Family of Adrian Jones Files Wrongful Death Suit

The family of murdered child Adrian Jones has filed a lawsuit against the State of Kansas and the State of Missouri alleging that authorities knew the boy was being abused by his father and stepmother, but they did nothing to help him. We, Robert Raskin and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, are deeply saddened that it is too late to help this child, but we are hopeful that the rise in suits filed against state child protection agencies is a step in the right direction as far as holding these agencies responsible for their criminal failings against families and children.

 

The Case Against the State

Adrian Jones was murdered in 2015. His father then fed his body to the pigs, an act so shocking and horrifying that it made national headlines. Adrian’s biological mother, his maternal grandmother, and his oldest sister have each filed lawsuits in both states. According to the lawsuit, the agency had a long and carefully documented record of numerous injuries against the child, including kicking and punching. Despite this, the boy remained in the home until his father and his stepmother beat and starved him to death. Unbelievably, at one point the agency had the child killers sign an agreement in which they stipulated they would no longer beat the child, which they took at face value. This proved to be a fatal mistake.

 

We, Robert Raskin and Kathleen Raskin, hope justice is served for this poor child and his grieving family. Nothing can bring little Adrian back, but a victory in court may help to prevent tragedies like this from happening to other families in the future.

Foster Children Displaced by Hurricane Harvey

Recently Hurricane Harvey swept through the greater Houston area, destroying 50,000 homes and leaving many children who are in state care with uncertain futures. Approximately 1,200 foster children from 24 facilities were evacuated, with many children going to other facilities in the state. These children are already traumatized, whether in their original homes or by being ripped from their homes by the state, so it is a real tragedy that they are now facing these obstacles. We, Kathleen and Robert Raskin, are concerned about what these children are now facing, and today we’d like to tell you about some ways you can donate to relief efforts that benefit children in the system who have been displaced once again.

 

How to Donate

However we may feel about DFPS, these children still need help. Organizations such as Roy Maas’ Youth Alternatives, St. Jude’s Ranch for Children, the Rainbow Room, Boysville, and the Children’s Shelter are all accepting donations, and there is also a website set up collecting donations for Friends of the Bexar County Child Welfare Board. Their fundraising efforts are specifically focused on providing children who are in state custody, foster families, and kinship families. The State of Texas has a history of non-profit organizations coming together with state organizations in times of crisis, and this is certainly a crisis, because there is no end in sight and no telling how many services these already vulnerable children and families will require. This is Kathleen and Robert Raskin, hoping you will keep these children in your thoughts.

Indiana Can’t Enforce Case Limits

Hello, this is Kathleen and Robert Raskin, and today we’re bringing you a bit of disappointing news. The Indianapolis Supreme Court is once again refusing to get involved or to set any limits on the power of their Department of Child Services. In 2015 the ACLU of Indiana sued the department on behalf of a case manager, and instead of stepping in to do what was right for children, the courts instead chose to continue to take a hands-off approach.

Children at Risk

Family case manager Mary Price claimed that she was just one of many case workers whose workloads were so heavy that children were being put at risk. As we all know, many of these cases aren’t cases at all and are instead merely abuses of the system. The case workers are being spread too thin because there is no watchdog group in place to prevent them from taking every report to the extreme, and the result is that children who are actually in danger are being harmed, while children who were never really in danger are being placed in harm’s way.

 

The Verdict

This past Monday, the court ruled that this isn’t an issue they can resolve, but if they can’t step in, who will? We are Kathleen and Robert Raskin, and we demand justice for children and families. The system needs a complete overhaul, but corrupt officials refuse to take even the smallest step in the right direction. With too many children to oversee, the danger to the kids who need protection the most is increased exponentially, and this is a risk that is morally unacceptable. It’s time to demand change.

Arizona DCS Fails Another Child

This is Robert and Kathleen Raskin of Las Vegas, and once again we are angered and saddened to report that another child has been ripped from a loving family only to suffer permanent injuries in foster care, thanks to the agency that was supposed to protect her. When a neighbor heard three-year-old Devani’s parents fighting, they called the authorities. Devani was not present at the time, and despite the fact no abuse of the child was observed, proven, or even alleged, Arizona’s DCS removed her from her parents’ care and placed her into not one, but two, horrific situations, one of which will leave the girl badly scarred for life.

