Defend The Children.Org

Florida Victims

Police in Daytona Beach said two men living in a local home with eight children face child abuse charges in court Tuesday.

Authorities said the children have all been removed from the home and are in foster care.
Police said that Michael Milligan, the children’s father, and his friend, John Slater, both 31, kicked or punched two of the children -- 11- and 13-year-old boys, daily for one to two years.
The relationship between Milligan and Slater remains unclear.
Milligan was accused of physically hurting his sons in the past, while police said Slater broke the 11-year-old's arm in September after forcing him to do military-style pushups.
"(An) 11- or 13-year-old kid is forced to do pushups, and then when he doesn't do it, or he gets tired, then he (Slater) and break his arm. That's just horrible," Daytona Beach police investigator Jimmie Flynt said.
The boy had a cast on his arm and finally confided in a school resource officer that he and his brother were being regularly abused, Flynt said.
"(The boy) had a black eye. The other kid had bruises -- some healed some and that weren’t healed yet," Flynt said.
Flynt said the 11-year-old was told to say he broke his arm when he tripped over a dog. The boys told police they were regular punching bags for both their father and his friend.
Both boys said Milligan and Slater told them if they ever said they were being abused, the suspects would find them when they'd grown up and hurt them far worse.
Police said the boys told them the abuse happened while their mother was at work.
During Milligan and Slater's first court appearance Tuesday, two women who appeared to be connected to the men were mouthing words at them, but their relationship remains unclear.

Read more: http://www.wesh.com/news/29454015/detail.html#ixzz1aZerWyjh

Abandoned Baby's Father In Court

Man Charged With Child Abuse

POSTED: Sunday, October 31, 2010
UPDATED: 10:13 pm EDT October 31, 2010

The father of a 3-month-old baby appeared in court Sunday on child abuse charges after police said he left the baby in a ditch.
The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said Stephen Broughman took his son Larry for a walk in his stroller Saturday and left the child on the side of the road in a ditch. A neighbor found the child and called police.
The child's mother, Ashley Fleming, said she does not understand why Broughman would leave the baby.
"I haven't been able to speak with him yet. The detectives wouldn't tell me anything. My main concern was my child. I wanted him to get to the hospital. I wanted him checked out," Fleming said. "It's unacceptable. He's 3-months-old. I wouldn't let him out of my sight."
Fleming said Broughman has a history of drug abuse and the baby is back in her care and doing fine.
The judge told Broughman he was to have no contact with his son while the case was pending. He is being held on a $20,000 bond.
The Department of Children and Families is investigating.

TAMPA — From his bench in a Hillsborough Circuit courtroom Friday, Judge Emmett Lamar Battles peered at a man waiting to learn his fate.

Donald Dankert, 27, had asked for mercy. But Battles had seen the autopsy photos of an infant with lacerated intestines and bruises all over his body, some in the shape of fingertips.

"Mr. Dankert," the judge said, "fathers are supposed to protect their children. You abused and killed your son, Dylan.

"Your crimes warrant nothing less than the maximum penalty allowed by law."

Twenty years in prison.

Man killed estranged wife, 4 children in Riviera Beach

RIVIERA BEACH — An overnight murder-suicide has left six people dead – four of them children ages 10 to 15 – in a Riviera Beach home, according to police.

A fifth child is in the hospital and two other children were unharmed, police report.

Riviera Beach police say Patrick Dell, 41, killed his estranged wife, 36-year-old Natasha Whyte-Dell, and his five step-children.

But, police said, Patrick Dell sparing a 1- and 3-year-old who are believed to be the couple’s biological children together.

Police continue to investigate while Palm Beach County Schools officials are working to put grief counselors in place at the schools where the deceased children attended, according to information released by police spokeswoman Rose Anne Brown.

She said police believe Dell acted alone and are investigating the tragic incident as a murder-suicide.

Riviera Beach Police Chief Clarence Williams, who went to the scene this morning, said: “This is a sad day for Riviera Beach. Many families have been tragically impacted by this unfortunate incident.”

