Monday, December 2, 2013

Update on Our Family Crisis and the Investigations


The last month has been very busy. We are still looking for an attorney. We do have some law firms looking at helping us.

We have been wondering if Sheila Crabtree had taken our oldest daughter of her seizure medications. She took Angel and Catrina off their medications for Mitochondrial Myopathy. She will not allow them to use their medical equipment. Once we found this out, we started looking to see if it was violating our rights, judge had not assigned a court appointed attorney after the last two were no longer handling our case starting February 2012. This does violate our Constitutional Rights. The DA sent me an email which stated the law. Here are excerpts from two emails:

DA email (November 2013): Second, I am aware that you and your husband are currently represented by counsel – whether or not you have been in touch with your respective attorneys of late.  I am not aware that the representation by Mr. Hagan and Mr. Dickson has been formally terminated.

Third, because you are both still represented by attorneys, under Rule 4.2 of the Kansas rules related to the discipline of attorneys, I cannot communicate with any person represented by an attorney about matters concerning the subject matter of that representation.

Court Service Officer(CSO) email: Sent: Wednesday, June 26, 2013 10:25 AM
Subject: RE: court case file

 

Teresa,

You are correct at this time the judge has not appointed a new attorney to represent you and David unless we go back in to court for some reason.  I do want to make it clear that there have been no court hearings held without your knowledge.  The only action taken by the court was the Administrative Review held this January then there is another one scheduled for January 2014.  At this time the next scheduled court date is an Administrative Review set for January 2014. 

We are working to get them home now because Angel had a grand mal seizure since being taken off all of her medications. She does not spend much time with the adults in the home. Angel and Catrina must stay in the basement. They are only to come upstairs to eat meals, use the bathroom, and get ready for bed; otherwise they are punished. Angel and Catrina are being treated like property. If Sheila Crabtree had spent any time with Angel, she would know what her petit mal seizures and partial seizures look like. The grand mal seizure could have been prevented. Can Sheila Crabtree, social workers, and the court workers explain why our daughters’ health are getting worse not better? Can they explain the dramatic change in their vision? Can they explain why Angel is having seizures because she does not have epilepsy? The court violated laws by refusing to read the requests sent by their specialist stating they need to go home for medical reasons. The Crabtrees, social workers, and CSO are guilty of medical neglect; possible criminal medical neglect. Does the state attorney and GAL know about our daughters’ health? The CSO did tell us the judge will not accept any doctors’ reports which states their health is not good. He obviously is not interested in doing what is best for our daughters. Sheila Crabtree is also using our daughters as pawns. Here are some statements from her emails:

On Sat, Nov 23, 2013 4:07 PM PST Jeff Crabtree wrote:

>Hi,
>
>I wanted to let you know that last night Angel had a grand mal seizure.  It didn’t last very long but I did call 911, better safe then sorry.  It is the first time since she has been with us that she has had a grand mal seizure.  She was fine by the time we got to the hospital. 
>
>Since her last EEG was normal and she hadn’t had any seizures in a long time they had at one point taken her completely off the one anti-seizure medication.  They did end up putting her back on it at a much lower dose then she had previously been on after she had an incident of the small seizures similar to the type she was having when she stayed with us back in September of 2010.  With what happen last night they have now raised the level of that medication again, although she is still on much less then what she was on at the time she came to stay with us in June of 2011.  They are working on finding the right balance of medication to be enough to control the seizures but not more than she needs.  I will let you know if any other major issues occur.
>
>Sheila Crabtree
>


Nov. 30 

Sheila just gave me the proof she is using our daughters as pawns.

Teresa,

 

As I recall and understand it, agreeing to abide by the safety contract was a requirement for visitation with the girls.

 

For clarity on the issue now, are you going to abide by the safety contract?

 

Sheila Crabtree

 

Here are the issues with this email:

1.    A child with seizures from a genetic disease cannot have a normal EEG after their first seizure. I also have insurance paper work which lists no EEG or blood tests for seizures.

2.    Saturday was the visitation. She did not tell the social worker about the seizure as stated in the rules. This email should have been a phone call.

