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Authorities remove children from polygamists' West Texas compound--April
4th, 2008--ELDORADO, Texas — Child welfare officials
Friday took custody of 18 girls who lived at a secretive West Texas
religious retreat built by polygamist leader Warren Jeffs following
an abuse complaint to state authorities.
A total of 52 girls, ages 6 months to 17 years, were bused away
on Friday to be interviewed, but only 18 were immediately taken into
state custody, said Texas Child Protective Services spokeswoman
Marleigh Meisner. No arrests had been made.
Meisner said CPS was looking for foster homes for the girls, most
of whom have rarely been outside the insular world of the
Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. They
were temporarily being housed at a local civic center, she said.
"We're dealing with children that aren't accustomed to the
outside world so we're trying to be very sensitive to their needs,"
said Meisner.
Authorities had interviewed about half the girls since arriving
at the remote compound with law enforcement on Thursday evening, she
said. Interviews were expected to continue over the weekend.
The investigation began with a call alleging physical abuse of a
16-year-old girl living there, Meisner said.
On Friday afternoon, Department of Public Safety officials began
executing a search warrant at the compound.
The warrant is for records dealing with the birth of children to
a 16-year-old and any records listing a marriage between Dale
Barlow, 50, and the girl, according to the San Angelo
Standard-Times, which cited court records released late Friday in
Tom Green County. Prosecutors in Tom Green, a larger county north of
Eldorado, were handling the case.
An arrest warrant was issued, but the individual DPS is looking
for had not been located by Friday evening, said spokeswoman Tela
Mange. She said she could not reveal whose name was on the warrant.
Doctor is sued in death of girl, 4 Her psychiatrist treated her with
powerful drugs--April 4th, 2008--The parents of 4-year-old
Rebecca Riley are awaiting trial on charges that they killed her in
December 2006 with an overdose of psychiatric drugs. A medical
malpractice suit filed yesterday asserts that a Tufts Medical Center
psychiatrist who diagnosed the girl as bipolar when she was 28
months old and then treated her for two years with a regimen of
powerful drugs is to blame for her death. "This child was
subject to mostly telephone prescriptions and a slipshod diagnosis,"
said Boston lawyer Andrew C. Meyer Jr., who represents Rebecca
Riley's estate and filed the suit against Dr. Kayoko Kifuji in
Suffolk Superior Court. Six weeks before Rebecca Riley was
found dead on Dec. 13, 2006, in a Hull house shared by her parents
and other relatives, a nurse at her Weymouth preschool warned Kifuji
that she suspected the child was overmedicated because she was often
too tired to participate in school activities and appeared like a
"floppy doll," according to Meyer. Kifuji did not reduce her
medication after examining the child, he said. "They made her
a 4-year-old zombie," said Meyer, whose Boston law firm Lubin &
Meyer specializes in medical malpractice cases. "We don't believe
that she did suffer from bipolar or that this was the appropriate
medication." The suit was filed on behalf of a court-appointed
guardian who is serving as administrator of Rebecca Riley's estate
and is protecting the interests of the girl's 13-year-old brother
and 7- year-old sister. It seeks unspecified damages for the
wrongful death and pain and suffering endured by Rebecca, as well as
the loss suffered by her brother and sister, who are in foster care
and have been named the beneficiaries of her estate. Kifuji
could not be reached for comment yesterday. Since the child's death,
Kifuji remains on staff at Tufts Medical Center, but no longer
treats patients. She has voluntarily agreed not to practice
medicine, pending an investigation by the state Board of
Registration in Medicine.
Tufts Medical Center released a statement yesterday saying: "We have
not received any official notification of a lawsuit. We remain in
support of Dr. Kifuji and the care she provided." Kifuji
diagnosed Rebecca Riley with bipolar disorder and attention deficit
and hyperactivity disorder and prescribed clonidine, a blood
pressure medication that is sometimes used to calm aggressive
children, Seroquel, an antipsychotic drug, and Depakote, an
antiseizure drug, according to court records. The child died from an
overdose of the prescription drugs, and, by itself, the amount of
clonidine in her system was fatal, court records indicate. Clonidine
and Depakote are approved by the FDA for adults only. A trial
date has yet to be set for Michael and Carolyn Riley, who were
initially charged with first-degree murder in intentionally
overmedicating their daughter and knowing that it would be fatal.
Schools
embrace fingerprint scanning--By
Pauline Vu, Stateline.org
Staff Writer--
The lunch lines in West Virginia's Wood County schools move much
faster than they used to. After students fill their trays with
food, they approach a small machine, push their thumbs against a
touch pad — and with that small movement, they've paid for their
meal.
For half the state's school districts, as well as hundreds more
across the country, the days of dealing with lost lunch cards or
forgotten identification numbers are over.
"A student cannot forget their finger," said Beverly Blough, the
director of food service in Wood County School District, which
in 2003 became the first district in West Virginia to use finger
scanners.
But the emergence of finger scanning has also sparked a backlash
from parents and civil libertarians worried about identity theft
and violation of children's privacy rights. In several cases
when parents have objected, school districts have backed down,
and some states have outlawed or limited the technology.
A growing number of schools are using biometrics, or the science
of identification based on physiological or behavioral features
like facial or voice recognition, to have students pay for
meals, log their attendance, board buses, check out books and
visit the nurse's office. Administrators cite many benefits,
chief among them efficiency.
Fingerprints are scanned, but the prints themselves are not
saved; instead, a finger's ridges and arcs are turned into "data
points," which are converted into a numerical identifier
assigned to each student.
Pennsylvania-based identiMetrics, which offers biometric
identification products, has sold fingerprint scanners to about
1,000 school districts in about half the states, mostly in the
Northeast and South, said Anne Marie Dunphy, the company's chief
financial officer. By the end of the fiscal year, she expects
the business will triple or quadruple over the previous year.