The scene unfolded shortly after 2 a.m., when a Riviera Beach police officer was on routine patrol and inspecting a suspicious vehicle at the corner of Avenue M and West 30th Street. As he inspected the car, he heard muffled gunshots and called for back-up.

Then, the officer saw a man leaving a home at 1225 W. 30th St. But when the man – later identified as Dell – saw the officer, he raised a hand gun and killed himself, Brown said.

When police entered the home, they found the children and Whyte-Dell dead inside. A 15-year-old boy inside had also been shot, but was still alive. He was taken to St. Mary’s Medical Center in West Palm Beach where he’s now being treated.

The two children identified as the couple’s biological children are now in the care of relatives, Brown said.

The children who died are: 11-year-old Javon Nelson and 10-year-old Daniel Barnett, who both attended Bethune Elementary School; 14-year-old Bryan Barnett, who attended Palm Beach Gardens High School; and 13 year-old Diane Barnett, who attended Howell Watkins Middle School.

Dead Homestead tot lived in a world of domestic turmoil

Child-welfare workers learned of family troubles involving the 2-year-old boy allegedly killed by his father, but the allegations were not enough to prompt the state to take him from his parents.

dovalle@MiamiHerald.com

Reports from police and state welfare workers show that 2-year-old Willie Brown lived a tumultuous family life marked by domestic strife involving his parents.

Miami-Dade police say his father, Lee Willie DeJesus, 23, beat him to death in his Homestead apartment last week.

Prosecutors charged DeJesus with second-degree felony murder and aggravated child abuse. The Miami-Dade state attorney's office plans to seek a grand jury indictment for first-degree murder.

DeJesus has pleaded not guilty.

Newly obtained records show:

The toddler's mother, Zipporah Brown, called 911 when Willie was whisked away by DeJesus' relatives -- as the mother tried fistfighting some of them.

The baby's maternal grandparents called police when DeJesus refused to give them the child after their daughter was arrested in Key West on shoplifting charges.

State welfare workers were notified when a complaint surfaced that Brown's utilities had been shut off.

The Florida Department of Children & Families investigated each incident, but determined there was nothing serious enough to merit removing Willie.

``We do have a history with this family, but there was no major concerns, and at the time we were involved with them there was no need to remove him,'' said DCF spokeswoman Lissette Valdes-Valle.

DCF will not release its internal reports into the handling of Willie's family cases because the agency has not determined hat the baby died because of abuse -- which would allow administrators to release confidential records.

BOXING LESSON

DeJesus told Miami-Dade police that he was showing his son how to box in the apartment when he hit him with a flurry of punches. The Miami-Dade Medical Examiner's Office ruled his death came from ``blunt force trauma.''

At first, DeJesus tried to blame a baby sitter, according to an arrest report.

In recent years, DeJesus had been arrested on armed-robbery and armed-burglary charges. Both times, the charges were dropped. He has a misdemeanor conviction for marijuana possession.

The boy's maternal grandmother, Willie Bee Brown, said she had long suspected DeJesus had been abusing the boy, but had no proof other than having seen some ``scratches and welts.''

``I asked if he's been abusing the baby and he said no. He lied to me,'' Willie Bee Brown said Wednesday.

The families had sparred before.

CONFRONTATION

In November 2008, the baby's mother called Homestead police to complain about DeJesus' family, who had been squabbling with her, according to an incident report.

Zipporah Brown told police that she had gone to his house and challenged a relative to a fight, handing the then-5-month-old baby to another of DeJesus' family members. When the family refused to give the baby back, Brown called Homestead police.

When Officer Maykel Acosta arrived, DeJesus walked out and handed the uninjured baby to Brown, who declined to press charges.

Acosta sent a copy of his report to DCF for a follow-up.

By March, Zipporah Brown was back living with DeJesus when she was arrested in Key West on a shoplifting charge. When her parents went to get the child from DeJesus' house, he refused to turn over the boy, Willie Bee Brown said.

POLICE COMPLAINT

Again, they complained to Homestead police. Officers knocked on DeJesus' apartment door to check on the child.

``He advised that the child was inside sleeping and became very defensive,'' Officer Brian Kennedy wrote. ``He had to be told to calm down several times as he became verbally disruptive and non-compliant.''