3.    She did not time the seizure. How long was Angel seizing before Sheila found her? Catrina has been told to ignore Angel when she is doing any twitching or shaking because she just wants attention. The twitching is petit mal seizures. Is this the first? Angel’s first grand mal was July 4, 2002. Her next grand mal was August 2, 2010. This is eight years between seizures. Sheila Crabtree is claiming there has been more grand mal while at home. This was not true. There have been two EEGs done while Angel was in custody. The doctor told the court in letters and testimony that these EEGs are very bad. They do not follow the progression of the disease like the previous EEGs did. These EEGs show signs of status epilepticus (fatal seizure, no medications can stop it) and the previous EEGs did not show this as a possibility. He explained the longer Angel is out of the home, her life is at risk. The last grand mal was Nov.22, 2013. This is only 3 year 3 month span. This scares me.

4.    Angel and Catrina are not seeing their specialists.

 

We know that there has been meeting and possibly hearings held without our knowledge and no attorneys for us. This also violates our Constitutional Rights. Here is part of the email from the CSO which talks about the meetings:

CSO email:  I do want to make it clear that there have been no court hearings held without your knowledge.  The only action taken by the court was the Administrative Review held this January then there is another one scheduled for January 2014.  At this time the next scheduled court date is an Administrative Review set for January 2014.  Those are not in court hearings, but they are done administratively by the judge.  If you hire an attorney and they file a motion then the judge can set the date for that motion to be heard before January. 

 

The investigations of DCF and Sedgwick County Juvenile Court has been in the news. The judge is blaming DCF. DCF is blaming the judge. What about the children?

Kansas officials investigate complaints about Wichita child welfare group


Legislators and others concerned that FaithBuilders organization is overstepping boundaries

 


 

 “What really upsets me about this is that it appears that DCF and FaithBuilders are picking on people who are the most vulnerable, people who have no one who’ll fight for them,” said Mary Dean, a social justice advocate in Wichita.

— State officials say they are investigating a faith-based group’s role in some child welfare cases after a Wichita legislator raised concerns that the organization might be undercutting efforts to reunite some of the children with their parents.

“The Kansas Department for Children and Families has more than 6,000 children in its care,” Theresa Freed, a spokesperson for the agency wrote in an email to KHI News Service. “The safety and security of each child is our number one priority. When concerns of their welfare are brought to our attention, we take those concerns seriously. DCF has been made aware of accusations regarding FaithBuilders. We are looking into the matter at this time.”

Freed said, “no time estimate is available for when our research will be complete.”

FaithBuilders is a nonprofit organization with about 30 foster homes licensed by the state in and around Wichita.

According to the group’s website, its mission is “…to be the hands and feet of Jesus to children and families in crisis here in our community. Our goal is to honor God’s desire that we serve the least of these.”

Andrea Dixon, the founder and director, said FaithBuilders' efforts were backed by more than 30 Wichita-area churches.

She said she was aware of the agency inquiry, which apparently began after State Sen. Oletha Faust-Goudeau, a Wichita Democrat, relayed complaints from constituents and her own concerns to DCF officials.

Dixon declined to say how many children were in FaithBuilders’ foster homes or to respond to the allegations.

“I work hard to serve kids and families all day long and I go to bed at night with peace, knowing that I did the best I could for that day. And I move on,” she said.

Complaints


Faust-Goudeau said she began receiving complaints in August that Dixon was encouraging at-risk families to circumvent the state’s foster care system by putting their children directly into FaithBuilders’ homes before or without a judge’s order.

 

Generally, when children are taken by the state and ordered into foster homes as the result of parental abuse or neglect, court-appointed attorneys represent them in a confidential hearing. The parents also are allowed legal representation in the custody cases. A judge then decides where to place the child based on evidence presented during the hearing.

Faust-Goudeau said she had three constituents tell her that after they had informally agreed to let FaithBuilders temporarily care for their children due to family crises, Dixon soon urged them to sign away their parental rights so FaithBuilders’ families could adopt the children.

Parents who declined, she said, were told their children likely would end up in state custody anyway with slim chances of being returned.

The state’s policy is to promote the return of foster children to their parents whenever that is considered possible and appropriate for the child’s well being.

Faust-Goudeau said officials at the DCF regional office in Wichita appear to have the endorsed FaithBuilders’ methods, preferring that children, most of them living in poverty, be adopted by well-to-do FaithBuilders’ familes rather than rejoined with their biological families.

“I want to know how much power these people have,” Faust-Goudeau said of FaithBuilders. “And I want to know who gave them that power.”

She said a DCF official from the agency’s Topeka headquarters notified her earlier this week that the situation was being investigated.

Sen. Forrest Knox, an Altoona Republican who has said he plans to introduce foster care reform legislation for the 2014 legislative session, seconded Faust-Goudeau’s concerns.

