Unbiased Reporting

What I post on this Blog does not mean I agree with the articles or disagree. I call it Unbiased Reporting!

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

Friday, June 4, 2010

Judge Slams Coercive Tactics Case: Loudermilk Family v. Administration for Children, Youth and Families

Judge Slams Coercive Tactics
Case: Loudermilk Family v. Administration for Children, Youth and Families
Filed: March 3, 2006
by Jim Mason

A federal court in Arizona has ruled that an unsupported threat to place children in custody, made to coerce cooperation with a social services investigation, violates the constitutional guarantee of family privacy and integrity.

As detailed in the March/April 2007 Court Report, social workers and sheriff’s deputies came to the home of Home School Legal Defense Association members John and Tiffany Loudermilk, demanding entry based on a six-week-old anonymous tip that the newly constructed home was unsafe for children. The Loudermilks declined consent, as was their right under the Fourth Amendment. After an escalating confrontation at the front door that lasted 40 minutes, the social workers, backed by no fewer than four deputies, threatened to take the Loudermilks’ children into custody and place them in foster care if the Loudermilks continued to deny them entry into their home. An assistant attorney general repeated this threat to HSLDA Attorney Thomas Schmidt, who was assisting the Loudermilks by phone during the confrontation.

Under this duress, Mr. and Mrs. Loudermilk allowed the social workers and sheriff’s deputies inside. Within five minutes, the social workers determined that the anonymous tip was false and left.

HSLDA filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of the Loudermilk family, alleging that the search violated the Fourth Amendment and that the unjustified threat to remove the children was a separate constitutional violation of the family’s Fourteenth Amendment right to privacy and family integrity. The social workers and assistant attorney general moved to dismiss the claims, arguing that neither the search nor the threat to remove the children violated the Loudermilks’ constitutional rights.

On September 27, 2007, the judge ruled in the Loudermilks’ favor, stating: “Defendants persisted in their threats to remove the children if Plaintiff Parents did not consent to the search, stating that [they] could arrest or handcuff the Parents in front of the children. Based on the allegations set forth in the Amended Complaint, viewed in Plaintiff’s favor, no reasonable official would have believed that his or her conduct was authorized by state or constitutional law.” With regard to the assistant attorney general, the court ruled that “Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that [the attorney] . . . by ‘threat’ exerted ‘coercive pressure’ on them to allow the search of their home so that their children would not be removed.”

The judge’s ruling allows the case to proceed to trial, and makes it clear that threatening to remove children to gain a parent’s cooperation is unconstitutional. HSLDA hopes that the ruling will change this common tactic used by investigative caseworkers across the country.

http://www.hslda.org/CourtReport/V24N1/V24N111.asp

Judge Upholds Family’s Right to Day in Court

Arizona


April 1, 2010
Judge Upholds Family’s Right to Day in Court
In a federal lawsuit filed March 3, 2006, and reported earlier in the Home School Court Report, HSLDA sued two child protective service workers who showed up at the Loudermilk family’s door, accompanied by numerous sheriff’s deputies, two months after an anonymous tipster had reported the family.

After winning the first round almost three years ago, when the judge ruled in the family’s favor in refusing to dismiss the case, we have been fighting the state’s attempt to have the investigators declared immune from litigation. The state argued that the family had voluntarily allowed the investigators into the home—an assertion that ignores the fact the social worker had said the Loudermilk children would be removed for 72 hours if the parents did not permit entry!

On March 31, 2010, the judge denied the state’s motion for summary judgment, stating that “The disputed questions of fact on these [consent] issues … preclude summary judgment.” He ruled that a jury must determine whether the Loudermilks were coerced by the CPS investigators and sheriff’s deputies.

“We are grateful that the judge is taking this matter seriously and making sure that a family’s right to be together is protected,” said Darren Jones, staff attorney with HSLDA. “The Loudermilks are doing a service to all families by their willingness to stand up against unjustified state intervention, not just at the initial contact, but for the four years this case has been going on.”

http://www.hslda.org/hs/state/az/201004010.asp

Intl Planned Parenthood Report: 140M Income, More United Nations Money

Intl Planned Parenthood Report: 140M Income, More United Nations Money
by Samantha Singson
June 3, 2010

LifeNews.com Note: Samantha Singson writes for the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute. This article originally appeared in the pro-life group's Friday Fax publication and is used with permission.