About 30 minutes later, they returned and DeJesus allowed an officer to see the child, ``who was sleeping at the time and was in good condition.''

The report was sent to DCF.

In May, DCF received a report that ``the mother's utilities have been turned off. The mother has been reluctant to seek medical attention for the child in the past.''




Tampa man, girlfriend charged with abuse in death of 3-year-old

By Jessica Vander Velde, Times Staff Writer 
Thursday, August 12, 2010


 

TAMPA — For a month, 3-year-old John Taylor Baxley suffered repeated abuse at the hands of his father and his father's girlfriend, deputies said. But authorities didn't know until it was too late.

About 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, dispatchers received a 911 call. The toddler wasn't breathing, the caller said.

The Sheriff's Office said it was apparent he had suffered extensive trauma to his upper body. He was pronounced dead at St. Joseph's
Hospital.

On Wednesday, deputies arrested Justin Garwacki, 26, and his girlfriend, Kara O'Connell, 21, and charged them with aggravated child abuse, child abuse, neglect of a child and failure to report neglect of a child.

The Sheriff's Office is still investigating, and deputies expect additional charges, said agency spokesman Larry McKinnon. An autopsy is pending.

Garwacki married Baxley's mother, Crystal Lee Ann Baxley, 25, in March 2006, county records show. She gave birth to their son that November.

But Garwacki also fathered a child with O'Connell, McKinnon said. The little girl is also 3.

In 2007, Baxley filed for divorce in Missouri, where she lives now. A judge set up a visitation plan and told Garwacki to pay $259 a month in child support, Missouri records show.

Last month, Garwacki brought the boy from Missouri to stay with him at a townhome in the 14000 block of Lemon Valley Place in Citrus Park, McKinnon said.

Garwacki lived there with O'Connell and their daughter, who is now in the care of Child Protective Investigations Division, McKinnon said. He said the girl doesn't have any obvious signs of abuse, but she will be medically screened.

Court records show that O'Connell was charged with domestic violence battery in 2009, but the charges were dropped.

 
Coleman is charged with aggravated child abuse and neglect
OKEECHOBEE COUNTY, FL - Deputy Sarah Green is a mother and grandmother, so she'll never forget that moment on April 21st. 

Green had been sent to do a welfare check on 2-year old Lilly Harden.

Someone opened the door of their trailer on Highway 98 and told Green the little girl and her mother weren't home.

The deputy went inside anyway and noticed a closed bedroom door. 

Lilly Harden was in that bedroom. Deputies think she'd been left there to die.

"Her head was hanging back because she couldn't support," says Green.  "She was lifeless, limp, just nonresponsive."

Lilly is now slowly recovering at St. Mary's Medical Center.  Doctors say she's suffering from Shaken Baby Syndrome.

"This is a beautiful little 2-year old girl, small for her size, about 20 pounds maybe," says Green.  "And right now, she's being deprived of the right to be a normal little girl.  To skip, to jump, to use her imagination."

Lilly's mother's live-in boyfriend, 26-year old John Coleman, is charged with aggravated child abuse and child neglect.

The arrest affidavit details the abuse.

Coleman told detectives he paddled Lilly on several occasions, using a belt or makeshift paddle.

Coleman said he would also force the little girl to stand in the corner on one foot as punishment.

The report says Coleman would smear dirty diapers in Lilly's face as punishment for not using the bathroom.

Coleman told deputies that, on the night of April 21st, he was tossing Lilly in the air.  He threw her up so high, she hit her head on a wooden beam and was knocked unconscious. 

Coleman says put Lilly in her bed and later tried to wake her up by shaking her.

Investigators say Lilly's mother, 28-year old Amanda Ashby-Harden, never reported the abuse.

She's charged with child neglect.

Detective Ted Van Deman choked up when describing the case.

"She had significant abuse, significant," he says.  "This is the worst I've seen."

Van Deman says doctors aren't sure if she'll ever fully recover.

Lilly's grandmother says she showed significant improvement Wednesday.  The little girl woke up and started talking for the first time since April 21st.

