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

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Govabuse-National Protest, Friday August 12, 2011

CPS Problems? Here Are 7 Ways to Fight CPS…

CPS Problems? Here Are 7 Ways to Fight CPS…

If you’re appalled by the actions of CPS, here are some ideas for correcting the injustices:
1. Write a letter to each and every member of your county board of supervisors detailing actions that show illegal activities or injustice on the part of local caseworkers. Suggest that they cut the CPS budget if caseworkers are taking children who shouldn’t be separated from their parents. Suggest that these illegal and unjust activities could cause the county to have to deal with expensive lawsuits. Follow this up by regularly attending meetings of the county board of supervisors and by getting up to share during community participation time; use your three minutes to tell people what’s going on.
2. Write a letter to your state legislators (don’t bother with the federal legislators – they’re usually worthless and corrupt unless they’re Ron Paul or someone exactly like him.) Go for the state level legislators. Tell them that child welfare is mismanaged in your county. Then follow up by going to the capitol to try to have a face to face encounter with these legislators. Take with you a gift-offering of a folder you’ve prepared with lots of information about how corrupt and evil CPS is. Tell them you support the State Sovereignty Movement and that federal child welfare laws are a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s Tenth Amendment.
3. Study your state’s social services regulations. You should be able to find a copy at your local county law library. Ask the librarian there for help finding them. If you have an open CPS case take notes on every regulation that’s being violated by your caseworker. Get photocopies of the regulations that are violated. Next, review your court order to see what orders may be violated by the caseworker. If you find discrepancies you can file for a state administrative hearing.



4. Does your county have a Grand Jury? If so, write them a letter, not about your personal case so much as about the problems of CPS injustice in general. Ask them to investigate CPS in your county.
5. If you haven’t already, write a Legal Declaration to clarify each point of malfeasance by caseworkers and others involved in your case. As when writing any letter or legal document, NEVER include any self-incriminating type of statement. Give this to your attorney. If he won’t see you in person, mail it to him and request (1) a response, and (2) that it be presented to the judge for the next hearing.
6. If your caseworker’s report to the court contains inaccurate statements, misrepresentations, or lies, create a legal document called “Objections and Corrections to the Report of the Social Worker” and as with the Legal Declaration, send it to your lawyer to be presented to the court.
Links to legal documents samples are here: Legal Document and Information Library.
7. If your caseworker is violating your court order or state social service regulations, treating you disrespectfully, or in any other way doing something you believe is wrong, write a letter to the county personnel department with a detailed complaint about the person. This will probably keep the caseworker from ever getting a promotion in that county. He or she might also get demoted, or fired.
I hope you find some solutions that will work for you.

Does Independence Day Even Matter For Our Stolen Children And Grandchildren?





Does Independence Day Even Matter For Our Stolen Children And Grandchildren?

July 4th, 2011, we celebrate another Independence Day. But what about our children and grandchildren, stolen by CPS/DCYF and the Court's? Do they even matter? What about their Independence? What about their Freedom? What about their parent's and grandparent's who suffer their loss every day of the year? Should Independence Day even mean anything for them? Or is it just another day?
Another day of fighting for their return. Another day of grieving. Another day of fighting for Independence and Freedom for ALL children and families torn apart by their own Government!
Our country is the greatest country of all, so how can such a great country treat it's own people with such disdain? How can our great country let the almighty dollar rule over everything else? Don't our children, tomorrow's leader's, deserve to be free and independent, or are they just a $ sign?
Shouldn't we ALL be able to celebrate our Independence and Freedom today? We, as American's have earned this right. We have helped make America the great country that it is. So why are we, as parent's, grandparent's and their children, being treated worse than convicted criminal's? Why are we not afforded our Constitutional right's? Why are we not afforded "due process" when our children are stolen,due to false allegation's of abuse and neglect? Why don't we have the same right's as accused and convicted criminal's? Why is evidence proving innocence NOT allowed in court? Why is perjury allowed by the state and it's witnesses? Why are Judges allowed to make false statement's without reprimand? Why does our Government allow CPS/DCYF and the court's to illegally steal our children and auction them off like cattle?

This is America! The land of the "FREE". The home of the "BRAVE". Children and their families make up a huge part of our great country. So where is their Independence and Freedom?

Saturday, July 2, 2011

The Pulse -Foster care

The Pulse - Times Union

Foster care costs New York $56,000 per child annually, according to a report released by the New York State Kincare Coalition in March. In comparison, the state pays about $6,500 per child in the grandparent program. More than 2,800 children were served statewide through the grandparent's program last year, saving $61 million in foster care costs.

A father's nightmare

A father's nightmare - Telegraph

A bizarre episode involving a father's separation from his children shows up our farcical law, says Christopher Booker.

Last month, a French-Italian language teacher, who had been happily bringing up his two daughters "somewhere in southern England" since their mother walked out on them seven years ago, was plunged into an inexplicable nightmare. It seemed one of his girls had been overheard by a teacher telling a friend that she had been "fighting" with her father. The girls were taken by social workers to hospital, where neither showed any marks or sign of injury – hardly surprising, since the girl and her father had merely been having an argument.

Adult Twins Who Lived With Dead Mother for 3 Months Charged With Murder

Adult Twins Who Lived With Dead Mother for 3 Months Charged With Murder - FoxNews.com

HOUSTON -- Twin Houston men were charged Tuesday with the murder of their 89-year-old mother after police say the pair allowed her to die on the floor in their foyer after she fell, then lived for three months with her decomposing, bug-infested corpse.

DCF: Positive drug test will lead to child abuse hotline referral

DCF: Positive drug test will lead to child abuse hotline referral | TBO.com

TALLAHASSEE --
Starting next month, Florida's social service agency will refer every welfare applicant who fails a drug test to a child abuse hotline.

State officials deny the drug test results may be used to remove children from their parents, but civil rights activists fear it will.

Beginning Friday, anyone applying to the state for temporary cash assistance must pass a drug test to receive benefits.

Applicants must pay the test's cost, which will be refunded for those who pass. That upfront expense could exceed $100, according to state documents, for those who need a medical review to confirm that the drug detected is one for which they have a legal prescription.

In a memorandum dated June 24, the Department of Children and Families directed staff to refer every applicant testing positive for drugs to Florida's child abuse hotline "for review to initiate an assessment or an offer of services."

Read More at the above link