Showing posts with label Orlando. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orlando. Show all posts

Friday, July 14, 2017

Startling Find In Jacksonville's DCF Child Death Investigations

I-TEAM examined 227 death investigations from 8-year span

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Nearly half of the 227 cases of child deaths in Duval County investigated by the Florida Department of Children and Families between 2009 and 2016 involved families already known to DCF investigators, an I-TEAM analysis of data found.
Those in charge of local child protection organizations were unaware the number was that high until shown the analysis by News4Jax.  The startling discovery by the I-TEAM has led to questions about staff experience and oversight within Florida’s child welfare system.

A privatized system

DCF privatization organization fixed
Florida privatized its child welfare system under then-Gov. Jeb Bush. The Department of Children and Families contracts with different lead agencies -- mostly nonprofits -- in different parts of the state, broken down by judicial circuits. The goal of that process is to have smaller organizations handle child welfare, in each individual community.
Family Support Services of North Florida is the lead agency for child welfare in Duval and Nassau Counties.
In Jacksonville, Family Support Services contracts with four other nonprofits to handle case management for children in troubled homes. Those organizations -- Children's Home Society, Daniel, Jewish Family and Community Services and Neighbor to Family -- also do other work beyond case management.
Lee Kaywork has been the CEO of FSS for eight years. The nonprofit annually oversees the cases of about 1,500-2,000 children who are victims of abuse, neglect or abandonment, largely due to domestic violence, substance abuse or mental health issues.  But the I-TEAM learned that Family Support Services doesn’t actually oversee any individual case involving abuse or neglect.
Lynnsey and Lee Kaywork
“I think we’re one of the best in the state,” Kaywork said when asked how child welfare in Jacksonville compares with communities across the state.
Kaywork told the I-TEAM he was confident that his case managers here have enough experience to make critical decisions about the children’s future.
“I'm confident once the child is in care, the safety of the child is being taken care of,” Kaywork said.

Taking a closer look at investigations

The harsh reality uncovered by the I-TEAM is that sometimes those families known to DCF and Family Support Services still end up having children die
Statistics on the DCF’s website show that 48 percent of child deaths the agency investigated in Duval County over the last five years were in families known to the agency. That percentage was higher than the percentages in jurisdictions with large cities, including Orlando, Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach.

Child Deaths in Large Florida Counties

CountyTotal Child DeathsPercentage of deaths in families known to DCF
Duval22748.46%
Orange22247.75%
Miami-Dade27842.09%
Broward27240.44%
Palm Beach20035.00%
Hillsborough27932.26%

Data compiled from DCF statistics, 2009-2016


“I don’t know that for a fact, but I’ll believe you for the moment,” Kaywork responded when asked about the comparison. “I don't know the detail behind the number.” Kaywork added, “I think that, in most cases, those are going to be investigations that never reached us at Family Support Services.”
The I-TEAM discovered that not to be the case.
In 2015, DCF began deploying a new oversight team -- the Critical Incident Rapid Response Team -- to investigate child fatalities in families that are already known to the state system.  One goal of the team was to figure out how to make improvements. A review of reports from the team’s first year found that Duval County had six CIRRT investigations – more than any other county in the state.
A review of the case of a 6-month-old girl found her death to be sleep-related, but investigators still found issues within the case. One finding cited “high turnover and lack of available staff.”  One child protective investigator also stated he felt he “lacked experience to handle complex cases.” 
The report also found “safety plans were not sufficient” to manage dangers.
In another case investigated by the CIRRT, a 3-month-old girl died after co-sleeping with her mother. The family had been investigated by DCF prior to the girl’s death. 
In this case, the report found “investigations lacked a thorough assessment of the family situation,” and that the “region’s workforce was inexperienced at all staffing levels.” The report went on to say that 57 percent of child protective investigators had less than one year of experience, and 80 percent having less than two years of experience.
In three of the six cases from 2015, Family Support Services was involved. FSS delegated out the case management of the families to some of the nonprofits under them.
“That’s an alarming number. I’m not going to make short sight of it,” Kaywork said when pressed. “That is an alarming number.”
The I-TEAM asked Kaywork how often Family Support Services examines its actions to see if a mistake was made in a child’s case.
“I don’t go to sleep at night without thinking of the children we are serving,” Kaywork said. “That’s our job.”
Kaywork acknowledged the system is not perfect.
“It’s a child welfare system. We are at the tail end of a lot of woes of our society,” Kaywork said.
In recent years another societal issue -- opioid addiction -- has had an effect on the child welfare system. 
Kaywork said the bulk of child removals from custody now are tied to opiate use, accounting for the case of 75 to 80 percent of the children taken from their homes. That’s up from 40 percent in the past.
Family Support Services, a fully accredited organization, has been the local lead agency for foster care, adoption, and family services since 2001. Kaywork explained their state-mandated goal is to reunify families, but the I-TEAM found that happens in less than half of their cases.
In 2013 and 2014, more children were adopted out than reunified. In 2015 and 2016 there were fewer adoptions, but still only 35 percent of families were reunified.
Kaywork said it’s a delicate and difficult balance.
“There is nothing more traumatic to a child than being removed from their parent,” Kaywork explained.  “Nothing. They will never recover from it.”
Thursday afternoon DCF responded to the I-TEAM analysis with a statement:

