers or family members. The appellate courts have continually held that even if the parents, caretakers and families members were involved in a domestic violence situation, without evidence showing that the domestic violence had occurred when the children were home, or that they otherwise were aware of the violence, the Circuit Court’s finding of “impending harm” to the children is unsustainable.
Another ripe area of concern for DCF to investigate is when the “hotline” receives the allegation that the parent, caretaker or family member is using “illegal” drugs or alcohol. Upon DCF receiving the drug use or alcohol information, they will immediately assume the allegations of drugs and alcohol are true, and then further jump to the conclusion that the children in the home are at risk and ripe for removal. But Florida law has continually held that even if there is evidence that the parent, caretaker or family member was under the influence of substances or alcohol, if there is no evidence that the parent was under the influence in the presence of the child, or that any substance abuse or alcohol abuse adversely affected the child, then the allegations by DCF are unsustainable.

If you or a family member are facing a DCF investigation and/or a criminal investigation into child abuse, neglect or abandonment, then time is of the essence in getting legal advice; definitely before meeting with DCF or law enforcement officers is imperative. Knowing how the appellate courts have interrupted the DCF statutes in Florida is paramount in getting a successful outcome for you and your child, when it comes to all DCF and criminal investigations regarding your family.
If you or a loved one are asking questions like “should I meet with DCF or the police about the domestic violence allegations in the home” or “should I take the urine test” that DCF is requiring of me, then you need to call West Palm Beach lawyer Andrew D. Stine. Palm Beach County criminal defense lawyer, Andrew D. Stine, has been fighting for his clients in DCF courtrooms since 2003 and in criminal courtrooms since 2001. Call Stine or Do the Time. 561 832 1170.

http://www.andrewdstine.com/palm-beach-defense-attorney-dcf-has-a-reputation-for-breaking-up-families/

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Boy Sues ChildNet, Says Foster Parent Abused Him

A child who was allegedly sexually abused by a foster parent has filed a lawsuit against welfare providers Kids in Distress Inc. and ChildNet Inc. because the agencies did not conduct proper background checks on the parent before issuing a foster parenting license.

According to the lawsuit, the child — identified only as R.S. — claims 56-year-old John Michael McGuigan of Broward County sexually abused him while the child was under his care. But the lawsuit says there were multiple glaring red flags the agencies failed to see when McGuigan applied to become a Florida foster parent in 2008.
The child-care providers failed in their background check of McGuigan, who had failed to disclose that he had been investigated for showing a minor a pornographic photo and asking that minor to perform sex acts, according to the lawsuit. McGuigan also failed to disclose that he had been arrested for cocaine possession. Moreover, McGuigan was also involved in a ten-year relationship that ended with his partner committing suicide.
Even more disturbing is that one 7-year-old foster child under McGuigan's care, Gabriel Myers, committed suicide by hanging himself in 2009. Although Myers was found dead in another foster family's home, the lawsuit says the suicide happened only days after Myers was removed from McGuigan's care following the boy's erratic behavior, which hinted at "inappropriate parenting" by McGuigan, according to the lawsuit.


Myers' death did force some changes by the Florida Department of Children and Families, including how agencies monitor drugs taken by foster children. Myers had been on two powerful psychiatric drugs at the time of his death.
But the lawsuit against the agencies points out that R.S. was placed in McGuigan's home only a year after Myers' death. R.S., who had never been abused before, was removed from McGuigan's home after DCF received a report alleging abuse by McGuigan.
"On or about December 12, 2011, DCF received a report through the Florida Abuse Hotline alleging that R.S. disclosed that he had been sexually abused by McGuigan while under his care, and this report was closed with indicators of sexual abuse," the lawsuit says. "R.S. was groomed and sexually assaulted by McGuigan, which resulted in R.S. being emotionally harmed and becoming sexually reactive."
It was after this report that investigators learned McGuigan had falsified information on his foster parenting application. Investigators also discovered that McGuigan had himself been sexually abused as a child by his father.
McGuigan was forced to resign from his position as CEO of the Broward House HIV service center following sexual abuse allegations from alleged former victims.



