Foster car program, associated agencies and courts are a joke | Mansfield News Journal | mansfieldnewsjournal.com:
Richland County Children Services has always been the talk of the town. It is an agency that no one wants to fight with.
It has been a year since Judge Spon granted custody of Haylee Donathan to Richland County Children Services. We attempted to get custody of Haylee, but it was already set in stone that Children Services wanted control of her. I received a letter from Judge Spon a few months ago stating that Haylee's adoption has been finalized months ago. Within six months, Richland County Children Services went from custody to adoption, which adoption never happens that quickly.
Exposing Child UN-Protective Services and the Deceitful Practices They Use to Rip Families Apart/Where Relative Placement is NOT an Option, as Stated by a DCYF Supervisor
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
In Memory of my Loving Husband, William F. Knightly Jr. Murdered by ILLEGAL Palliative Care at a Nashua, NH Hospital
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Native American roots trump in adoption battle over toddler
Native American roots trump in adoption battle over toddler | Reuters:
(Reuters) - The parents of a 2-year-old Cherokee girl adopted at birth are fighting to get her back after a court ruling based on Native American heritage allowed the biological father she has never known to take her away on New Year's Eve.
(Reuters) - The parents of a 2-year-old Cherokee girl adopted at birth are fighting to get her back after a court ruling based on Native American heritage allowed the biological father she has never known to take her away on New Year's Eve.
New CPS/DCYF Cases - Filed or Decided
New Cases - Filed or Decided:
Browse all files this Folder
AFRA
In Hernandez v. Foster, 657 F.3d 463 (October 7, 2011) the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals declared that having probable cause to remove a child is not enough to do an emergency removal; there must also be exigent circumstances, otherwise the case must be brought to a judge for a pre-removal order. This is a constitutional due process ruling so should be good in every jurisdiction. This was done as a warning shot to agency workers who do removals first and then seek to have petitions filed after the fact--the 7th Circuit granted qualified immunity in the specific case because the law wasn't yet clearly established, but it declared that from now on the law is clear on this point. We were remanded to the federal trial court on the coerced safely plan claims and the withholding of the child after the State's Attorney refused to file a petition.
So a federal civil rights suit on a removal after return could be considered where there is no exigency.
In In re A.B., the Supreme Court of Washington held that a parent has a constitutional due process right not to have the State terminate his or her relationship with a natural child "absent a finding of current parental unfitness." In re A.B., 232 P.3d 1104, 1113 (Wash. 2010) ("The first question here is whether a parent has a due process right not to have the State terminate his or her relationship with a natural child in the absence of an express or implied finding that he or she, at the time of trial, is currently unfit to parent the child. According to the United States Supreme Court, this court, and our Court of Appeals, the answer is yes.").
In In re Alonza D., Jr. & Shaydon S., the Court of Appeals of Maryland held that, "the record does not reflect through evidentiary support . . . how a continued parental relationship would have caused a detriment to the children, and the trial judge made no findings to that effect." In re Alonza D., Jr. & Shaydon S., A.2d 536, 551 (Md. Ct. App. 2010). Moreover, the Court said that, "[b]ecause the record [was] silent in this regard, and because parental rights are among those deemed fundamental, we cannot say that exceptional circumstances warranted the termination of Mr. D.'s parental rights." Id. at 551-552 (emphasis added). To come to this conclusion, the Court relied on the "majority view" of its "sister states," which said that:
Because of the presumption that natural parents are fit to raise their children and/or because natural parents have a fundamental constitutional right to raise their children, or both, there must first be a finding that the natural parents are unfit, or extraordinary circumstance detrimental to the welfare of the child must first be determined to exist, before the "best interests of the child" test may be applied when private third-parties dispute custody with natural parents. Id. at 547 (quoting McDermott v. Dougherty, 869 A.2d 751 (Md. Ct. App. 2005)).
