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Isabella Brooke Knightly and Austin Gamez-Knightly

Isabella Brooke Knightly and Austin Gamez-Knightly
In Memory of my Loving Husband, William F. Knightly Jr. Murdered by ILLEGAL Palliative Care at a Nashua, NH Hospital

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Nun accused of kidnapping was a guardian ad litem

Nun accused of kidnapping was a guardian ad litem

Similar stories:•Baby returned after police say nun kidnapped her
Baby returned after police say nun kidnapped herSister Mary had taken an interest in the girl before she was born, befriending her pregnant mother, driving her to doctor appointments and the grocery store.
Jose Ochoa Avalos and Adai Lopez Vasquez left Mexico for sleepy central Florida town of Eustis, with few friends and speaking little English. The nun's kindness seemed a godsend as they transition to life in a new country. But once the baby was born, Sister Mary's helping hand turned into a controlling grip as she threatened to call immigration officials if they didn't let her keep baby Maria. She once offered them $2,000 for the girl, authorities said. Last fall, she took the baby anyway.
On Tuesday, the couple held a red-faced crying Maria, now 2, for the first time in six months. Sister Mary, also known as Laura Caballero, was arrested in Miami, charged with taking the girl to Argentina to start a new life.

•Mom starved daughter to exorcise demons
Mom starved daughter to exorcise demonsKimberly McZinc, age 4, starved to death in a mobile home on a dirt road here in the Florida Panhandle. The refrigerator was stocked with food. Four other children in the home were plump and beloved.
Kimberly's mother, in the grip of twisted fundamentalism, is a college graduate with a masters in public administration. She believed her spunky little girl was possessed by demons.
To exorcise the evil, she denied Kimberly food and made the weakened child run "with Jesus," her tightly braided pigtails flying behind her.

•How a foster care tragedy led to reform
How a foster care tragedy led to reformFlorida child welfare administrators had seen children in their care get raped, tortured, strangled, starved. They had seen one plunged head-first into a toilet as punishment for a potty-training accident.
But never before Rilya Wilson had a foster child simply vanished.
Cute, pig-tailed and with a name -- Remember I Love You Always -- that belied the horrors of her childhood, Rilya's story led the scandal-rich cable news for weeks.

•Missing baby found in box under sitter's bed
Missing baby found in box under sitter's bedInvestigators spent five days searching dense vines and marshes for a missing infant, only to find her lying quietly in a two-by-three-foot cedar box that had been shoved under her baby sitter's bed.
Clothing was packed around it to muffle any sounds, and baking powder was placed inside to mask the stench of dirty diapers.
Authorities said the baby's mother, Chrystina Lynn Mercer, gave the infant to baby sitter Susan Elizabeth Baker early Saturday, then reported her missing about 10 hours later.

•Guardian Ad Litem gives a voice to abused
Guardian Ad Litem gives a voice to abusedSurrounded by her three grandchildren, Juanita Martinez named all the ways Andi Steinacker has helped her family: Uniforms for the kids. Transportation to and from court. Someone to call.
And, with Steinacker's guidance, Martinez was able to officially adopt her grandchildren in 2006 after their mother died.
``She's always there for me,'' said Martinez, 60, of Miami. Steinacker is no guardian angel but a Guardian Ad Litem, or GAL -- volunteers who speak up for abused and neglected children in court. They visit with the children they represent and make recommendations on their behalf.
By KELLI KENNEDY
Associated Press Writer
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- A nun charged with taking a 2-year-old girl from her parents and fleeing to another country was also a guardian ad litem for the state, officials said Thursday.

Sister Mary, or Laura Caballero, has been a guardian ad litem since 2002, working with 19 cases, said Marcia Hilty, a spokeswoman for the Florida statewide guardian ad litem office. Guardian ad litems are appointed by the court to neutrally represent a child's interests.

She could not confirm whether Caballero was a guardian for Maria Lopez Vazquez, the child she is accused of taking.

Hilty says Caballero was in good standing and completed all requirements for the program, including a criminal background check, interview, references and 30 hours of training. Caballero was removed from the program after her arrest at a Miami airport in January.

"We are shocked and saddened by the events," Hilty told The Associated Press.

Caballero was charged with false imprisonment after taking the baby last year from her parents and fleeing to Argentina with a handyman from the church. The family was reunited in Orlando on Tuesday, six months after the girl was taken.

Authorities said Sister Mary was controlling and threatened to turn her parents into immigration officials if they did not give her the child. Her parents are illegal immigrants. At one point, detectives said she offered the parents $2,000 for the girl.

Caballero said she is a nun at St. Filumena in central Florida. It is not a Roman Catholic church affiliated with the Orlando Diocese or the Vatican, nor are its clergy and nuns.

No one answered the phone at Caballero's on Thursday.

The Department of Children and Families investigated the family last May after receiving a call that the child might be in danger, but the case was closed with no findings of abuse. The family later moved to South Carolina, yet Sister Mary continued to contact the child investigator, insisting that Maria was "her child" and her parents didn't take care of her, according to an arrest report.

Sister Mary told the investigator she hired a private eye to find the family and later informed the investigator she had Maria and that her parents had given her custody, according to the arrest report.

It's unclear why the case wasn't investigated until the family called the police months later.

DCF says the agency was not informed of any change in custody. They closed the case finding the girl was safe with her parents.

"The next official communication that we received regarding this child was a call to help the parents this week," DCF spokeswoman Carrie Hoeppner said.


http://www.miamiherald.com/news/florida/AP/story/1463555.html

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