In 2000, McGuigan was investigated by Delray Beach Police for lewd and lascivious acts after a teenager claimed he had shown him a pornographic picture and asked him to perform sex acts. The lawsuit also points out an incident where a man from Boston accused McGuigan of molesting him when he was a child. McGuigan was not charged in either case.
The lawsuit says that both Kids in Distress and ChildNet allowed "an alleged child molester and person of poor moral character" to care for R.S. by not thoroughly checking McGuigan's background and by not conducting a fingerprinting and local criminal records check.
R.S., who is represented Fort Lauderdale attorney Howard Talenfeld, is seeking compensatory damages in excess of $15,000.
Requests for comment from DCF by New Times were not immediately returned.

http://www.browardpalmbeach.com/news/boy-sues-childnet-says-foster-parent-abused-him-6970745

Friday, November 21, 2014

Inside Florida’s Department of Children and Families (DCF)

The Department of Children and Families (DCF) is an agency in Florida with multi functions. Under Florida Statute the Department of Children and Family provides that its local offices, like the West Palm Beach DCF Office, shall provide services relating to: (1) adult protection; (2) child care regulation; (3) child welfare; (4) domestic violence; (5) economic self-sufficiency; (6) homelessness; (7) mental health; (8) refugees; (9) substance abuse.  While DCF might sound like a nice cutesy agency looking out for the citizens of Florida, think again.

The Department of Children and Families has a horrible track record in their placement of children with foster families, government agencies and orphanages throughout their history. This placement of children occurs after DCF plucks them from good, decent Families throughout Palm Beach County, and places them outside their home. With all medical providers like Doctors, Nurses, and clinics throughout Palm Beach County, Florida well aware of the Department’s horrible placement tract record, why would these medical providers even report and suspected abuse to DCF? The answer lies in the Florida Legislatures and more importantly in the purse strings of the Florida Tax Payer!
Under Florida Statute 39.201 there are lists of named professions that must report to DCF:


 Physician, osteopathic physician, medical examiner, chiropractic physician, nurse, or hospital personnel engaged in the admission, examination, care, or treatment of persons; mental health professionals and practitioners who rely solely on spiritual means for healing; school teachers or other school officials or personnel; Social workers, day care center workers, or other professional child care providers, foster care, residential, or institutional worker; law enforcement officer and Judges shall all report to DCF any child that the reporter has reasonable cause to suspect is abused, abandoned, or neglected by a parent, legal custodian, caregiver, or other person in this State.
The Florida Legislatures have passed laws that require Doctor’s and their staff to report activity of their own patients to the Florida Government, law enforcement officers and DCF.


 As an example of how far the DCF mandatory reporting requirements have reached, into the lives of West Palm Beach women, who are pregnant and about to deliver their new born babies is startling. Moms and moms to be, you may want to closely guard your personal information about any recreational alcohol or drug use from your OB/GYN doctor and their staff, while receiving prenatal care and during delivery of your child.  The guarding of your personal information about recreational use of substances from your physician, nurses and other clinic staff, while pregnant, will allow you to take “home” your bouncing bundle of joy in a manner without DCF intervention. This is because if you tell your doctor or clinic staff at the OB/GYN facility that you drink alcohol, smoke marijuana or use any form of drugs prescribed or not, your OB/GYN Doctor will report this information of use to the Palm Beach DCF hotline. What occurs next is the reporter is required to provide their information and mom’s information, including where and when the child is delivered, to DCF. Now the investigation is started!

