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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

Thursday, March 24, 2011

DCF Tries to Rip Children Away from Grandfather Because He's Too Old

DCF Tries to Rip Children Away from Grandfather Because He's Too Old - Miami News - Riptide 2.0

​Cornelius Miller lost his 19-year-old daughter Corneisha a year ago after a brutal murder. Now, he may lose his two young grandsons to the Department of Children and Families. Authorities feel that 62-year-old Miller is too old and sick to care for three-year-old Jemarcus and 16-month-old Rodgerick, and instead want to put the children up for adoption.

Miller has helped raise the children since they were born, and they've always lived in his house. The children's mother was murdered by their father on March 18, 2010. The young children witnessed the killing. To say these kids have faced more than a lifetime of tragedy in their short existence is an understatement. Now the state wants to rip them from the only home they've ever known.

The state says that because of Miller's age and diabetes he's not a proper guardian. WSVN spoke to Miller. He plans to fight the decision, and made an impassioned plea to the already embroiled DCF.

"I love these kids," Miller told the station. "I loved my daughter, too. She was just taken away from me so early. She had so much potential. She would have fought for her kids herself. She's not here, and I have to do it. I do it because I love her, and I want them, and I'm gonna fight for them. If I have to take it to the Supreme Court, if I can do that, I will do that, anything."

"These decisions are not made by one person, but a team of people, including judges, guardian ad litems, case managers and others," read a DCF statement. "We are all tasked with making sure the best interest of the children are protected."

Miller will go to court in April to fight the decision, and Tampa attorney Melissa Cordon tells MyFoxTampaBay he has a good chance: "He does not have a criminal record, and he has been the caretaker of these children from birth. My personal opinion is that children should be placed with family members."

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