Child safety is the first priority of the Florida Department of Children and Families and our staff and partners are entrusted with a sacred mission to protect the vulnerable and aide family recovery and resiliency. Every case of suspected abuse or neglect called into the Florida Abuse Hotline is carefully evaluated based on statutory criteria to be accepted for investigation. Every child death, regardless of family situation or the community, is a devastating tragedy. DCF takes every child fatality very seriously and is absolutely committed to reducing preventable child deaths."

http://www.news4jax.com/news/investigations/48-of-duval-countys-child-deaths-investigated-by-dcf-from-known-cases 

Monday, May 5, 2014

Did DCF The State Fail These Children?

ORLANDO, Fla. —
9 Investigates combed through 10 years' worth of state records and found a deadly problem with Florida's child care system.
State Department of Children & Families records show 16 children in central Florida died during that time period after the agency created to protect them reunited the children with parents who had previous problems identified by DCF.


WFTV's Tim Barber asked DCF officials what, if anything, can be done to prevent at-risk children from being placed back inside dangerous homes?
But first, Barber visited the gravesite of Tariji Gordon, nestled beneath the shade of a large tree at Restlawn Cemetery in Sanford. The memorial is made up with fake flowers and a tin plate bearing the dates that book end a life cut short: "Born in 2011. Died in 2014."
Sanford Police said Tariji was beaten to death by her mother, Rachel Fryer, a parent with a lengthy history with DCF and other child welfare organizations.
Just three months before her death, Tariji was safe and happy in a foster home, so 9 Investigates asked DCF Regional Director Bill D’Aiuto how things could go so wrong?
"If Tariji Gordon never went back to Rachel Fryer, would she be dead today?" Barber asked.
"You know, that's, that's a, you know, tough question, you know, and to speculate on that, ah, you know, certainly looking back, possibly," D’Aiuto responded.
The 2-year old was placed with a loving foster mother after investigators determined Fryer accidentally killed Tariji's twin, Tavontae Gordon, in 2011.
In November, however, the state decided the 32-year-old mother of eight was ready to get her kids back.
But Barber discovered the decision to return Tariji to a deadly home environment was not the only one DCF, other child-care agencies and the courts have made through the years.
After sifting through 10 years of records, Barber found 15 other central Florida children died after they were returned to their parents.
Some were accidents, but others like the deaths of Ja’Quez Baker in Marion, Aurelia Juarez in Seminole, and the four Johnson children -- Joel, Jazlyn, Jaxs and Pebbles -- in Brevard were murders.
Since 2008, hundreds of other children died under DCF’s watch across Florida.
Gov. Rick Scott recently pushed to give DCF more than $30 million in new funding, which will likely provide the central Florida area with 145 new investigators, checking up on child abuse and neglect cases.
“That will allow us to bring our caseloads down and allow investigators to spend more time with the families,” D’Aiuto said.
Despite clear warning signs indicating that Fryer could not handle the stress of parenthood, D'Aiuto said no one who worked on Fryer's case has been disciplined in the aftermath of Tariji’s death.
D’Aiuto places blame elsewhere.The death of Tavontae Gordon, Tariji's twin brother, was originally ruled an accident, but since Tariji's death, the Sanford Police Department has reopened that case.
“Who failed or what failed Tariji Gordon?” Barber asked him.
“Rachel Fryer failed Tariji Gordon,” D’Aiuto said.