New York, NY (LifeNews.com/CFAM) -- The abortion giant, the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), has just released its latest financial statement. The report boasts of increased spending on youth programs and a significant increase in funding from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), with an overall 20% boost in income as compared to 2008.

In 2009, IPPF raked in a staggering $140 million, the bulk of which came from government grants. Sweden, the United Kingdom and Japan top the organization's list of government donors, accounting for 40% of grant money received.

Grants from foundations and multilateral organizations also grew from the previous year. UNFPA, while it is not one of the organization's largest donors, nearly doubled its contribution to IPPF last year from $783,000 to $1.36 million. The World Health Organization, apparently a new IPPF donor, contributed $15,000 in 2009.

IPPF spent a significant portion of its income on an increased focused on youth, to the tune of $9.9 million dollars more than the previous year. According to the report, a central theme of IPPF’s mission is the "provision of high quality and accessible youth friendly sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services."

As part of their strategic framework, the IPPF report lists the five priority areas of focus as “Adolescents/Young People, HIV/AIDS, Abortion, Access, and Advocacy.” The term adolescent commonly refers to a child between ages 10 and 14. As part of their vision, IPPF is working to “develop a guide for young people to implement the IPPF Declaration of Sexual Rights,” and boasts that “IPPF youth programs now more strongly promote sexual rights in all their strategies, activities and services for and by young people.”

IPPF will also launch a new global initiative entitled "Girls Decide; stand up for sex and pregnancy." Aimed at young women, this initiative will focus on "preventing unintended teenage pregnancy, and providing safe abortion and safe motherhood services."

IPPF reported increased activity across the board. According to the latest figures, while spending on "abortion activity" was down almost $5 million last year, IPPF and its member associations reported providing 1.1 million "abortion-related services," almost five times greater than in 2005. IPPF also doubled the number of "contraceptive services" in the same time period.

The organization will next take aim at the UN in September at the high level review on the Millennium Development Goals where it will continue to push the controversial target on "universal access to reproductive health by 2015" and promoting young people’s, "and especially girls’ and young women’s, sexual and reproductive health rights; and increasing recognition and action around sexual rights."

As reported previously by the Friday Fax, IPPF has been partnering with youth organizations like the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts and the Young Women’s Christian Association to help to promote family planning and “adolescent reproductive health.”

IPPF recently hosted the 4th Africa Conference on Sexual Health and Rights, whose plenary speakers included several high-level UN agency officials.

http://www.lifenews.com/int1566.html

CNN Hides Poll Showing Strong Opposition to Pro-Abortion Health Care Law

CNN Hides Poll Showing Strong Opposition to Pro-Abortion Health Care Law
by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
June 3, 2010



Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- CNN is coming under fire for holding back the results of a poll it conducted weeks ago showing strong opposition to the pro-abortion health care law President Barack Obama signed. Not only does the poll show opposition, but had CNN polled likely voters opposition would have been higher.

The survey of over 1,000 adults nationally was conducted two weeks ago, but CNN withheld the health care results until Wednesday.

It released the results of other questions a week ago and appeared to hold the information so it could be released with questions showing more positive polling numbers for Obama, whose approval ratings are at the bottom of the barrel.

According to CNN's poll just 43 percent of Americans are in favor of the health care scheme Obama signed that includes massive abortion funding and rationing concerns. A much higher 56 percent of Americans oppose it, yielding a -13 percent rating.

Ed Morrissey, a conservative writer at HotAir, said a big "question is why CNN chose to hold off the release of this question for almost two weeks."

"A week ago, the news network released data on the immigration law from the same survey. The older the data, the less relevant it is," he explained. "CNN appears to have wanted to pair it with results that showed support for the Obama administration — in this case, on financial regulation reform."

Morrissey notices CNN doesn't mention the health care results until the eighth paragraph of its release of the polling data.

"CNN still hasn't released the entire survey, showing the sampling demographics and especially the partisan split in the sample. After almost two weeks, one has to wonder why," he writes.

Meanwhile, Morrissey also complains that CNN chose to survey adults in general -- instead of registered or likely voters, which would have provided better results about the feel of the American electorate heading into the November elections.