Her family said in a statement, "Lilly is improving on a daily basis.  She has a long recovery ahead of her."

"At this time she is awake, has limited control of all extremities and is unable to see.  It is unknown at this time if and how much vision will return."

"Her recovery is measured in baby steps and we have a lot of baby steps to go."

The family has set up a trust fund to help pay for Lilly's medical expenses.

You can donate to the "Fraternal Order of Police Officer Assistance Fund" at any Seacoast National Bank.

You can also send donations to:

4351 Hwy 441N
Okeechobee, FL 34972

Make checks payable to the Fraternal Order of Police Officer Assistance Fund.

 

About 200 Florida children died from child abuse in 2008

 

Published: December 29, 2009

Updated: 12/29/2009 09:07 pm

FORT LAUDERDALE - About 200 children were fatally abused in Florida in 2008, a roughly 20 percent increase from 2007. Unemployment rates and drug use also increased in the state — a factor in many of the deaths, according to a preliminary report.

The number of kids fatally abused who had involvement with the state child welfare agency also increased 20 percent, the State Child Abuse Death Review Committee determined in a report obtained by The Associated Press. In 2008, 79 children were killed who had some type of involvement with the Department of Children and Families in the past five years, compared with 66 children who died in 2007.

It marks a return to 2006 levels, when 76 kids who had DCF contact died.

"The numbers should be a call for careful scrutiny and accountability, especially when so many of the children were already known to the department or the hotline," said Andrea Moore, child advocate and Broward County attorney who represents foster children.

The investigation verified 198 child abuse deaths in 2008 and six deaths from previous years that weren't verified until 2008. That's an increase from 163 child deaths in 2007 and 170 in 2006.

Florida has one of the highest per-capita rates of child deaths reported to the state abuse hotline in the country, partly because its figures count such events as car accidents, drownings and suicides, which aren't included in most other states.

Twelve of the children died while in foster care, the Department of Children and Families said. Eighty-six percent of the deaths could have been prevented by a state agency like DCF or a caretaker. Seven percent were not preventable, according to the report.

But DCF officials said most of the children came into state custody as a result of abuse or with a pre-existing illness that led to their death, not because they were abused while in state care.

"The more I know about child abuse and domestic violence the more convinced I am that the roots are in substance abuse and mental health," DCF Secretary George Sheldon told The Associated Press. The agency has begun focusing more resources on treating those problems in adults and educating caseworkers on recognizing the symptoms.

Experts say the sour economy also contributed to the problem. Florida's unemployment rate jumped from 4.1 percent to 6.2 percent in 2008, accounting for the loss of about 339,600 jobs.

Unemployed men between 18-30 who watch the children while the mother is at work are the most common abusers, according to the report. Crying, toilet training and feeding are the most common triggers of physical abuse in young children.

"The fact that many of these males are unattached, non-biological fathers contributes to their inability to cope with crying and they very often lack appropriate knowledge of child development and parenting skills," the report says.

Many of the men also have criminal records and histories of substance abuse and domestic violence.

Among the deaths was a 3-month old boy who was thrown out a car window by his mother's irate boyfriend in Tampa in May. Jasmine Bedwell told caseworkers Richard McTear Jr. beat her on two occasions and threatened to harm her son. DCF determined caseworkers didn't take the threats seriously because she promised to get an injunction against him.

Sheldon said he's troubled by an increase in the number of violent child deaths, especially shaken baby deaths. He gets an e-mail alert on his Blackberry every time there's a report of a child dying from abuse.

The number of traumatic injuries increased from 45 physical abuse deaths in 2007 to 59 deaths in 2008.

About 465 deaths were reported to the Florida Abuse Hotline in 2008. Of those, 201 were verified as child abuse or neglect, according to the report.

The report comes after a newspaper investigation showed thousands of calls to the hotline each month aren't forwarded for investigation. Agency records show DCF screened out allegations of physical or sexual abuse, medical neglect and inadequate supervision of very young children. Calls from judges, social workers, school counselors and hospital workers are among those that have gone without investigation, according to The Miami Herald.