http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/9-investigates-did-dcf-fail-these-children/nfpqr/

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

OC Public Schools, Sheriff’s Office, DCF Knew Of Teacher’s Alleged Misconduct

 

ORLANDO, Fla. —Officials from Orange County Public Schools, the Department of Children and Families and the Orange County Sheriff’s Office knew of Jennifer Fichter’s alleged misconduct, but state education officials were not notified, allowing Fichter to teach in Polk County.
Jennifer Fichter's
Fichter was arrested last week after she admitted to a sexual relationship with a child in Polk County. Fichter allegedly admitted that she became pregnant with the child’s baby, but had an abortion, officials said. She was arrested at her home and charged with six counts of unlawful sexual activity with a minor. Fichter is an English teacher at Central Florida Aerospace Academy.
Prior to her alleged romance with the Polk County student, Fichter taught language arts at Robinswood Middle School in Orange County from August 2007 until Dec. 19, 2008. Orange County Public School officials started investigating Fichter after a teacher filed a complaint accusing her of discussing her feelings for an eighth-grade male student and texting the student.
According to a Sheriff’s Office report, deputies interviewed the eighth-grade student who said Fichter had texted the student about her feelings about 40-50 times. School officials notified DCF officials, according to the Sheriff’s Office report.
Fitcher reportedly told that teacher “she felt as though the student was her boyfriend and that he made her melt.”
Video: Polk teacher who had sex with student accused of misconduct in Orange County
According to the report, both the teacher who filed the complaint and the eighth-grade boy told school investigators Fichter “texted a student a message that said that she ‘was going to smash’ the student,” and that “Fichter had asked a student if he wanted to be her baby.”
Public Schools Spokeswoman Kathy Marsh said Monday that the county “did not report the case regarding Fichter to the state Department of Education.”
Since the county did not inform state officials, Fichter was able to get a teaching job in Polk County, Florida Department of Education officials said last week.
Following the allegations made against Fichter, public school officials in Orange County told all employees that “No employee of the Orange County Public Schools should engage in any texting or other social media with any OCPS student,” unless the student is the employee’s child or the information is related to a class, athletic or extracurricular activity, Marsh said.
Polk County school officials said last week that they expect Fichter to be fired this week.

Thursday, February 27, 2014

DCF Worker Accused Of Falsifying Well-Being Report

ORLANDO, Fla. —

Posted: 3:12 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2014
Investigators said a 38-year-old woman was supposed to be checking up on some of the most vulnerable victims of child abuse and neglect but instead lied in her paperwork to avoid being fired.
Margaret McCalman
Margaret McCalman told investigators at the Department of Children and Families she was exhausted from her case load and typed up a false home visit in her computer to avoid missing a required visit.
McCalman and others in her position are required to go out and investigate allegations of child abuse and neglect, authorities said.
According to the arrest warrant, McCalman documented a visit in May 2012 to a home with at least two children.
In the report, it was written that the children were seen without abuse and that the house was cluttered but no major hazards were seen.
The catch, according to payroll data, is that McCalman wasn’t working that day.
Channel 9′s Karla Ray went to McCalman’s home on Wednesday to ask why she would put children’s lives at risk by making up information about their well-being, but no one came to the door.
McCalman quit her job at DCF month after her internal investigation started.