 

A Foster Care Nightmare

After the girl was taken for no reason, she was placed in a home in which she immediately began showing signs of abuse, which included everything from bite marks to the frequent UTIs that are hallmarks of sexual abuse. Devani’s parents reported this abuse to police and social workers, but they were ignored, and the girl’s mother was accused of disrupting the foster care system. It was eventually revealed that the foster father, David Frodsham, had been using the girl and other foster children in his child pedophilia ring. He is now serving a sentence of 17 years, but that is not anything compared to the sentence Devani is serving since her next foster parent—Samantha Osteraas—submerged the child in a scalding bath, resulting in the loss of all ten of her toes, organ failure, and burns over 80% of her body. Mrs. Osteraas is facing felony charges, but this is yet another case of too little, too late.

 

How are these monsters continually approved as foster parents, and when are these agencies going to learn that foster care is a risky option for many children? We, Robert and Kathleen Raskin, demand answers, so please join us in demanding change.

Family Sues Niagara CAS

We are Kathleen and Robert Raskin, and today we’d like to bring to light the tragic case of a baby who was killed by his own grandfather after being placed in his care took a unique turn when several of the deceased child’s family members filed a lawsuit. One-year-old Kody Smart’s parents, his paternal grandmother and her husband, and his maternal grandmother are seeking compensation of $150K each for the loss of guidance, care, and companionship that led to the child’s death. The toddler’s killer, Brian Matthews, had been convicted of abusing Kody’s father when he was an infant, but caseworkers from CAS decided to put the baby in his care anyway despite his past. It was a fatal mistake, and now Matthews is on trial for manslaughter.

 

How Could This Happen?

Despite repeated warnings, Family and Children’s Services placed the baby, who was then 11 months old, into Matthew’s care. Having been abused by him in the past, Kody’s father knew his grandfather was a danger to children. The agencies own files contained documentation that future killer was using drugs and was verbally abusive to a female partner in 1998. Allegations of abuse against children surfaced twice more between 2007 and 2012, and yet the agency handed the boy over to his grandfather anyway. Despite further evidence the boy was not well-cared for, he remained in his grandfather’s care until he died from head injuries.

 

We, Kathleen and Robert Raskin, demand to know how this could have ever been allowed to happen. The sad truth is, until watchdog organizations are put in place, these tragedies will continue to take place.

Kentucky CPS Worker Arrested

Police in Louisville, Kentucky, discovered heroin in the purse of a woman who works for the state’s Child Protective Services department, and this led to the discovery that she has been smoking methamphetamines with her own 14-year-old son. When interviewed, the boy admitted they had used drugs together on multiple occasions. We, Robert Raskin and Kathleen Raskin, are dedicated to protecting children and families against corruption in the CPS and DHR systems, because organizations that can’t screen their own employees have no business making these decisions about children’s lives until they get their own acts together.

 

The Case Against Stephenie Chism

Ms. Chism is a 39-year-old woman from West Point, and she was stopped by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives as she left her home. When it was discovered that she had heroin in her car, she said she had “found” the drug and didn’t know what else to do with it but to keep it. After getting a search warrant, police entered the home just in time to see her son throw a meth pipe and a bag of meth out the window.  When he was questioned, the teen said his mother permitted and even encouraged his meth use, to the point that she had offered it to him in the past only to have him decline. The woman has since been arrested.

 

While it is unclear if CPS in Kentucky drug tests their employees, it is very clear that they will make parents who have no basis for the drug use allegations made against them submit to repeated drug testing, even if the results are consistently negative. We, Robert Raskin and Kathleen Raskin, are disgusted by the hypocrisy in this system, and we need to put better safety precautions in check. After all, if this woman does drugs with her own child, how is she to be trusted with anyone else’s kids?

Fake CPS Worker Tries to Enter Nebraska Homes

An unidentified woman in Lincoln, Nebraska, has been attempting to persuade people to let her into their homes under the guise of being a CPS worker. We, Kathey Raskin and Robert Raskin, are relieved to hear that so far this woman has not been able to gain entrance into any of these homes, but she’s still out there, and she may be still trying. You do not have to let any child protective worker into your house without demanding identification verification and contacting your lawyer!

 

Four Incidents in Four Weeks

The woman has approached families at four different homes asking to be let inside by asking to “talk to the parent” of the child in question, but the families refused to grant her request when she was unable to provide proof that she was in fact affiliated with the state’s DHHS organization or any other identification. DHHS is concerned about the incidents, but at the same time they have created the impression that their workers must be let into homes or else there will be repercussions.

