Links and Resources Tell your friends
Send this to everyone in you know
Up to the Minute News and support
Usenet News Group
No newsreader?
Click Here

Share Your Experience

Dale
Her 5-year old son with special medical needs was taken from her based on lies, and placed in an unlicensed foster home where his medical needs weren't met.  He died 12 days later.

Jamie
She begged a caseworker to save her children while she was jailed for a minor probation violation, and was told that she couldn't run her home from prison.  Two months later her 1-year old son was dead, his twin sister seriously beaten

Adam
When he was a kid, he spent 6 months in "night-to-night" foster care, being shuffled to a different shelter, institution, or foster home every night.  

abduct \Ab*duct"\, v. t.  
1. To take away surreptitiously by force; to carry away (a human being) wrongfully and usually by violence; to kidnap.

 

Annie
Florida DFC wanted her 3-year old child but could not get a court order, in fact were told by a judge to leave the child alone.  So they had the police come in and arrest everyone, the only way that DFC could legally take the child.  FBI investigating the brutality.
Oscar and Ramona
When their children were playing in the vacant lot next to their house, a complaint was called in and without a search warrant or court order police brutally seized the terrified children from their home, and subjected them to neglect and sexual abuse in foster care.
Neil
A caseworker tried to tear his family apart over a simple case of head lice.  

cor·rupt (k-rpt)
adj.

  1. Marked by immorality and perversion; depraved.
  2. Venal; dishonest: a corrupt caseworker.
  3. Containing errors or alterations, as a text: a corrupt translation.
  4. Archaic. Tainted; putrid.

 

Susan
Complications from childbirth made her sick.  DFS offered to help, but instead they stole her baby.

Kris
When she found out that the father of her youngest child was sexually abusing her other child, she immediately sought help.  Instead, they took her children away for "allowing it to happen".

Irene
Shortly after the death of her son, her daughter's kids were snatched.  She was given custody of the children, who were loved and cared for.  When she reported a domestic dispute, though, the kids were put into foster care.  Now she's fighting back

kid·nap (kdnp)
tr.v. kid·napped, or kid·naped kid·nap·ping, or kid·nap·ing kid·naps 

To seize and detain unlawfully and usually for ransom.

Eddie
An angry teen-aged daughter launched a complaint of verbal abuse, which has escalated into a nightmare for this innocent family, causing this daughter and a three-year old girl to be removed from their home.
Bonnie
A single mother working two jobs, she found herself involved with the CPS when she left an abusive relationship.  They took her son without an investigation and now he lives, without a bed, in state care.  She wants him to come home.

in·com·pe·tent (n-kmp-tnt)
adj.

  1. Not qualified in legal terms.
  2. Inadequate for or unsuited to a particular purpose or application.
  3. Devoid of those qualities requisite for effective conduct or action.

 





Sponsored LinksYour Ad Here