"A poll of adults is the least predictive sample for elections. Polling likely voters gives politicians a much more predictive look at voting behavior than registered voters, and a general adult population sample is relatively worthless when other pollsters provide the more predictive sampling techniques," the conservative writer said.

As such, Morrissey says Obama and his pro-abortion allies should be worried because the 56-43 percent disapproval of pro-abortion health care is likely worse when it comes to voters who will show up in November.

"In fact, general-population polls tend to skew too far toward liberal policies and politicians — so this isn't good news at all for Obama and his health-care plan supporters," he concluded.

http://www.lifenews.com/nat6393.html

UN Asks Researchers to Hide Maternal Mortality Numbers Discounting Abortion

UN Asks Researchers to Hide Maternal Mortality Numbers Discounting Abortion
by Susan Yoshihara
June 3, 2010

LifeNews.com Note: Susan Yoshihara, Ph.D. writes for the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute. This article originally appeared in the pro-life group's Friday Fax publication and is used with permission.



New York, NY (LifeNews.com/CFAM) -- At a meeting on maternal and child health research in Washington last week, United Nations (UN) staff and abortion advocates told scientists they should “harmonize” their findings or discuss them “in a locked room” so that the press could not report maternal death numbers that conflicted with the ones they use to lobby policy makers and major international donors.

Ann Starrs, co-founder and president of the abortion advocacy organization Family Care International (FCI), told a roomful of scientists to “lock all the academics in a black box and have them come out with a consensus set of numbers” or “at least hide that there is disagreement” and “infighting.” FCI is the founder of Women Deliver, which is hosting a massive UN-backed reproductive rights fundraising conference in Washington next week.

The comments were made at a symposium hosted by the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and the British medical journal, The Lancet.

The journal recently published an IHME study, which refuted the UN-sanctioned but highly controversial figure of 500,000 annual maternal deaths, finding the number to have declined to 342,900 including 60,000 deaths from HIV/AIDS.

Abortion advocates and some UN staff have been using the higher figure for two decades to promote a version of maternal and child health policy that includes abortion.

Tessa Wardlow, Chief of Statistics and Monitoring at UNICEF, shared Starrs’ concerns, saying that there is a “system in place for harmonizing estimates for child mortality and I would invite the IHME to participate in that process and contribute to the methodological dialogue.”

Dr. Richard Horton, editor of The Lancet, pushed back saying researchers should not come to a “consensus” or “harmonize” but rather have a “scientific summary view of what the totality of available evidence should be.” He argued that this should not be centered at the UN, but housed “independently within the scientific community.” Horton responded to Starr’s objection by saying, “Unless we subject numbers to that peer-review process, I think we are accepting second-class data, and that applies wherever the numbers come from.”

When he published the IHME study, Horton told the press that he withstood significant pressure from activists not to release it until after major global funding conferences concluded this year, such as the G8 summit, UN General Assembly, and next week’s Women Deliver conference.

Highlighting the tension in the room between the researchers’ desire for openness and activists call for secrecy, Horton said, “For God’s sake, your country, the United States, was founded on the press! One of the best documents in the history of humankind is the Federalist Papers; if it wasn't for the press, we wouldn't have a United States! So learn to love the press.”

The confrontation between the maternal health advocates and researchers may be behind the decision by Women Deliver conference organizers to re-write their schedule to include Dr. Horton in the agenda for next week’s conference.

http://www.lifenews.com/int1565.html

Study Presented on Autism and Vaccines Using Cells From Babies From Abortion

Study Presented on Autism and Vaccines Using Cells From Babies From Abortion
by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
June 3, 2010



Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- A controversial study into the possible link between the use of cells form babies victimized by abortions in vaccines and an increase in autism rates was presented late last month to the International Meeting for Autism Research in Philadelphia.

Dr. Theresa Deisher, the founder and lead scientist of the Sound Choice Pharmaceutical Institute (SCPI), which conducted the study, presented the paper touching on the apparent link found in childhood immunizations with Autism and Austim Spectrum Disorder.

The study, which Deisher said was "met with both shock and gratitude," focused on "improper integration of the residual DNA as a possible contributor to autism, particularly in genetically susceptible infants."

"It is known from gene therapy studies that injected naked DNA can be transported to the brain, that improperly integrated therapeutic DNA has caused cancer in young children, and that shorter DNA fragments have a higher probability of entering the nucleus," Deisher said.