DCF has said they would review referrals from the hotline to prevention workers within 24 hours among other changes.

Florida ranks third in rate of child deaths due to abuse, neglect

Advocacy group Every Child Matters says 2007 deaths equal 3.8 per every 100,000 children


 
Florida ranks third in the nation in the rate of children killed by child abuse and negligence, according to a report released Tuesday by nonprofit child advocacy and lobbying group Every Child Matters.

The group determined that the 153 child deaths the state logged in 2007 amounted to a child death rate of 3.8 per every 100,000 children.

The group also looked at child death cases nationwide from 2001 through 2007. It concluded that during this period, Florida ranked 37th in child welfare spending, with $52 per capita. In that seven-year span, Florida recorded 785 child deaths linked to abuse or neglect, according to the report.

Police charge father with aggravated child abuse

He is accused of breaking infant son's jaw, arm and rib.

Published: Thursday, May 6, 2010 at 6:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, May 5, 2010 at 11:22 p.m.

A man accused of abusing his infant son admitted to breaking the child's jaw, arm and a rib in three separate incidents, police say.


Brian James Linsinbigler, 26, of 311 S.E. 8th St., was arrested by Gainesville police on Tuesday afternoon and charged with three counts of aggravated child abuse causing disfigurement to his 5-month-old son.

According to an arrest report by Officer Leah Hayes, the injuries to the baby were discovered by medical workers at Shands at the University of Florida and members of the state's Child Protection Team.

After Linsinbigler's arrest, he allegedly provided explanations for the injuries.

Linsinbigler told police that at one point the baby was in his crib lying on his side and crying. Linsinbigler told Hayes that he was going to give the baby a pacifier and in doing so, rolled the baby onto his back so violently that the baby's right humerus - upper arm bone - was twisted behind his back. Linsinbigler said he could hear the pop of the arm breaking and also felt the break as it happened.

The baby's rib was broken, according to Linsinbigler, because he squeezed the baby's torso too hard while he was angry with his own boss.

The baby was lying on the floor when Linsinbigler hit him with his open hand. Linsinbigler reportedly said he hit the baby so hard that the baby's head moved.

Following medical treatment, the baby was turned over to the Department of Children and Families.

Linsinbigler was being held at the Alachua County jail on Wednesday.

Additional details about the case - including the whereabouts of the baby's mother or who discovered the injuries - were not released by GPD.

ABUSE: Baby now in DCF custody

Colllier County

Father: SAMUEL SEJOUR

Victim(s): Elijay Kye Aliazar (3 months)

Date of Death: Jan. 2009

Father had shared custody with infant's mother. Son died of blunt force trauma to the head during visitation. Father charged w. 2nd-degree murder.

Duval County

Father: JOSI M. HALL

Victim(s): Kyla Hall (1 year)

Date of Death: 2008

Father had sole custody, and had been cleared of previous abuse allegations. Daughter died of blunt force trauma at home. 2008.

Hillsborough County

Father: CHAUNCEY ROBINSON

Victim(s): Chavon Robinson (22 months)

Date of Death: Feb. 2008

Father convicted Dec. 2009 of murdering child during visitation.



Osceola County

Father: MELVIN ORTIZ

Victim(s): Unnamed Son (5 years)

Date of Death: July 2009

Son beaten to death while visiting father, stepmother.

Palm Beach County

Father: TONY CAMACHO

Victim(s): Crystal Camacho (8 years), Nelson Camacho (10 years)

Date of Death: Dec. 2006

Father and mother were finalizing divorce. During Christmas visitation, father stabbed daughter, then killed her and brother Nelson Camacho (10 years) in arson murder-suicide. Mother had unsucessfully petitioned for protection.

Pasco County

Father: THOMAS LUDWIG

Victim(s): Diella Ludwig (2 months)

Date of Death: Dec. 2008

CPS granted father THOMAS LUDWIG custody of infant twins. Father charged with 1st-degree murder in Diella's death.

Volusia County

Father: MICHAEL REESE

Victim(s): Jeremiah Reese (14 years)

Date of Death: Sept. 2009

Jeremiah Reese died of "accidental overdose" at the home of his custodial father. Father had long history of abuse, neglect with CPS

Date of Death: Aug. 2009

Father arrested for murder of infant who was visiting father.

