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

Monday, June 6, 2011

Police: Man shoots, kills the mother of his children during custody swap

Police: Man shoots, kills the mother of his children during custody swap - Atlanta Crime | Examiner.com

A man was arrested Sunday after police said he shot the mother of his two children four times during a custody swap, then drove all three to his father’s house in Cumming.

Continue reading on Examiner.com Police:

Sunday, June 5, 2011

It Can Happen To You - Baby LK Report For June 5th 2011

Foster Mom's License Revoked

Foster Mom's License Revoked - :: Cincinnati news story :: LOCAL 12 WKRC-TV in Cincinnati



A seven month old girl dies in foster care.The girl's foster mother is getting her license revoked.

Lighthouse Youth Services officials asked state officials to de-certify the woman. But this investigation is far from over.

"The children services department has substantiated child abuse."

Speaking of Immigrant Right's Terminated Illegally:Austin Knightly's Immigrant Father's Right's Terminated Illegally Also!

Austin Ricardo Gamez-Knightly was born on January 25th, 2000 in Nashua, NH. His father, Ricardo Arturo Gamez, was an illegal immigrant from Honduras, living and working in Nashua for many year's.
Austin was only a couple of month's old when his father was arrested and sent to jail for giving a false name and then deported back to Honduras. Austin didn't see his father after he was deported. His father was afraid of being arrested if he returned to the U.S. for his son, so he staid away.
Austin's mother lost custody of him to the State of NH in January of 2006, after she was arrested at Nashua DCYFs cohort Hospital for intoxication. She was charged with Child Endangerment, a criminal charge that was later dropped, after hidden lab test result's from that night proved there was no alcohol in her system. Austin was still never returned as the caseworker and CASA worker vowed to make sure he wasn't returned. Nashua District Court's Judge LeFrancois refused to dismiss the false charges against Austin's mother or to admit the evidence proving innocence.
Austin's mother was later hand delivered TPR paperwork from the Sheriff's Dept. for the Termination of Parental Right's of Austin's father. While reading over the paperwork, we noticed the Petition was not for Austin's father, but for a man thirteen year's younger from Nashua. We immediately notified the DCYF caseworker that they had the wrong man. Her response,"Oh well, no big deal. It doesn't matter." It most certainly does matter. A fictitious man's right's were terminated on September 25,2007, making it easier to terminate Austin's mother's right's, without having to contact his REAL father, whom DCYF and the Court's had ALL information on.
Immigrant's may be in this country illegally, but does that give our court's the right to steal their children? Should their right's be taken because they were deported?
Austin was ILLEGALLY adopted in December of 2009, or so we've been told by NH DCYF. But who know's when he was adopted for sure, or if in fact he was adopted, knowing DCYFs horrible track record of NEVER telling the truth.
Below are document's of proof as to the above horrible story:

Austin's Mother Lab work showing NO ALCOHOL


Judge LeFrancois denial to present new evidence, drop charges of abuse and neglect AND vacate the order's of the Nashua District Court


Judge LeFrncois-Page 2



Termination of Fictitious Man's Right's Page 1 and 2




Austin's Birth Certificate Before he was Illegally Adopted

Missouri court rules immigrant's adoption rights terminated illegally

Missouri court rules immigrant's adoption rights terminated illegally - CNN

January 25, 2011|By the CNN Wire Staff

The Missouri Supreme Court Tuesday overturned a lower court ruling that terminated the parental rights of a Guatemalan woman whose son, the woman says, was adopted without her consent while she was imprisoned following an immigration sting in 2007.

The court ruled that the state violated its own laws in terminating the parental rights of Encarnacion Bail Romero, but the supreme court sent the case back to the lower court for retrial rather than return the boy to his biological mother.

Read more at the above link and also read the Missouri Supreme Court Ruling at:
http://www.courts.mo.gov/file.jsp?id=43941

Saturday, June 4, 2011

LAW REFORM IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE

LAW REFORM IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE | Parents Rights Blog

There are many procedures by which citizens can challenge the legality of decisions made by public bodies. They include: Judicial review: court proceedings in which a judge is asked to review the lawfulness of the decision which is being challenged; Complaints procedures such as the social service complaints procedure; and Ombudsman schemes such as the

via IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE.

ADHD Diagnosis, Treatment Differ Across the Globe-The U.S. use drug's

ADHD Diagnosis, Treatment Differ Across the Globe

In the U.S. the children are drugged that are diagnosed with ADHD. Especially Foster children, because Child Protective Services doesn't won't to deal with them. For that matter, most foster parent's don't want to either. An active, busy child doesn't need to be drugged!

Economic, historical, and political forces and cultural values affect the implementation of treatment for ADHD worldwide.

In Israel, highly active children are well tolerated in the classroom, making it difficult to distinguish high activity from attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) manifestation. In Brazil, light physical punishment is considered by a large number of teachers to be “therapeutic,” and physical exercise is considered a viable alternative to medication for children with ADHD. In Canada, health professionals view ADHD as an impairing, often lifelong disorder that requires careful assessment and multimodal intervention.