“I don’t like that people might feel like they’re being forced to sign over their rights to their children,” he said. “It sounds like there ought to be some formal procedures for helping families and for helping them get their kids back, because if those kids aren’t in state custody and the parents can’t get them back, I call that kidnapping.”

Knox and his wife, Renee, have nine biological children, two of whom still live at home. The couple adopted four brothers — then ages 5, 7, 8 and 13 — two years ago after having cared for them for two years as foster parents.

The foster-care system


In keeping with state and federal laws, DCF is charged with investigating reports of child abuse and neglect and with sharing its findings with local prosecutors. In cases in which a judge decides to place a child in foster care, DCF is responsible for the actual placement.

The laws are meant to protect parents’ rights while also ensuring safe environments for children to grow up in.

In Kansas, most foster care services were privatized in 1996 after the then-Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services failed to settle a lawsuit that accused the state of not doing enough to protect foster children.

DCF currently has foster care contracts with two nonprofit, nongovernmental agencies: St. Francis Community Services, based in Salina, and KVC Behavioral Healthcare, which is headquartered in Olathe.

St. Francis and KVC, in turn, have subcontracts with several organizations that have affiliated foster homes.

In Wichita, FaithBuilders homes are affiliated with DCCCA, a Lawrence-based organization that until July had administered a statewide contract for family preservation services. That contract has since been taken over by St. Francis.

Colleen Pederson, contracts administrator at DCCCA, said Dixon is well known for her ability to rally quick and substantial support for low-income families in crisis.

“She has an extensive system for getting whatever a family needs, whether it’s housing, money for utilities, diapers, cribs — whatever,” she said. “She knows lots and lots of people.”

'Hearts in the right place'


But some Wichita-area social workers said they were troubled by what they considered a too cozy relationship between Dixon at FaithBuilders and top officials in the DCF Wichita office.

“They are a very Christian-based group. They try very hard to help families and there’s absolutely no doubt in my mind that their hearts are in the right place,” said Connie Mayes, a 20-year social worker who supervised the Wichita DCF office’s foster care liaison operations until she retired in May.

“But there have been concerns about them in regards to boundaries — it’s enabling versus accountability,” she said. “By that I mean that they put so much into these families, but, at the same time, they don’t hold them accountable when it comes to making positive changes. Once they begin working with a family, the perception is that that family belongs to FaithBuilders and that FaithBuilders will be the primary voice for that family.”

 

Mayes said Dixon had an unusually close working relationship with Diane Bidwell, who runs the DCF office in Wichita. She said Bidwell often took a direct role in decisions regarding FaithBuilders’ homes in instances that typically would be left to lower ranking social workers and their supervisors.

In separate interviews last month, four licensed social workers in Wichita told KHI News Service that they suspected Bidwell had inappropriately shared confidential information with Dixon and that she allowed Dixon to overrule case workers’ recommendations on where children should be placed and whether children in foster care could return home.

Bidwell did not respond to a request for an interview and DCF officials would not discuss details of their investigation, so it remains unclear if the social workers’ specific concerns are being looked into by the agency.

The social workers also said they believed there were cases in which DCF, at Faithbuilders’ behest, had not done enough to place children with other family members willing to care for a relative’s child.

Each of the four social workers asked for anonymity, saying they feared DCF reprisal.

There need to be some clear parameters on what their role is,” Mayes, the former DCF supervisor, said. “No one has a problem with their being faith-based or with FaithBuilders being a church-run organization. The problem begins when they start running a case and when DCF lets them.

“I know these are well-meaning people,” she said. “But they’re not child welfare professionals, and the decisions that are being made in these cases need to be made by professionals who are responsible to a code of ethics and policy.”

'Lawsuit waiting to happen'


Another allegation raised is that DCF officials in Wichita were steering children ordered into state custody to FaithBuilders’ foster homes with the goal of seeing them adopted rather than reunited with their families.

Many, if not most of the children placed in FaithBuilders homes, according to the social workers and others, were black, many of them infants. And most of the foster parents were white.

Letter to PPS Director Teresa McQuin    Go to KHI website to view the letter.

 


 

 “What really upsets me about this is that it appears that DCF and FaithBuilders are picking on people who are the most vulnerable, people who have no one who’ll fight for them,” said Mary Dean, a social justice advocate in Wichita, who is black.

“We keep being told these people are doing God’s work, but I think that’s a misplaced concept,” Dean said. “I don’t think God wants these families separated.”

Dean communicated her concerns to DCF Protection and Prevention Services Director Teresa McQuin in phone calls, then following up with a lengthy Sept. 3 letter.