“We absolutely do not tolerate the falsification of child protective records,” said a DCF spokeswoman. “We have a zero tolerance for it.”
If convicted, McCalman could face prison time.
http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/dcf-worker-accused-falsifying-well-being-report/ndhJx/

Friday, November 29, 2013

Former DCF Worker Faces Charges Of Falsifying Records




Mable Peters mug
ORLANDO, Fla. —A former Department of Children and Families employee has been arrested and accused of falsifying records.
According to DCF officials, Mable Peters, 45, was arrested on Oct. 30 based on an investigation in 2010. She is accused of falsifying records about visits to multiple children.
Officials said none of the falsified records resulted in injuries to children.
Investigators said Peters reported making a visit on a night of bad weather, and a supervisor followed up with the family involved and learned Peters was never there.
Peters admitted to authorities with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement that she lied. She was transferred to desk duty.
Peters resigned when she was told she would be fired.

Read more: http://www.wesh.com/news/central-florida/orange-county/former-dcf-worker-faces-charges-of-falsifying-records/-/12978032/23116232/-/cvhjyfz/-/index.html#ixzz2m30SVZCP

Thursday, October 27, 2011

And This Is Just One Reason The System Is Corrupt!

Matthew Lappin

Matthew Lappin is just one reason the system is corrupt. How many more are out there? In light of what has happened in the last few weeks first with Nubia and her brother and with the two children and their mother one wonders when it will all stop! Added to that was the case worker who was arrested in Orlando for drugs and now this. The system is beyond broken. It is corrupt – greedy and abusive. It is past time to shut it down!

A Department of Children and Families employee was arrested by the Leon County Sheriff’s Office on Wednesday on two charges of lewd and lascivious molestation against a child, LCSO spokesman Sgt. James McQuaig said Sunday.
Matthew Lappin, 29, was arrested on charges of fondling/molesting a child younger than 12 years of age, McQuaig said.




If convicted, Lappin could face life in prison.
DCF Communications Director Joe Follick said Lappin worked as an abuse registry counselor. His job was to field calls on the department’s abuse hotline, take information from the callers and dispatch that information to the proper authorities. Follick said Lappin did not come in physical contact with children on his job.
McQuaig said LCSO received the case on Feb. 25 through a report from DCF, informing LCSO of allegations that a child was molested twice, once on April 1 and once on Oct. 1.
“The system in place worked,” McQuaig said. “When DCF became aware of a criminal allegation, they did what they were supposed to do and contacted the appropriate law-enforcement authority.”
Follick said Sunday the department had become aware of the allegations against Lappin on Feb. 25, contacted LCSO and placed Lappin on paid administrative leave. On the day of Lappin’s arrest, Follick said DCF sent Lappin a letter stating the department’s intentions of firing him. He has 10 days from the receipt of the letter to contest the firing.
“On the rare occasion when a department employee allegedly commits a crime, we react quickly to remove that person from any interaction with families during an investigation,” Follick said.
Lappin currently is being held in Leon County Jail. Bail has been set at $25,000.


http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20110320/BREAKINGNEWS/110320006/DCF-employee-arrested-on-child-molestation-charges
Read more: DCF employee arrested on child molestation charges | tallahassee.com | Tallahassee Democrat http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20110320/BREAKINGNEWS/110320006/DCF-employee-arrested-on-child-molestation-charges#ixzz1HBq1mScG

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

If DCF Florida Hadn't Taken Boy Zachary Johnson, He Might Still Be Alive



 Family: If DCF Hadn't Taken Boy, He Might Still Be Alive



  A Polk County deputy and her husband are questioning why the Florida Department of Children and Families took 17-month-old Zachary Johnson and his 2-year-old brother from their custody and placed them with an aunt and uncle.
That decision may have proved fatal.


Family: If DCF Hadn't Taken Boy, He Might Still Be Alive


The children's uncle, Matthew Wyrosdick, 32, is charged with aggravated manslaughter after Zachary died Friday from injuries consistent with shaken baby syndrome, according to Lakeland police.
He is being held without bail at the Polk County Jail.