Deisher, along with physicist Marissa LaMadrid, PhD, authored the paper investigating whether improper insertion of DNA into the vaccine recipient cells can cause autism.

"Changepoint analysis of autism disorder demonstrates a temporal correlation with events associated with human DNA residuals in vaccines. The levels of residual DNA are well over FDA-recommended limits", stated Dr. Deisher.

While research has been conducted in the past on a possible link between thimerosal and autism, no one has ever looked at the contaminating DNA, something requested for years by Children of God for Life, a pro-life watchdog focused on the use of aborted fetal material in vaccines, medicines and other consumer products.

"Until the advent of AVM Biotechnology and their non-profit arm SCPI we had little hope that anyone would invest the time and money to do this study", stated Children of God for Life's founder, Debi Vinnedge.

A separate study published by the Environmental Protection Agency in February in the publication Environmental Science & Technology, confirms 1988 as a “change point” in the rise of Autism Disorder rate.

"Although the debate about the nature of increasing autism continues, the potential for this increase to be real and involve exogenous environmental stressors exists," the study says.

The 1988 date is significant because SCPI indicates that's when the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices added a second dose of the MMR vaccine, containing fetal cells from aborted babies, to its recommendations.

The study found two other change point dates: 1981, two years after MMRII was approved in the United States with fetal cells, and 1995, when SCPI says the chickenpox vaccine using aborted cells was approved.

Two pro-life advocates seized on that study and said it shows a correlation between the use of cells from babies in abortions in vaccines and an increase in autism rates.

But the study's author, Mike McDonald, and others, questioned that claim.

McDonald responded to an email from the Opposing Views web site, and said the claims "incorrectly represent, and far overreach, our study findings."

And Rev. Nicanor Pier Giorgio Austriaco, an Assistant Professor of Biology at Providence College, told LifeNews.com the study "suggests a link between exogenous environmental stressors and autism" but "does not say that this stressor was the vaccine."

http://www.lifenews.com/nat6392.html

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Federal Judge Orders Atlanta Child Welfare System to Hand Over Documents on Foster Care Alternatives

25 MAY 2010 / POSTED BY CR

Children’s Rights is one step closer to shedding light on concerns that the Georgia Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS) may be misusing programs designed to support families in an attempt to artificially suppress child abuse and neglect investigations and reduce the number of children in its custody.
We filed papers in federal court two months ago seeking documents related to the state child welfare agency’s use of strategies aimed at avoiding child abuse and neglect investigations in certain cases and allowing parents to voluntarily place children with relatives or family friends while accessing community services or being investigated for abuse or neglect.
Citing multiple investigations conducted by the Georgia Office of the Child Advocate (OCA) over the last three years, we presented evidence that the state has been using these strategies inappropriately — and argued that if these allegations are true, DFCS’s actions are not only violating children’s constitutional rights and a longstanding federal court order secured by Children’s Rights to reform the Atlanta child welfare system, but also putting a great many kids at risk of serious harm.
Last Friday, U.S. District Court Judge Marvin H. Shoob agreed that “the OCA reports raise at least the possibility that diversion, safety resources, and temporary guardianships are being used in Fulton and DeKalb Counties to keep children out of foster care inappropriately.”
His decision (PDF) requires state officials to provide Children’s Rights with all policies, practices, and procedures related to diversion, safety plans, and temporary guardianships in Fulton and DeKalb counties — along with a list of all children who accessed these services in 2009 — within 10 days. Once the documents have been turned over, Children’s Rights can then select cases to be reviewed in depth to determine whether the child welfare agency is, in fact, putting children in danger.
Children’s Rights believes strongly that children should be able to remain with their families whenever it is safe and possible to do so. However, programs that “divert” child abuse reports must include the intensive services and oversight needed to help these families stay together and ensure that children are safe. Otherwise, these programs can be misused as a means to save state funds, deny families vital services and supports, and potentially keep vulnerable children in unsafe homes and at risk of being harmed again.
We remain committed to ensuring that children and families in Atlanta — and across the United States — are not being inappropriately shuffled away from the supports and services they need.

http://www.childrensrights.org/reform-campaigns/legal-cases//georgia-kenny-a-v-perdue/federal-judge-orders-atlanta-child-welfare-system-to-hand-over-documents-on-foster-care-alternatives/