Upon delivery of your new baby, mom will be greeted at her hospital room by a government agent named DCF. The DCF worker will begin the personal investigative process of being very nice to the new mom to gain her trust so that mom will provide her information as to why the government agent should be involved in the new family. The government agent from DCF will offer services to mom like drug rehabilitation, alcohol treatment, and other services to the mom. With DCF asking questions of the new mom, the DCF agent is provided information about the mom’s recreational use of substances from the source itself-mom. Because the DCF worker has been provided information straight from mom’s mouth, the new baby will likely be tested through a blood examination for recreational substances too. What occurs next is completely up the headless agency named DCF.
If the new baby tests positive for any substances, then mom will be forced into a very odd predicament. The choices facing mom will be to have the child remain in the hospital and not return home with her or have mom begin a serious of obstacles, namely enter into a case plan, to possibly get her child back. Under Florida Law, the child may only be kept in the hospital and not allowed to leave the hospital with its mother if there is a court order in place “enjoining” or stopping the mother from taking the child home. Otherwise all the threats from DCF that mom cannot take home her baby are idle.
The Florida legislatures have made it mandatory for doctors to tell on their patients through government regulated laws or regulations.  But are this regulator laws ethical, because of the doctor patient relationship and confidentiality? For that answer you must contact your local AMA. But in my opinion, the reason why doctors will continue to breach doctor patient confidentiality, especially knowing the dire circumstances its causes the new mother and their baby, is because of the mighty dollar attached to the mandatory regulating laws.

South Florida Doctors rely more heavily on Medicaid patients than anywhere else in America. Without those Medicaid dollars rolling into Palm Beach County OB/GYN clinics, many doctors would not be able to exist let alone flourish. So, what is attached to the Doctors mandatory reporting, Medicaid dollars! If a Doctor does not report what he or she believes is reasonable cause to suspect abused and it is later discovered that the Doctor withheld this information or did not report it for whatever reason, the Medicaid dollars that fund the Doctor’s lifestyle may be taken away through sanctions or worse. Moms you can bet on one thing, the OB/GYN will sooner let DCF come between you and your baby, before allowing anyone to come in-between the OB/GYN’s pocket and Medicaid Dollars.
If you or a loved one needs help with a Department of Children and Family matter, contact West Palm Beach Attorney Andrew D. Stine. Andrew D. Stine has been defending families against DCF for more than a decade. Compassionate, understanding, and willing to go to trial can be useful for you and your family in a DCF time of need.
http://www.andrewdstine.com/blog/2014/11/inside-floridas-department-of-children-and-families-dcf/

Friday, September 26, 2014

Editorial: Nightmare Of A DCF

It has become like a nightmare. Imagine it: You lay flat, cheek pressed against the dusty edge of a cliff. Your outstretched hand grips that of a tiny child. Fingers clench hard and white. Then slip. The child falls. Sweat-drenched, you wake before the body shatters against the stone below.
Horrifying ends like this have become far more than dreams under the Florida Department of Children and Families. Losing hold of our most vulnerable has become a regularity. A failure to protect them is systemic. And the results are unthinkable.


Last week, we were forced to think about it. On Sept. 18, in Bell, Florida, a man named Don Charles Spirit shot his daughter and six grandchildren. The tiny Floridians ranged in age from 2 months to 11 years. Spirit turned the gun on himself as deputies arrived — the final act of a depraved and evil man.
But for the state, our greatest shame is that these children could have — and should have — been saved.
According to the Miami Herald, just two weeks prior to the massacre, the DCF “received a report ... that the children of Sarah Spirit, 28, were living with drug abusers... Spirit told the agency she had just been released from jail after violating probation .... At the time, she was living with her father, a 51-year-old man with a record of violence who had once gone to prison for fatally shooting his son in a hunting accident.”
In the records obtained from the DCF, the Herald found all the ingredients for this nightmare. This was not the first encounter the agency had with the monster. Don Spirit’s history with the DCF spanned years with “allegations that he physically abused both his children and grandchildren, as well as at least one report of domestic violence between him and his daughter.”
Furthermore, the records showed that Spirit had been arrested on a slew of charges including “battery, drug possession and depriving a child of food and shelter.” And in 2001 the man had accidentally shot and killed his 8-year-old son on a hunting trip, according to the Herald’s findings. In addition, the story noted that the mother’s history “included arrests for larceny, shoplifting and drug possession” and that the “two fathers of her six children both are incarcerated.”