Police: Mom’s felon boyfriend beat, killed 2-year-old boy

Child suffered severe head trauma.

 A 28-year-old convicted felon is jailed in the beating death of his girlfriend's 2-year-old son, who Palm Bay police say showed signs of sexual abuse.

The boy was taken to Holmes Regional Medical Center in Melbourne Wednesday with a severe head injury, police said. He was transferred to Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children in Orlando, where he died Thursday at 2:15 p.m.

An autopsy showed brain hemorrhages that investigators say were caused by a beating or beatings.

Witnesses told investigators they saw Jason Padgett punch the child in the face and head in the three weeks before his death. Their identity was not revealed, nor did officers say why the witnesses did not notify police or child-protection workers.

The child's mother left him with Padgett while she went to work Wednesday night. Witnesses told police that he smoked marijuana while baby sitting the boy at his apartment on Pinewood Drive.

Padgett told detectives the boy fell off the toilet and hit his head on the floor and was bleeding and unconscious. He did not summon medical help. Instead, he gave him a bath and put him to bed.

The mother arrived home at 11:30 p.m. and rushed her son to the hospital.

Padgett has served prison time for robbery, grand theft, forgery and fleeing a law enforcement officer. He also has been arrested on charges of domestic violence, child abuse, aggravated battery and drugs, according to police.


Published: Monday, March 8, 2010 at 9:46 p.m.
Last Modified: Monday, March 8, 2010 at 9:46 p.m.

LAKELAND | A 7-month-old Lakeland boy remained in critical condition Tuesday morning, police said, the day after his stepfather was charged with attempted felony murder and aggravated child abuse.


Ryan Joe Clarke, 29, of Orlando, lost control Saturday when the baby wouldn't stop crying, Lakeland police Lt. Al Wilson said.

The baby, Mark Ward, suffered severe head injuries, police said.

Wilson said doctors have told police that the injuries to the child were consistent with shaken-baby syndrome. The child has "a chance" to survive, Wilson said, but if he does, he may have permanent brain injuries.

The nature of the baby's injuries showed that Clarke "didn't just drop the baby" in an accident, Wilson said.

Clarke was arrested late Monday in Orlando by Lakeland and Orlando police. LPD Sgt. Terri Smith said Clarke was booked into the Orange County Jail and was held without bail.

Wilson said Clarke was interviewed by Lakeland police Monday night.

The boy's mother is identified as Rian Basarich, also of Orlando. Wilson said the family called Clarke the baby's stepfather. It wasn't clear Monday what the relationship is between Clarke and Basarich.

The baby was taken to Lakeland Regional Medical Center on Saturday and then was flown to Tampa General Hospital, where he remained hospitalized Monday.

Police said the boy's grandmother, Bridgit Ward, who lives in an apartment near U.S. 98 and Griffin Road in North Lakeland, has legal custody of Mark. Wilson said Clarke drove over to baby-sit Saturday because Ward couldn't find a sitter.

"The investigation indicated that the suspect intentionally inflicted injuries on the infant while he was in (Clarke's) care,'' Lakeland police said in a prepared statement.

When Ward came home, the baby was unconscious, Smith said.

Ward declined to comment Monday.

West Palm Beach mother tells jurors about finding her baby dead
By Andrew Marra
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Updated: 7:04 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19, 2010

Posted: 5:59 p.m. Friday, Feb. 19, 2010

WEST PALM BEACH — A man accused of beating his 3-month-old son to death in 2007 listened on in a courtroom today as the mother told a jury about the day she found her baby dead and the father bewilderdly attempting CPR.

The mother was a key witness today on the first day of the first-degree murder trial against Tillman C. Moore, 25, a West Palm Beach man charged with the death of his son, Jayden Moore.

A jury listened as the mother, LaWanda Addison, tearfully recounted receiving a panicked phone call in September 2007 from Moore, who was caring for the baby in their home on Greenwood Avenue in West Palm Beach. He told her Jayden wasn't breathing.