 

 Linda Page and her husband, Tom, who are the children's great-aunt and great-uncle, had custody of the boys briefly last summer when their parents, Eugene and Clarissa Johnson, were arrested on multiple charges ranging from grand theft to credit card fraud.
The state agency placed the boys at the Pages' four-bedroom home in Winter Haven, and later moved them to the one-bedroom home of Wyrosdick and his wife, Mysti,in Lakeland, Linda Page said.
"We were shocked," Page said, adding that she and her husband provided for the boys even after DCF moved them.
"For the past year, we provided diapers, food and formula for the kids. We saw the kids regularly," Page said.
When asked if she believed Zachary would still be alive had the children remained in her home, Linda Page said, "I can tell you there wouldn't be a shaken baby situation."
Elizabeth Arenas, a DCF spokeswoman in Orlando, said the agency is conducting an internal review of the matter.
"There are still a lot of unanswered questions," Arenas said.
In general, anyone taking custody of the children would have had to pass a screening process, including a home inspection, a criminal background check and reference checks, Arenas said.
Wyrosdick is accused of shaking the child so hard his head snapped back and forth after the boy wouldn't sit at a child-size picnic table.
Police said after the shaking, Wyrosdick put Zachary back on the seat, but the boy fell and hit his head on the corner of a coffee table. He shook the boy again and marched him to a door, where the boy's head struck a stair railing twice. Police said he also dropped Zachary on the floor three times.
The Johnsons, Zachary's parents, told a reporter Sunday that the children were placed with the Wyrosdicks because they were the only relatives who passed a DCF background check.
Carrie Hoeppner, another DCF spokeswoman, said today that she could not confirm that because of the ongoing review.
The Johnsons had been working with the state agency to regain custody of the boys. Zachary's 2-year-old brother, Austin, is back with his parents, Hoeppner has said.

Comment

  1. +0-0
    Posted by Desmo on March 18, 2009 - 3:20 p.m.
    DCF is the biggest waste. I called them about 15 years ago on a neighbor who used his one year old as a punching bag routinely. They came out, checked out everything and told me I was a liar and said I must have a problem with the people. I told the woman that came out "yeah, I have a problem with a grown man that beats a 1 year old girl all night long". I ended up calling the Sheriff's office the next time and they told me DCF is a waste of tax payers money, that they do nothing and to never call them, call the law enforcement. One week after the sheriffs were called, the family moved out and I still to this day wonder what ever happened to that little girl.
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  2. +0-0
    Posted by dschrist on March 18, 2009 - 3:35 p.m.
    Florida's DCF child welfare system is widely known as the worst in the country. They can't even tell you where some of the children in foster care ARE right now let alone keep them alive. Its pathetic.
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  3. +0-0
    Posted by Desmo on March 18, 2009 - 3:36 p.m.
    The people complaining aren't the parents, they are the people who cared for the two brothers and had them taken from them and given to the white trash uncle for no reason.
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  4. +0-0
    Posted by OneWhoKnowsBetter on March 18, 2009 - 3:45 p.m.
    The child was placed with an uncle & aunt and they were the ONLY family members that passed a background check? Doesn't the article say that the sheriff's deputy and her husband are family? So did the sheriff's deputy not pass the background check...and if not, WTF?
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  5. +0-0
    Posted by girlygirl22 on March 18, 2009 - 3:48 p.m.
    the kids are always left to "defend" themselfs when DCF is involved. Trust me I know. As a mother myself I hope this SOB gets what is coming to him.
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  6. +0-0
    Posted by northofcuba on March 18, 2009 - 4:16 p.m.
    White trash, what else can you say. They need to have their plumbing fixed.
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  7. +0-0
    Posted by KENNYFAN1 on March 18, 2009 - 4:26 p.m.
    I dont comment much but DCF is a joke. Maybe in this circumstance they should have questioned the parenting skills of the biological parents...They DO NOT do background checks!!! If that was the case I would have gotten my niece and nephew instead of them being put in foster care for 2 weeks and now they are in another state. DCF, HKI all of them are a joke. I am sure this uncle had a past history?????? Are you seriously telling me that this piece of redneck trash never did anything violent and then all of sudden starts slapping kids around? DCF wake up!!!!! This is not the first time this has happened.
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