The state knew all of this — had long known this. Yet these six children were still in the custody of monsters. That has not been an isolated failure with the DCF.
Last year, the Herald chronicled this sad pattern in a series called “Innocents Lost.” The newspaper demonstrated how, for years, our state has continually allowed children to remain in dangerous situations, even after the danger has been well-documented. Too often, it resulted in fatal consequences for the most vulnerable and innocent members of our society.
And now this. The Herald says the killings are “believed to be the largest loss of life in a single family with a child welfare history ever in Florida.” So the nightmare continues. The agency that exists to save is incapable of pulling these children up from the cliff.
Forget the election-year promises that, in Florida, “it’s working.” Gov. Scott must make fixing the DCF his first priority. Because if government’s foremost obligation to protect children’s right to life isn’t working, then nothing in Florida is.

http://www.pnj.com/story/opinion/2014/09/25/editorial-nightmare-dcf/16227011/

Friday, September 19, 2014

Nubia Barahona's adoptive sister files lawsuit against Florida's Department of Children and Families

Suit claims child suffered years of abuse

12:08 PM, Sep 17, 2014
 
It was a Valentine's Day discovery that unearthed one of the worst cases of child abuse and neglect in recent Florida history.


Three years after the young body of 10-year-old Nubia Barahona was found stuffed in a garbage bag of her adoptive father's pickup truck, Nubia's adoptive sister is suing Florida's Department of Children and Families.  The sister is accusing the state agency of failing to protect her too.
“It’s about a systemic failure of DCF and its agencies to protect children that they're supposed to be protecting,” said attorney Todd Falzone, who’s representing the young girl.
In the lengthy 20-page lawsuit, Nubia's adoptive sister, identified as J.B., now 11-years-old, claims for years she also suffered from the abuse of living with Carmen and Jorge Barahona, the children's adoptive parents.
“Unfortunately there is unspeakable acts of abuse embarked on this child,” said Falzone.
The lawsuit claims Carmen and Jorge Barahona physically, sexually and emotionally abused J.B.  It also cites multiple times that DCF allegedly missed signs of abuse in the house where J.B. lived with Nubia and her twin brother, Victor.
“You name it.  It’s a horrible, disgusting set of facts,” said Falzone.
Between December 2004 and February 2011, when Nubia was killed and her twin brother, Victor, nearly lost his life, Falzone cites at least 12 times DCF failed to properly discover abuse and investigate reports of it.
The lawsuit claims DCF and three case workers are responsible for the damages, injury, pain and mental distress that J.B. continues to live with.


“The light needs to be shined on what goes on with these kids at this agency.  This is an agency that time and time again has failed the children of this state,” said Falzone.
This is the second lawsuit filed against the state in this case.  The other was filed on behalf of Nubia and her twin brother Victor.
Carmen and Jorge Barahona have pleaded not guilty to the charges they face.  If convicted, both could face the death penalty.  Both remain in jail awaiting trial.

http://www.wptv.com/news/state/nubia-barahonas-adoptive-sister-files-lawsuit-against-floridas-department-of-children-and-families

 

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Florida Child Welfare Worker, 3 Others Charged In Girl’s Starvation Death

cmarbin@MiamiHerald.com

A Broward County grand jury has charged four women — one of them a child welfare caseworker — with ignoring the suffering of a severely disabled Lauderhill pre-teen who withered away and died while under the protection of the state.


