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

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Maxim Kuzmin’s death: lawyer says foster parents not guilty

Maxim Kuzmin’s death: lawyer says foster parents not guilty : Voice of Russia:


The public was alerted to the death of Max Shatto, known in Russia as Maxim Kuzmin, by Russia’s children’s rights ombudsman Pavel Astakhov.
Astakhov said the three-year-old was treated with strong anti-psychotic drugs and beaten by his mother before he died in a Texan hospital on January 21. The Shattos still have custody over Maxim’s younger brother.

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Immunity for Guardian Ad Litem destroys Connecticut family

Immunity for Guardian Ad Litem destroys Connecticut family | Washington Times Communities:

WASHINGTON, DC, March 1, 2013 - In Connecticut, the phrase “for the sake of the children” is often thrown around on custody cases involving child victims of violent crimes.  However, cases like 9-year old Max Liberti’s suggest that some family court appointees are more likely to favor the opportunity to continue billing families for unnecessary, even fraudulent services, over what is best for the child.

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Welcome to the (Foster)hood

Welcome to the (Foster)hood | SocialJerk:

One of the toughest things about working in the child welfare system is dealing with all of the petty, bullshit, infighting. (You thought I was going to say it was the sadness of children, didn’t you? Fools, social workers thrive on kiddie tears, they’re like Gatorade!)

What we know about the effects of foster care-Study

What we know about the effects of foster care 


Although no one disputes the need for foster care, no one endorses it as a solution to the problems for which it is invoked.

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Former Sen. Brown's DOJ complaint alleges favoritism, collusion in Massachusetts judiciary

Former Sen. Brown's DOJ complaint alleges favoritism, collusion in Massachusetts judiciary « Watchdog.org Watchdog.org:


BOSTON, Mass. If the allegations are true, it means that Massachusetts residents, who are not politically connected, can be subjected unequal, unfair treatment within their state’s judiciary system.
Someone inside the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts is suppressing and manipulating evidence. That someone is most likely a court clerk and that someone is operating in collusion with other court clerks, and possibly the current and former chief justices, to avoid issuing a definitive ruling that would clarify the legal distinction between “employment discrimination” and “employment retaliation.”
- See more at: http://watchdog.org/72017/former-sen-browns-doj-complaint-alleges-favoritism-collusion-in-massachusetts-judiciary/#sthash.tIE5sJfK.dpuf

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Ways and Means Subcommittee Hearing on Increasing Adoptions from Foster Care

Ways and Means Subcommittee Hearing on Increasing Adoptions from Foster Care | The Children's Monitor:

Please contact  Chairman Dave Reichert (R-WA) at: 
 Washington, DC Office
1127 Longworth HOB
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: (202) 225-7761
Fax: (202) 225-4282   
AND  Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) at: 

WASHINGTON OFFICE

201 Cannon House Office Bldg
Independence and 1st St, SE
Washington DC 20515
Phone: 202-225-4865


And express your concerns on Title IV funding and the illegal kidnapping of our children. Let them know the incentive money is NOT being used to help families. It is being used to destroy innocent families!

Yesterday Human Resources Subcommittee Chairman Dave Reichert (R-WA) held a hearing on increasing adoptions from foster care through the Adoption Incentives program and other federal initiatives. Upon opening the hearing, Chairman Reichert shared his personal and professional commitment to the adoption and foster care cause. He described adoption as a truly bipartisan issue that he hopes to be able to work with Ranking Member Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) to improve upon in hopes of providing more permanent homes for children and youth in foster care.
Doggett shared the Chairman’s commitment to increasing adoptions but warned that the impending sequester would have a negative impact on the adoption incentives fund if Congress fails to act. He also acknowledged that the Family Connections Grants are set to expire this year and although a relatively small program, it provides resources to improve the lives of children and families in need.
The subcommittee heard testimony from four witnesses, all representing adoption organizations. Witnesses spoke to the importance of raising awareness about the number of children waiting to be adopted from foster care. They shared examples of outreach that their respective organizations utilize to familiarize the public with children in care who want to be adopted in addition to providing opportunities for children in foster care to meet and interact with potential families. The witnesses were very vocal about the importance of not giving up on finding permanent connections for all children in the foster care system.
A significant portion of the hearing focused on the need for flexibility and continued funding for post adoption services. Nicole Dobbins, Executive Director for Voice for Adoption, spoke to the recently reauthorized Adoption Tax Credit and the benefit that it serves to families who adopt from the foster care system. She also pointed out that the recent reauthorization did not include refundability, which is critical for families adopting from foster care who in the past did not benefit from the credit due to their low tax liability. Other issues at the forefront of the hearing included the fact that there is currently no federal mandate that requires agencies and staff to continue to pursue for adoptive families (especially for older youth), that there are states that are increasing adoptions from year to year but are still not eligible for federal adoption incentives, and the need to examine federal adoption funding to determine how states are using savings from the adoption assistance de-link and where they are reinvesting those funds (as currently required by law).

Foster System Remains ‘Unacceptable’

Foster System Remains ‘Unacceptable’ | Jackson Free Press | Jackson, MS:

Jamison J. had shuffled through 28 foster homes, mental institutions and temporary shelters, by the time he was 17 years old. In the first of the homes, when he was 4, his foster mother terrorized him by shoving Jamison in front of her two snarling, growling dogs.

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