She said she raced home and arrived minutes later. In the bedroom she found Moore attempting to perform CPR by himself.

"I asked 'Where's the paramedics?'" she said. "He said 'I was waiting for you to get home'."

She said Moore first told her that the baby must have suffered heat stroke after he took him outside in a stroller.

But he changed his story, she said, after officials at a hospital emergency room announced their son had a skull fracture.

Then, she said, he claimed that he had left him alone on the bed and speculated that he may have fallen.

Later, authorities say, he also claimed the baby had fallen from a stroller.

Addison portrayed Moore as emotionally unstable, threatening her, the baby and himself in the weeks prior to the baby's death.

Prosecutors are seeking a lifetime prison sentence for Moore. The trial is expected to last through next week and into the following week.

Man arrested in beating death of toddler; another man arrested for the beating death of his girl's friend's baby
January 01, 2010 12:29 PM

BELLE GLADE -- For the second time in as many days, a young man has been arrested in the beating death of his girlfriend's baby.

Antion Denard Lawrence, 23, of Pahokee, has been charged with first degree murder and aggravated child abuse for killing a 2-year-old.

An autopsy showed the baby, who was not identified, suffered from a long list of injuries including a torn liver, wounded sternum, torn small bowel intestine, hemorrhage to the adrenal gland, deep bruising to the neck, bruises on forehead, bruises on abdomen, bruises on back, scrapes on the penis and scrotum, and several other injuries in various stages of heal ling.

Investigators said the baby was found unresponsive in his home December 27 after two days of vomiting. He was taken to Lakeside Medical Center in Belle Glade, where he couldn't be revived.

The baby's mother, Crystal Banks, told Sheriff's deputies she didn't know why she let the beatings happen, but said on one occasion Lawrence left marks on the baby and she told him not to hit him anymore. Banks told investigators her boyfriend beat her baby for not eating, not going to sleep or not moving fast enough.

She said she thought Lawrence was jealous of the baby.

"He (the baby) always wanna be up under me," the arrest report said.

Lawrence told investigators he hit the baby with a belt, but not his hands.

“I don’t beat him, I tap him on the butt every now and then with a belt or something but fist wise or pickin up something heavy, no," he said, according to an arrest report. Lawrence said the last time the baby had "a whoopin” was "3 or 4 days ago before Christmas when he was hollerin and throwin things around," according to the arrest report.   

The baby's older brother told investigators that he had seen Lawrence hit the baby for wetting the bed. He also said Lawrence hit other children in the household with a belt.

Yesterday, a 19-year-old man Boca Raton man was arrested for beating his girlfriend's 12-month-old baby to death. Carlos Rivera remains in jail today.

The arrests were made the same week a report from the State Child Abuse Death Review Committee showed deaths from child abuse increased along with unemployment

Florida police: Mesac Damas killed his wife and five children then fled to Haiti

September 20th, 2009


Police in Naples, Florida said thirty-three year-old Mesac Damas killed his wife and five children then fled the country.

Authorities in North Naples found the bodies around 6:30 p.m. yesterday after receiving a concerned call from Damas’ sister-in-law about the welfare of her sister.

“When the officer walked in the house to do a check, he found a deceased person.  As he walked through the house to see if anyone else was inside, he found other persons deceased,” chief investigator Jim Williams said.

According to Damas’ father, his son has fled the country and is now living in Haiti.

Police: Man Shakes, Injures Baby Girl

Baby Girl On Life Support

POSTED: Wednesday, September 16, 2009

A Jacksonville man has been arrested on a charge of aggravated child abuse.
Jason Shegog, 28, is accused of shaking his baby girl, leaving her with skull fractures and other injuries. His fiancée, 29-year-old Victoria Pursley, is charged with child neglect.
Police arrested them on Sept. 3 after Pursley took their then-6-week-old girl to the hospital.
According to police, Shegog first denied hurting the girl, but then admitted to shaking the baby several times.
Pursley has been released on bond.

An Orange County man is in jail and facing murder charges in connection with the death of his 8-month-old son, deputies said.