Tamiyah Audain suffered from a devastating disease, as well as autism and an intellectual disability. After her mother died from the same disease, tuberous sclerosis, Tamiyah was sent by the state to live with a young cousin, though a more capable caregiver in Kentucky was eager to take custody. On Sept. 25, 2013, Tamiyah’s emaciated, bedsore-pocked body was found in her caregiver’s home. An autopsy concluded Tamiyah was ravaged by infection, and starved to death.
The 12-year-old’s cousin, Latoya Patterson, was charged in an indictment with felony murder, meaning the child died as a result of another felony, aggravated child abuse, said Ron Ishoy, a spokesman for Broward State Attorney Mike Satz. Patterson was arrested Tuesday, and booked into the Broward jail. The charge is punishable by a maximum of life in prison.
A caseworker who was responsible for ensuring Tamiyah’s welfare, Jabeth Moye, was indicted on charges of child neglect causing great bodily harm, a second-degree felony. Moye worked for a foster care agency under the umbrella of Broward’s privately run child welfare agency, ChildNet, which has a contract with the Department of Children & Families. Her charge carries a maximum sentence of 15 years imprisonment.
Also indicted Friday were two psychologists who were involved in Tamiyah’s care, Juliana Gerena and Helen Richardson, Ishoy said. The two women were charged with failing to report suspected child abuse or neglect to DCF’s abuse hotline, which is required under Florida law. The charge is a third-degree felony, punishable by up to five years’ imprisonment, Ishoy added.
Failing to report child abuse has been a crime in Florida since at least 1999, when the well-publicized death of 6-year-old Kayla McKean of Central Florida prompted lawmakers to crack down on professionals who fail to act when confronted with obvious signs of abuse. But it is exceedingly rare for professionals or lay people to be charged with the offense, both in Florida and elsewhere.
“It is very, very unusual,” said Richard Gelles, the former dean of the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Social Policy and Practice, and a child welfare professor. “The indictment of professionals for failure to report almost never occurs. I may have heard of it once before in 40 years.”
The charges, Gelles said, suggest that grand jurors were particularly moved, or angered, by the circumstances of Tamiyah’s death. “To say they were probably pretty damn fed up would be mild,” Gelles said. “I think they were disgusted.”
Moye’s indictment was handed up Friday, the same day that a Seminole County caseworker, Jonathan, Irizarry,
Jonathan, Irizarry

was charged by state police with falsifying records about visits to another child under the state’s care, 2-year-old Tariji Gordon. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement said Irizarry’s failure to monitor Tariji’s health and welfare might have led to her Feb. 6, 2014, death. Police say Tariji’s mother, Rachel Fryer, beat her to death.
Moye was fired by ChildNet on July 11, according to records obtained by the Miami Herald. A termination letter said only that “even with the support and coaching” of her supervisors, Moye’s work had not “improved enough to timely comply with the duties and responsibilities assigned in [her] job description.” Moye, the letter said, had failed to “adhere to our standards of excellence.”
A website operated by Gerena says that her practice, Gerena and Associates, offers mental health counseling and assessments under contract with several state agencies and their providers, including DCF, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities and ChildNet.
The stories of both Tamiyah and Tariji were featured in a Miami Herald series, Innocents Lost, that detailed the stories of 477 children from throughout Florida who died after DCF had made prior contact with the children’s families. The deaths — overwhelmingly involving infants, toddlers and other very young children — spiked around 2008 after DCF administrators embraced a rigid “family preservation” model while simultaneously reducing the supervision of troubled, drug-addicted and sometimes violent parents.
In particular danger, the newspaper reported, were children with complex medical needs and physical or intellectual disabilities. Children with physical impairments, a report said, are 17 times more likely to die from abuse or neglect in Florida than their typically developing peers. Among the Herald’s sample of 477 children, 85, or close to 20 percent, had suffered from some type of medical, physical or cognitive disability. Many, including Tamiyah, endured multiple impairments.
Ishoy said Tamiyah weighed only 56 pounds when Patterson, her caregiver, finally sought help. The girl’s body was marred by “extensive bed sores and bone-deep wounds” at death.
But even as Tamiyah shriveled away, records show, her ChildNet caseworker was recording regular visits to Patterson’s home, and reporting that Tamiyah was safe.
Patterson admitted to investigators that she had locked Tamiyah in her bedroom for hours, allowing the girl to emerge only at mealtime. Tamiyah also was being sedated with three separate tranquilizers to subdue her behavior — medication that left her so drowsy that, Moye wrote, the girl would slumber during the agency’s monthly visits.
During the state’s last visit with Tamiyah, a report said, the 12-year-old was “moaning” as she sat on the lap of her caregiver, and covered head-to-toe in clothing, possibly to cover the bedsores.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/08/26/4311195/florida-child-welfare-worker-3.html#storylink=cpy

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Key Lawmaker Calls For All Child Deaths To Be Reported

By Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida
Senate sponsor of Florida’s sweeping new child-welfare law says she’ll be back next year with a bill to expand its reporting requirements. 
 
