Youngest Kids In Class At Higher Risk Of ADHD Diagnosis : Shots - Health News : NPR:
By the time they're in elementary school, some kids prove to be more troublesome than others. They can't sit still or they're not socializing or they can't focus enough to complete tasks that the other kids are handling well. Sounds like ADHD. But it might be that they're just a little young for their grade.
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
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Rural Retreat woman sentenced in foster son's death
Rural Retreat woman sentenced in foster son's death - HeraldCourier.com: News:
WYTHEVILLE, Va.—Delores Ann Gordon lost some of her freedom on Wednesday, but in some ways the Rural Retreat resident whose foster son died in a 2014 alcohol-fueled truck wreck that she caused has already gotten a death sentence.
WYTHEVILLE, Va.—Delores Ann Gordon lost some of her freedom on Wednesday, but in some ways the Rural Retreat resident whose foster son died in a 2014 alcohol-fueled truck wreck that she caused has already gotten a death sentence.
Child adoption racket busted; network targets poor mothers
Child adoption racket busted; network targets poor mothers - The Hindu:
A poor Dalit woman who gave her 35-day-old girl child for ‘adoption’ to a couple based in Ambattur near Chennai triggered speculation of operation of an illegal child adoption racketeering at the Government District Headquarters Hospital here.
A poor Dalit woman who gave her 35-day-old girl child for ‘adoption’ to a couple based in Ambattur near Chennai triggered speculation of operation of an illegal child adoption racketeering at the Government District Headquarters Hospital here.
Ringgold foster mom going back to court on murder charge
Ringgold foster mom going back to court on murder charge | Times Free Press:
Clara Louise Edwards, the Ringgold, Ga., foster mom accused of killing a 2-year-old girl, is going back to court. Superior Court Judge Ralph Van Pelt Jr. this week granted a prosecutor's motion for a new trial, allowing the state to retry Edwards on a charge of felony murder. Last month, a jury convicted Edwards of first-degree cruelty to children but acquitted her on a charge of malice murder — Georgia's way of alleging the killer intended to take a life.
Clara Louise Edwards, the Ringgold, Ga., foster mom accused of killing a 2-year-old girl, is going back to court. Superior Court Judge Ralph Van Pelt Jr. this week granted a prosecutor's motion for a new trial, allowing the state to retry Edwards on a charge of felony murder. Last month, a jury convicted Edwards of first-degree cruelty to children but acquitted her on a charge of malice murder — Georgia's way of alleging the killer intended to take a life.
Woman supposed to reunite with son in foster care learns he's died
Woman supposed to reunite with son in foster care learns he's died - CBC Player:
A woman is mourning after discovering her two-year-old son died while in foster care.
A woman is mourning after discovering her two-year-old son died while in foster care.
Deaths of children in care of Department of Children and Families in the spotlight
Deaths of children in care of Department of Children and Families in the spotlight | NT News:
THE coronial inquests into the deaths of two children in the care of the Department of Children and Families, including a 17-year-old girl who committed suicide at a residential care home, will get under way next month.
THE coronial inquests into the deaths of two children in the care of the Department of Children and Families, including a 17-year-old girl who committed suicide at a residential care home, will get under way next month.
Rep. Redman's 'Safe Families' bill passes House, 53-15
Rep. Redman's 'Safe Families' bill passes House, 53-15 | The Spokesman-Review:
Rep. Eric Redman’s legislation to amend Idaho law to empower non-profits to train and oversee “host families” for parents who are in crisis or serving in the military and want to temporarily have someone else care for their kids has passed the House on a 53-15 vote. The bill, HB 573, is entitled the “Safe Families Act.”
Rep. Eric Redman’s legislation to amend Idaho law to empower non-profits to train and oversee “host families” for parents who are in crisis or serving in the military and want to temporarily have someone else care for their kids has passed the House on a 53-15 vote. The bill, HB 573, is entitled the “Safe Families Act.”
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