My 3 Daughters where snatched by the state of Utah for monitary gain. I was given a defective/drug addict attorney and the state was allowed to lie under oath in order to terminate my parental rights. Their case worker even had the nerve to say my daughters were adoptable because they werer little white girls, What a crock!
My Life
I am the mommy of Michelle, Ashleigh and Samanthia. The state of utah snatched them from me in July of 2001. The Last time I was allowed to see them was January 8, 2002. Not a day goes by that they are not in my thoughts. They were sold out of foster care here for financial insentive. I miss you three so much and can't wait til the day you can come find me.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Child Protective Services That Operate Like the Mob
Everyone is thankful for Child Protective Services, which takes "let's think about the children" as an organizational slogan. But when a senator from Georgia admits that the organization tears families apart to hurriedly adopt children off for huge wads of cash, well, that's when CPS starts to look less like a government agency and more like a human trafficking ring.
We want to make it clear that none of this is aimed at the child welfare system or all the caring, wonderful people working for it. The problem seems to lie with laws like the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997. According to it, for each child adopted into a foster family, the responsible state receives $4,000 to $6,000, with an additional $20 million bonus if it exceeds the average number of adoptions from previous years, which turns the practice of protecting children into a nationwide pie-eating contest.
So sure, you want to be known as the state that rescues the highest number of children in America, but the policy also encourages CPS to make an increasingly liberal interpretation of the term "rescue." Consider that, a few years ago, CPS employee Pat Moore was fired for refusing to put a child in a foster home simply because everyone in the foster family had a felony conviction, and the family occasionally hired a convicted sex offender to babysit. But hey, at least none of them had been convicted of genocide yet.
The situation is so bizarre that CPS whistleblowers have even reported foster parents putting in orders for other people's children, at which point the organization will reportedly investigate the shit out of that family until they hear someone use a cuss word, and then it's hello, new parents.
If you still don't buy the mob analogy, consider this: When Vanessa Shanks' child was taken away and she fought the decision in court, CPS responded rationally by taking away children of her relatives, and after Shanks finally won in court, they took away her attorney's children. And to think they could have saved themselves so much time by simply offering Shanks "child insurance."
We want to make it clear that none of this is aimed at the child welfare system or all the caring, wonderful people working for it. The problem seems to lie with laws like the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997. According to it, for each child adopted into a foster family, the responsible state receives $4,000 to $6,000, with an additional $20 million bonus if it exceeds the average number of adoptions from previous years, which turns the practice of protecting children into a nationwide pie-eating contest.
So sure, you want to be known as the state that rescues the highest number of children in America, but the policy also encourages CPS to make an increasingly liberal interpretation of the term "rescue." Consider that, a few years ago, CPS employee Pat Moore was fired for refusing to put a child in a foster home simply because everyone in the foster family had a felony conviction, and the family occasionally hired a convicted sex offender to babysit. But hey, at least none of them had been convicted of genocide yet.
The situation is so bizarre that CPS whistleblowers have even reported foster parents putting in orders for other people's children, at which point the organization will reportedly investigate the shit out of that family until they hear someone use a cuss word, and then it's hello, new parents.
If you still don't buy the mob analogy, consider this: When Vanessa Shanks' child was taken away and she fought the decision in court, CPS responded rationally by taking away children of her relatives, and after Shanks finally won in court, they took away her attorney's children. And to think they could have saved themselves so much time by simply offering Shanks "child insurance."
Child Snatching
Child-Snatching to Reap Federal Funds: The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997
by Hans Bader on December 9, 2010
The problem of government officials seizing children and adopting them out to receive bonuses is even more severe in England, as I explained a few years ago at Point of Law. But improper seizures of children from loving parents is also a problem in the United States, as I previously chronicled.
English children have been taken from their parents based on mere speculation that they may abuse them in the future, even if the government concedes the child has never actually been abused.
Most newspapers and legal commentators don’t cover this sort of thing, assuming that such actions are either non-existent, or isolated aberrations, and that CPS officials are omniscient and wise when they seize children from their parents. A few exceptions are the Washington Examiner, and Walter Olson, the dean of law bloggers. Olson has discussed the subject, and the devastating effects when parents are not in fact abusive or dangerous yet are put through investigations, or worse yet see their children taken away, at his web site Overlawyered, the world’s oldest law blog, which has been cited by federal court rulings on other subjects.
Children seized by CPS often experience devastating harm. In Doe v. Lebbos, 348 F.3d 820 (9th Cir. 2003), Judge Andrew Kleinfeld’s dissent described the tragedy that befell a little girl who was seized from her father as a result of false abuse accusations:
After being bounced around in the agency and foster parent bureaucracy for over a year, Lacey . . . was ‘diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, hearing voices, and suicidal ideation.’ She was put on anti-psychotic medication. She had taken to smearing feces and to other abnormal and highly disruptive behavior. . . what the county did to her to ‘protect’ her apparently destroyed her. Something in this experience, perhaps being ripped away from her father for whom she consistently expressed love during the whole miserable period, perhaps having strangers strip her and search her heretofore private parts, perhaps being put with caretakers instead of her father, amounted to a trauma that was too much for her.Ironically, after CPS seizes your kid and places him or her with a foster family, it will sometimes argue that the child should not be returned to you even if you prove you did nothing wrong and that the allegations were false. Why? They’ll argue that the kid has bonded with the foster family and thus would suffer emotional harm from being returned to you. Yet the emotional harm that kids experience being taken away from their parents in the first place seems to be given little weight.
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Happy Birthday Michelle!
✽•*(¯`v´¯)¸.•*✽
*◦.(¯`:✿:´¯) BLESSINGS & HAVE A GREAT DAY ☆
*✽.(_.^._)¸.•✽☆.♥•*¨`*.••.*•✽♪ ★*.••.*•✽♪★*¨`*
(¯`v´¯)Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
ॐ •..•(¯`v´¯)Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
. . . . ॐ •..•**
Happy Birthday Michelle, I love you and miss you!
*◦.(¯`:✿:´¯) BLESSINGS & HAVE A GREAT DAY ☆
*✽.(_.^._)¸.•✽☆.♥•*¨`*.••.*•✽♪
(¯`v´¯)Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
ॐ •..•(¯`v´¯)Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ
. . . . ॐ •..•**
Happy Birthday Michelle, I love you and miss you!
Monday, September 2, 2013
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
A Single Moment
I hope and pray you remember the love that I have for you three. I miss you so much. I pray we are together again soon.
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