Dunphy said rural districts seem to be taking the lead on
implementing the technology. "You would think that it would be
the technology-rich, wealthy districts along the Northwest
corridor, and it's the complete opposite. We have installations
in very rural areas in Indiana, where the backyard's a cornfield
and there's an Amish lady working the cash register," she said.
But the technology's emergence has raised concerns for parents
about whether their children's information is safe.
"It just opens a huge database out there that's just easy for
identity theft," said Joy Robinson-Van Gilder, an Illinois
mother who rallied legislators last year to place limits on the
technology in her state. "I think it's against their civil
rights, without a doubt, and it is an invasion of privacy."
Illinois is the
only state that requires schools to get parental permission
before scanning students' fingerprints. Iowa banned
biometrics outright in schools, and Michigan doesn't allow
fingerprinting because of a 2000 attorney general opinion that
it would violate state law.
Arizona could join this group. Last month, a Senate committee
passed a bill to ban the use of biometrics in schools.
Scanning opponents argue that districts don't have policies in
place for what information to collect, how long to keep it, how
to delete it when it's no longer needed and who should have
access to the information. They also say that schools, unlike
banks or major government agencies that also collect biometric
data, don't have the financial resources to ensure that it is
secure.
"The benefits certainly do not justify the privacy violations
that we're seeing," said Alessandra Meetze, executive director
of the Arizona chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. "I
don't think collecting fingerprints from very little kids sends
the right message…They're essentially treating (students) like
criminals for the sake of efficiency."
Jewish family sues Jamaican reform school for troubled teens--March
25th, 2008--
A battle has erupted in the Orthodox Jewish
community over a
Brooklyn teenager sent by his prominent
family to a behavior boot camp accused of
terrifying abuse.
Isaac Hersh, 16, has been trapped since
last summer at Tranquility Bay, a reform
school on the island of
Jamaica with a soothing name - and harsh
discipline, according to the lawyer hired to
try to get him out. "It's a
modern-day concentration camp," said
Maryland lawyer
Joshua Ambush. Isaac's estranged
parents sent him to the boot camp last year
after luring him back to Brooklyn from his
new home in
Texas, court papers claim. Isaac's
twin brother, Sol, is panicked he's next to
go. "He's very worried about his
brother. He's very worried about himself,
too," said a friend of the family who asked
to remain anonymous. Tranquility Bay offers
the promise of turning bad boys into focused
achievers, but the walled-off camp with
barred windows has been called a nightmare.
Children have been beaten, forced to eat
their vomit and made to stand in painful
contortions for hours, according to a
separate suit filed in
Utah by former students against private
boot camps, including Tranquility Bay.
The case has so riled up members of the
normally insular Orthodox community that
several are taking the rare step of
publicizing Isaac's situation.
Sins against kids--March 20th,
2008--The General Assembly
does not legislate based on facts, relying instead on perceptions,
personal experiences and
political pandering. And nowhere is that
more apparent than in the way the state responds to juvenile crime.
Despite the fact that only 5 percent of youth
arrests owe to serious
offenses, legislators have toughened the juvenile system over the
years in response to the myth of the teenage "superpredator." At the
same time that lawmakers don't believe 17-year-olds are mature
enough to buy cigarettes or drive past midnight, they maintain that
teens are old enough to
be viewed as adults when they break the law.
In Georgia, a teen as young as 13 can face life in prison for some
offenses. Now, JUSTGeorgia — a coalition
of Voices for
Georgia's Children, the Georgia Appleseed Center for Law and
Justice, and Emory's Barton Child Law & Policy Clinic — is offering
up a new
code. The comprehensive rewrite is based on four years of
work by the State Bar of Georgia's Young Lawyers Division and
interviews with hundreds of people
across the state, including
advocates, victims of juvenile crimes, foster children and law
enforcement. Despite their varying perspectives, all those
interviewed
agreed that the Georgia statutes dealing with young
people who violate the law or who are victims of abuse and neglect
are not in the best interests of
children. Since its
introduction in 1971, the Georgia juvenile code has wandered far afield from its founding principle that when a young person errs,
the law
should rehabilitate, not punish.
"Baby ASBOs" for children as young as 10--March 18th,
2008--
LONDON (Reuters) - Troubled teenagers and
children as young as 10 would be hit with
anti-social behaviour orders (ASBOs) under a
government plan unveiled on Tuesday to fight
youth crime. About 1,000 of the
country's "most challenging" children will
be forced to sign good behaviour contracts
under the 218-million pound programme,
Children's Secretary Ed Balls said.
Under the expansion of the Family
Intervention Projects, the troublemakers
would be supported by "non-negotiable"
workers. But failure to abide by the
contract will lead to a criminal record, and
a behaviour order dubbed a "baby ASBO". "The support is non-negotiable -- if young
people don't take the help, or refuse to
mend their ways they will face the
consequences," Balls said in a statement.
"For example (they will face) an Anti-Social Behaviour Order to stop bad behaviour and an
Individual Support Order to compel them to
co-operate with support. These are court
orders with criminal records and sanctions
for those who breach them."
Judge
orders California to enforce county juvenile hall standards--March
12th, 2008--A judge has ordered California authorities to set strict
deadlines for bringing county juvenile halls up to state standards
if they fail inspections. San Francisco Superior Court Judge
Patrick Mahoney ruled the Corrections Standards Authority has been
giving counties too much time to correct problems that include
overcrowding and excessive use of force.The authority inspects juvenile halls every two years. The judge says counties must
submit an improvement plan within two months. They then must make
changes within three months or risk having their juvenile jails
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