State. Sen. Eleanor Sobel
 
Sen. Eleanor Sobel, chairwoman of the Senate Children, Families and Elder Affairs Committee, said the new law doesn’t go far enough in requiring all children’s deaths to be reported.
The law (SB 1666), approved this spring by lawmakers, overhauled Florida’s troubled child-welfare system and went into effect July 1. Among its many provisions, the law requires the state Child Abuse Death Review Committee to “prepare an annual statistical report on the incidence and causes of death resulting from reported child abuse in the state during the prior calendar year.”
However, the number of deaths “from reported child abuse” is just a fraction of the total number of child deaths, and critics say that means crimes are slipping through the cracks.
“Even a car accident could be abuse and neglect, depending on the state of the driver,” Sobel, D-Hollywood, said Thursday.
During 2012, 2,111 children under the age of 18 died in Florida, according to the Child Abuse Death Review Committee’s 2013 annual report. Of those, 432 were reported to the state abuse hotline, which is housed at the Department of Children and Families.
Of those, the department verified 122 deaths as being related to child abuse or neglect.
Depending on DCF’s definitions for abuse and neglect, the hotline counselors screen cases in or out.
“You see variations year to year in how many abuse deaths are reported, depending on the criteria used by the hotline,” said Pam Graham, associate professor of social work at Florida State University.
Sobel said the department is screening out too many cases that, with additional scrutiny, could be determined to be child-abuse deaths.
“There’s been too much of a cover-up in this state,” she said. “The Department of Children and Families should be required to report what they find.”
Her criticisms echo a Miami-Dade grand jury report in June that blasted DCF for its reporting of child deaths, noting, for instance, that the department in 2010 changed its definition of “neglect” in a way that made it apply to fewer children.


“The public does not have confidence in the accuracy of the number of child deaths reported,” grand jurors concluded. “Reported reductions in the total number of deaths may only be a consequence of changing the definitions of abuse and neglect.”
One of the grand jury recommendations was that the department should revert to its pre-2010 definition of neglect and eliminate other inconsistencies in its reporting.
The training of those who classify the cases is crucial to whether or not they’re reported, said Maj. Connie Shingledecker of the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office.
For instance, the two biggest causes of child deaths in Florida are drowning and what are called “co-sleeping” deaths, in which babies suffocate while sleeping with adults.
Drowning and co-sleeping deaths are often accidental, but they can also be the result of impairment due to substance abuse by a parent — and Shingledecker said not all law-enforcement agencies are reporting them that way.
“They haven’t been trained to recognize the death is a result of neglect, so they don’t call it in,” she said.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Former Foster Parents: Cherish Perrywinkle's Sisters Lost In System

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The former foster parents of Cherish Perrywinkle's sisters say they are disappointed with how the state has failed to place the girls in a permanent home.

Former foster parents: Cherish Perrywinkle's sisters lost in system


It's been over a year since the girls, Destiny, 6, and Nevaeh, 5, were removed from their home and placed in foster care, and today Amy and Bill Decker say the children are not any closer to a safe and permanent home.
The Deckers say they met Rayne through community support services when she was pregnant with Cherish. When they heard about Cherish's abduction and murder, they wanted to offer Rayne help.
"There was an entire room filled with black mold, there was no running water in the bathroom, there were holes all the way through the floor," said Amy Decker. "The situation they were living in, the house should have been condemned."


The Deckers say they took Rayne and the girls to stay with them. After a few days Rayne returned home but allowed the girls to stay.
"DCF [Department of Children and Families] was removing the children from Rayne and asked us if we would provide temporary care for them while they found a home that could be more permanent for them," added Decker.
Destiny and Nevaeh were four and five-years-old at the time. The Deckers instantly fell in love with the girls.
"They were in that van," said Decker, referring to Cherish's murder suspect, Donald Smith's van. "It was only grace that they made it through, so of course we only wanted the best for them."
The girls were supposed to stay six weeks, but that turned into three and a half months. The Deckers took them to Disney World and organized birthday parties all while keeping them connected with their family. Their hope was that they would get a permanent home.