Read More:
Browse all files this Folder
AFRA
In Hernandez v. Foster, 657 F.3d 463 (October 7, 2011) the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals declared that having probable cause to remove a child is not enough to do an emergency removal; there must also be exigent circumstances, otherwise the case must be brought to a judge for a pre-removal order. This is a constitutional due process ruling so should be good in every jurisdiction. This was done as a warning shot to agency workers who do removals first and then seek to have petitions filed after the fact--the 7th Circuit granted qualified immunity in the specific case because the law wasn't yet clearly established, but it declared that from now on the law is clear on this point. We were remanded to the federal trial court on the coerced safely plan claims and the withholding of the child after the State's Attorney refused to file a petition.
So a federal civil rights suit on a removal after return could be considered where there is no exigency.
In In re A.B., the Supreme Court of Washington held that a parent has a constitutional due process right not to have the State terminate his or her relationship with a natural child "absent a finding of current parental unfitness." In re A.B., 232 P.3d 1104, 1113 (Wash. 2010) ("The first question here is whether a parent has a due process right not to have the State terminate his or her relationship with a natural child in the absence of an express or implied finding that he or she, at the time of trial, is currently unfit to parent the child. According to the United States Supreme Court, this court, and our Court of Appeals, the answer is yes.").
In In re Alonza D., Jr. & Shaydon S., the Court of Appeals of Maryland held that, "the record does not reflect through evidentiary support . . . how a continued parental relationship would have caused a detriment to the children, and the trial judge made no findings to that effect." In re Alonza D., Jr. & Shaydon S., A.2d 536, 551 (Md. Ct. App. 2010). Moreover, the Court said that, "[b]ecause the record [was] silent in this regard, and because parental rights are among those deemed fundamental, we cannot say that exceptional circumstances warranted the termination of Mr. D.'s parental rights." Id. at 551-552 (emphasis added). To come to this conclusion, the Court relied on the "majority view" of its "sister states," which said that:
Because of the presumption that natural parents are fit to raise their children and/or because natural parents have a fundamental constitutional right to raise their children, or both, there must first be a finding that the natural parents are unfit, or extraordinary circumstance detrimental to the welfare of the child must first be determined to exist, before the "best interests of the child" test may be applied when private third-parties dispute custody with natural parents. Id. at 547 (quoting McDermott v. Dougherty, 869 A.2d 751 (Md. Ct. App. 2005)).
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DHS monitors' records to be kept secret
DHS monitors' records to be kept secret | Tulsa World:
Keeping progress reports and documents a secret is a provision included in a settlement approved by Oklahoma Department of Human Services officials and the plaintiffs in a federal class-action lawsuit.
Read more
Keeping progress reports and documents a secret is a provision included in a settlement approved by Oklahoma Department of Human Services officials and the plaintiffs in a federal class-action lawsuit.
Read more
Indian family protection law central to emotional custody battle
Indian family protection law central to emotional custody battle - CNN.com:
(CNN) -- For the first few moments of her life, Veronica was with her birth mother.
I'm sure there will be many more adopted children taken from their adoptive parent's because they have Native American blood before this is over. I'm sure there will also be MANY adopted children taken from the adoptive parent's due to fraud and illegal adoptions, culminated by CPS/DCYF and the Family Court's. It doesn't matter how long the child has been with the adoptive parent's where fraud is concerned. The children MUST be returned! If the Law was followed to begin with, children wouldn't be taken from adoptive families!
(CNN) -- For the first few moments of her life, Veronica was with her birth mother.
I'm sure there will be many more adopted children taken from their adoptive parent's because they have Native American blood before this is over. I'm sure there will also be MANY adopted children taken from the adoptive parent's due to fraud and illegal adoptions, culminated by CPS/DCYF and the Family Court's. It doesn't matter how long the child has been with the adoptive parent's where fraud is concerned. The children MUST be returned! If the Law was followed to begin with, children wouldn't be taken from adoptive families!
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