McQuin is head of the Division of Prevention and Protective Services at the DCF central office in Topeka.

Lynette Herrman, a former Sedgwick County prosecutor who now represents parents and foster parents in custody cases in juvenile court, said the issues raised by the social workers warranted thorough investigation.

“Child welfare investigations are closed,” Herrman said. “That’s federal law. If DCF is talking about these cases to anybody but law enforcement, that’s a lawsuit waiting to happen.”



The KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute. It is
supported in part by a variety of underwriters. The News Service is committed to timely, objective and in-depth coverage of health issues and the policy making environment. All news service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution. More about the News Service at khi.org/newsservice or contact us at (785) 783-2529


Head DCF official in Wichita resigns abruptly

Investigaton of complaints continues

 
By Dave Ranney
KHI News Service
Originally published Oct. 14, 2013 at 7:05 p.m., updated Oct. 15, 2013 at 6:05 a.m.

 

Diane Bidwell — who runs the DCF office in Wichita — and Rep. Forrest Knox in a photo posted on Twitter in early 2012 by the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services.

WICHITA — Diane Bidwell, the head of the Wichita regional office of the Kansas Department for Children and Families, resigned today.

She “…resigned voluntarily. Her last day (is) Friday,” Theresa Freed, a DCF spokesperson in Topeka, wrote in an email to KHI News Service.

DCF officials in Topeka earlier this month confirmed that they were investigating complaints that the Wichita office was steering children at risk of entering the foster care system toward FaithBuilders, a faith-based group that some parents said was undercutting their efforts to be reunited with their children.

The accusations prompted Sen. Oletha Faust-Goudeau, a Wichita Democrat, to ask DCF officials to investigate.

“All I can say at this time is that I don’t know if Ms. Bidwell’s resignation and my requesting an investigation were related to one another,” Faust-Goudeau said. “But if they weren’t, it sure seems like a major coincidence.”

Faust-Goudeau said she was contacted by a DCF investigator last week.

“All I know is that an investigation was, in fact, being conducted by the (DCF) secretary’s office,” she said. “And that there seemed to be a lot of interconnectedness between FaithBuilders and the DCF office here. As I legislator, I have to say I’d like to know more. All any of us want, I think, are facts.”

Attempts to reach Bidwell for comment were unsuccessful.

FaithBuilders has about 30 licensed foster homes in and around Wichita.

According to the group’s website, its mission is “…to be the hands and feet of Jesus to children and families in crisis here in our community. Our goal is to honor God’s desire that we serve the least of these.”

Bidwell’s resignation was the subject of an internal memo circulated shortly after 2 p.m., even though DCF offices were closed for Columbus Day. It read: “After serving the Kansas Department for Children and Families for two and a half years, Wichita Regional Director Diane Bidwell is moving on. An interim director will be named shortly.

“We would like to thank Diane for taking on the tremendous responsibility of leading our Wichita office. She was involved in many successful endeavors, including the Business Process Redesign of Economic and Employment Services that has significantly improved client care. She also played an integral role in the collaborative effort to encourage employment through the Green Leaf CafĂ©. Most recently, she has done a great deal of work to facilitate a move from the Finney State Office Building to improve safety and efficiency for clients and staff. These are just a few of her many contributions. We wish her well.”

The memo was unsigned.

 

Article on Judge Henderson sent by email

are you kidding me? Henderson drawing attention away from himself ? he's the gatekeeper - he is required to apply the law on cases before him - not take recommendation without "clear and convincing evidence" to prove a parent unfit


 

DCF is refusing to give the reports of this part of the investigation to Kansas Congress and news media. This violates laws.

 One DCF head social worker and Interim head CPS social worker have resigned from this part of the investigation released to the news media.

When will DCF and Sedgwick County Juvenile Court start following the federal and state laws plus stop targeting children and violating Kansans’ Constitutional Rights?

Check me out on Twitter: Bubblegum Mom

New videos on YouTube:

1.        Update on Investigation  www.youtube.com/watch?v=utx3ghi2XO0                                                                                                            

2.        Twitter and Investigation www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlxiQA3wkY                                                                                                                                                                                                                 

3.        Military, Kansas, and Court www.youtube.com/watch?v=HiVZlEahbrA

4.        Political Parties  www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKNoNoSmdhS

5.        Trailer for Channel   www.youtube.com/watch?v=52nDVLf6g8k                                                                                                                                                                                                             

 

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