"We are not anti-Rayne, we are not anti-DCF, we are pro-Destiny and Nevaeh. So all the steps along the way were to support them and protect them," said Decker.
But then, the girls were going to be moved and not to a permanent home, but to another temporary home. The Deckers say there were several families who were interested in adopting Destiny and Nevaeh, but were ignored by DCF. The Deckers say DCF told them the plans changed and that they are now working towards parent reunification.
"A little over a year ago these two little girls barely escaped with their lives and they are no closer to a safe and permanent loving home today ," said Decker.
We reached out to DCF about the case and were referred to Family Support Services [FSS] of North Florida. We are in contact with someone from FSS who is looking into the case, but could not confirm whether the girls are on track to be adopted or reunited with their parents.
Meanwhile, the Donald Smith is charged with the first-degree murder of Cherish. He is scheduled to be in court Wednesday morning.

http://www.firstcoastnews.com/story/news/local/2014/07/15/cherish-perrywinkle-siblings-foster-care/12714993/

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Grand Jury Rips Florida’s DCF For ‘Deliberately’ Undercounting Child Deaths

cmarbin @MiamiHerald.com

A Miami-Dade grand jury accused state child welfare administrators Tuesday of “intentionally and deliberately” manipulating the investigation of child deaths because of abuse and neglect — making it appear that fewer children were dying across the state.

Nubia Barahona, 10, was found dead in the back of her adoptive father's pick-up truck

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/06/24/4199002/grand-jury-rips-floridas-dcf-for.html#storylink=cpy

In a 30-page report that explores whether the Department of Children & Families has improved since the shocking 2011 death of 10-year-old Nubia Barahona, grand jurors found much that pleased them. But they also scolded the agency for what they described as a systematic attempt to conceal the true number of children whose lives are cut short by abuse or neglect.
“I thank the members of the grand jury for their comprehensive look at Florida’s child welfare system,” said Mike Carroll,

the agency’s interim secretary. “It is clear from their thoughtful recommendations that they understand the challenges in the work we do, and it’s also clear they recognize our commitment to continuing to improve so we can better protect Florida’s children.”
The grand jury presentment, handed up to Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Gisela Cardonne Ely Tuesday afternoon, comes on the heels of a series of stories in the Miami Herald, called Innocents Lost. Details of the series are discussed in the report. In particular, grand jurors confirmed the Herald’s findings that DCF had revised its definition of “neglect,” resulting in an artificial reduction in the number of children reported to have died the past four years.
The report highlighted a several-paragraph excerpt from the series that detailed the deaths of four children in 2011and 2013 that DCF declined to verify as resulting from neglect. In one case, a 1-year-old boy drowned in a community pool during Memorial Day weekend three years ago while his mother texted friends away from the poolside. DCF said the mother wasn’t negligent because other adults at the pool were likewise failing to supervise their small children.


SOME CHANGES
Every person on the grand jury, the report said, “concluded that each of these preventable deaths occurred due to the neglect of each child’s parent(s),” the report said. “We are at an utter loss to understand how those who labor in the field of child protection and child welfare could intentionally and deliberately find that these deaths were not verified as acts of neglect.”
Changes in the way DCF investigates and discloses child death information, grand jurors wrote, left a cloud hanging over the agency, even as administrators tout reforms. “The public does not have confidence in the accuracy of the number of child deaths reported,” the report said, adding: “Aside from being misleading, reported reductions in the total number of deaths may only be a consequence of changing the definitions of abuse and neglect.”
At the center of the unusual report — grand juries seldom issue such presentments, opting instead to indict alleged offenders without comment — is Nubia Barahona. The tow-headed twin from West Miami was found soaked in toxic chemicals on Feb. 11, 2011, stuffed in a black garbage bag in the flatbed of her adoptive father’s pest control truck. In the passenger seat in front of her, Victor Barahona fought for his life after being doused in the same chemical stew. He survived.