 

We, Kathey Raskin and Robert Raskin, are dedicated to raising awareness of the cracks in the foundations of the organizations that are supposed to protect children. A part of what we hope to accomplish is to make families aware of what their rights are in the event that a CPS or DHR worker shows up at their door, and this frightening situation is a perfect example of why it’s crucial that you know your rights.

Florida Fails its Foster Children

Hello concerned citizens. Today we, Robert Raskin and Kathey Raskin of Las Vegas, are writing about how the money that is meant to be distributed to child protection agencies in Florida is distributed. What started off as a stopgap measure to protect funding levels in 2015 has today become a problem, because in Hillsborough County it has led to there being less funds available to help children and their families than is available in other areas.

 

The Problem in Hillsborough County

Hillsborough County has some of the highest rates of child abuse investigations in the state, and they also have high rates of child removals. Despite this, because of the policies that are in place, the county was shorted nearly $6M in state funds in 2016. In the meantime, other counties in Florida received approximately $44M to look after foster children that they do not even have. The problem was created due to shifts in the foster child population, and this has left already dangerously underfunded agencies and the children in their areas even more at risk than they were.

 

Last year alone, on average there were 3,6000 foster care in Hillsborough County, which is more than in any other county in the state. This is yet another reason watchdog organizations need to be put in place who will really advocate for children and make sure these agencies and their policies are doing the same. We are Robert Raskin and Kathey Raskin, and we hope you will stop by again soon, because raising awareness of these issues is so important.

Taken Over a Tantrum?

If you’ve ever had a two-year-old, then you have had to deal with a tantrum. Perhaps even dozens. We, Kathleen Raskin and Robert Raskin, are parents and grandparents, and believe us we’ve seen our share of them! It is inconceivable to us that in this day and age children can be removed from loving homes over something as ordinary as a toddler tantrum, but for one mother in California that nightmare became reality when she was reported to Child Protective Services.

An Ordinary Day
As the mother, who wishes to remain anonymous, revealed in an interview on the website Mom.me, she was trying to cook dinner, and her two-year-old son began trying to take toys from the baby. When the mother told him not to take the baby’s toys, he—big surprise here—threw a tantrum. After screaming and trying to hit his mother, she put him on time-out on a patio that was directly next to the open window where she stood, never more than 12 inches away. That 12 inches was all it took for a neighbor to report her.

Kidnapped by CPS
With no proof of wrongdoing and no evidence outside of a neighbor’s report that a child was outside in a safe patio in a secure backyard in a gated neighborhood, CPS was able to have the family’s children, who included an exclusively breastfed infant, removed from the household. After hiring a lawyer, getting statements from family, friends, and doctors, submitting photos, and attending court-approved anger management and parenting classes, the children were returned a month-and-a-half later. The charges against the parents were dropped without a trial, but it is simply unbelievable that it got to that point in the first place.

This happens all too often in this system, because there are no watchdog organizations to stop it. We, Robert Raskin and Kathleen Raskin, hope this couple is able to get the settlement they deserve in court, though no amount of money can make up for what they went through. Unfortunately, in other cases, too many families who have tried to sue for wrongful removal of their children have not seen their rightful day in court.

England’s Baby P Killer Denied Parole

When 17-month-old toddler Peter Connelly was found dead in his crib in North London, he was suffering over 50 injuries and clad only in a diaper. The child, known as Baby P, was known by child protective services to be at risk, but he was left in the home anyway, only to meet his tragic end at the hands of his stepfather. We, Kathleen Raskin and Robert Raskin, are sad to report that once again, the system has failed to protect a child who was in their care.

 

The Scandal

The death sparked outrage from citizens who were incensed upon learning the child had been considered to be at-risk, and social workers, police, and other health care professionals had already visited the child’s family 60 times over the previous eight months. His killer was his mother’s new husband, Steven Barker, who was sentenced to 12 years at HMP Wakefield. Many believe this sentence was too lenient, and the killer’s recent bid for parole only added outrage to injury.

 

The Aftermath

After the scandal arrested with Baby P’s death, five Haringey Council employees were terminated, including the children’s services director, who was later awarded a large settlement for her firing. The council spend the equivalent of $12M+ USD in confidentiality deals to cover their tracks. The only silver lining that has come from this child’s tragic death is the NSPCC’s Helpline has seen a 79 percent rise in calls due to the increased awareness on child abuse issues brought about by the case.

 

We are Kathleen Raskin and Robert Raskin, and our hearts go out to Baby P. We are relieved to see his killer is still behind bars, and we have to wonder how many more times the organizations that are meant to protect children are going to get away with failing kids and families before a system of checks and balances will finally be put in place.