The twins’ adoptive parents, Jorge and Carmen Barahona, remain in jail, awaiting trial on murder charges that potentially carry the death penalty. On July 25, 2011, an earlier Miami-Dade grand jury released a scathing report on DCF’s failure to protect Nubia. “The testimony we heard will stay with us forever, as a bad dream will sometimes stay, only this was not a dream but a reality too painful to fathom,” grand jurors wrote then.
That report criticized DCF for its “utter failure to have the full picture” of parents accused of wrongdoing, and suggested the agency was beset by “a persistent, insidious bias of trust. Here, these two factors combined to exponentially raise the risk of disaster,” the report concluded. “Murder was the result.”
In its report Tuesday, the new grand jury concluded that DCF is implementing improvements at the the agency’s abuse hotline, among child abuse investigators, and in the use of a tool that helps investigators assess risk.
“There is a marked difference between the practices and procedures child protective investigators employed pre-Barahona and the manner in which they conduct [child protective services] investigations now,” the report says.
Some professionals in the child welfare system expressed skepticism that much had changed, however, and suggested prosecutors might have focused on witnesses sympathetic to DCF. Esther Jacobo, who is chief of staff for State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, had been DCF’s interim secretary until two months ago. She was among the grand jury’s witnesses.
Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Rosa Figarola, who presides over child welfare cases, chairs the county’s Community Based Care Alliance and has been a persistent agency critic, was not asked to testify. “It is arrogant,” she said, “to have a grand jury investigation and not bring in people whom they are concerned might disagree with their point of view. You have to bring everyone involved to the table.”
Child abuse investigations, and the court petitions that sometimes follow, have “improved a little bit” since 2011, Figarola said. “But any attempt to portray the problems that have plagued the child welfare system as fixed should cause us all alarm and concern for the safety and welfare of our children,” she added.
Another judge, Jeri B. Cohen, who oversees the Miami Circuit’s child welfare drug court, said “any self-congratulation is premature.” Though Cohen had testified before the 2011 Nubia grand jury, she was not invited back this year.
Cohen said few of the initiatives grand jurors cited as improvements have been fully implemented, many are applied inconsistently, and virtually all are long overdue. “None of this stuff is working” yet, said Cohen, who also is a member of the child welfare alliance. “The judges are complaining like hell” that the system remains broken.
Though grand jurors commended DCF on the progress made since 2011, they also declared themselves “deeply troubled” by the Herald’s Innocents Lost series, which contained details on the deaths of 477 children — mostly infants, toddlers and children age 5 and below — whose parents had been the subject of at least one report to the state’s abuse hotline within the previous five years.

Gov. Rick Scott signed into law Monday an overhaul of DCF designed to stanch such deaths and create better agency oversight.
Grand jurors seemed particularly troubled by “discrepancies” between the number of child deaths DCF reported to the governor and Legislature, and the number identified by both the Herald and an independent consultant. “In all instances,” the report said, “the numbers given by the Herald, based on its review of DCF’s own records, were higher. Reportedly, numbers tallied by an independent source were also higher than those reported by DCF.”
Indeed, Nubia’s death never entered into an official DCF tally until more than three years after her killing created a firestorm statewide. Nubia’s death was “verified” as resulting from abuse on April 22, 2014 — a week after the first installment of Innocents Lost was published. Her formal death review was dated six days later; it was six pages long.
DISCOVERY
As recently as last month, the Herald discovered administrators in DCF’s Southeast Region — which includes Broward and Palm Beach counties, and which recorded the highest tally of child deaths in recent years — had failed to file required “critical incident reports” for 30 child deaths linked to abuse or neglect. At first, the agency attributed the withheld reports to a “misunderstanding.”
But earlier this month, DCF’s deputy secretary, Pete Digre, completed an internal investigation into the missing records without generating a single record. Carroll, the agency’s administrator, called the withheld reports “an attempt to address insufficiencies in data security.” He denied agency heads were seeking to conceal public records from the Herald.
On Tuesday, state Sen. Eleanor Sobel, a Hollywood Democrat who helped draft the legislation Scott signed the day before, called on the governor to launch an independent investigation into what she has repeatedly called “a cover-up.”
“It appears these were employees directing other employees to conceal child death reports, not simply a system or technical error,” Sobel wrote in a news release. “An independent investigation by a non-DCF related entity is the best way to clear the air and get an unobstructed view.”
“Sweeping child deaths under the rug will only serve to perpetuate a culture of cover-up and corruption; hiding the deaths should never be a solution.”
 http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/06/24/4199002/grand-jury-rips-floridas-dcf-for.html#storylink=cpy