Staffers at the Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children notified the Orange County Sheriff's Office on Friday evening about the death of infant Roosevelt Bradley III, who had been transported to the hospital in the afternoon from his father's apartment by an emergency vehicle.

Investigators interviewed both parents at the hospital on Friday, then arrested Roosevelt Bradley II, 28, on a count of aggravated child abuse.

The county medical examiner said Saturday that the boy's death was the result of foul play/homicide, according to the sheriff's office. Bradley is expected to be charged with first-degree murder.

Elizabeth Bradley does not live with the elder Bradley but had dropped her son and his twin sister off at about noon Thursday to spend time with their father. On Friday, Bradley called the mother and then emergency rescue services when the child seemed to have medical issues, according to deputies.

Bradley is in the Orange County Jail

Hudson man accused of child abuse after baby taken to hospital

By Times Staff
In Print: Thursday, June 4, 2009


HUDSON

Baby in hospital leads to Man's abuse charge

A 2-month-old girl was taken to the hospital on May 25 for projectile vomiting. Doctors there noticed blood spots on her brain and sent her to All Children's Hospital in St. Petersburg. There, she was diagnosed as having neurological damage and hemorrhaging in her brain and eyes: All the symptoms of shaken baby syndrome. "I did it," Anthony B. Curatolo told authorities, according to his arrest report. "I was too rough with her." Curatolo, 22, told investigators the child might have been injured when he accidentally smacked the back of her head against a doorway while carrying her. Or he might have bounced her too much in her bouncy swing, he said, according to the Pasco Sheriff's Office report. Kevin Doll, spokesman for the Sheriff's Office, said the baby was released from the hospital on Sunday and is in custody of caregivers. He would not release the identities of the caregivers or Curatolo's relationship to the infant. He said the girl's long-term prognosis is not known. Curatolo, a laborer who lives at 10160 Briar Circle in Hudson, was arrested Monday on a charge of aggravated child abuse and is being held without bail at the Land O'Lakes jail. According to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, this is Curatolo's first arrest in Florida.

  ORLANDO, Fla. -- Staggering numbers released Monday from the Department of Children and Families show a rising plague of severe child abuse in Central Florida
Since the start of the New Year, 41 children have died in the area, and, just since last month, five different caregivers were arrested in connection with the death of a child.

Since the beginning of March, three men and two women have been arrested in Central Florida, each charged in the death of a toddler age 2 or younger.
"The deaths that we have been seeing have been severe, very traumatic injuries, and also a number of injuries," DCF spokeswoman Carrie Hoeppner said.  DCF said while the overall number of child abuse cases is not up, they are seeing more severe cases.

So far in 2009 in Central Florida, they're investigating the deaths of 41 children. Among the tragedies, 15-month-old Blake Rupe of Tavares died from swelling in his brain and six broken bones. His mother's boyfriend, David Tatara, was arrested last month and charged with Blake's murder.
In a similar case, Michael Reid, 26, was baby-sitting his girlfriend's 4-month-old son when he called 911 to report the child had stopped breathing. Investigators said doctors found the baby had suffered severe head trauma. Reid was arrested in Osecola County last week and charged with murder.

: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 by Kelly Creswell

Father arrested on child abuse charges

CHARLOTTE COUNTY: A Port Charlotte man is under arrest accused of breaking his two-month-old son's leg and deputies say this wasn't the first injury to the tiny child.

The father of the young boy is behind bars because according to reports by the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office, doctors found that in just two months of the baby's life, he suffered three fractures in his legs.

The reports say his father, Bryan Finnegan, was watching young Aiden when he started to fuss. Investigators say Finnegan tried to change his diaper and pushed Aiden's legs forward.

Aiden's mother, Danielle Weinrich, says she came home and realized, "[His leg] wasn't bruised or swollen or anything. If you moved it he would cry, so we went to bed and the next morning we woke up and it was swollen."

On Christmas Eve, Weinrich brought Aiden to the hospital and according to deputies' reports, doctors found two previous fractures in Aiden's legs that were healing.

She says it was only then that she realized the boy's injuries weren't accidental.

"He told my dad, who told my mom, who told me because he wouldn't tell me that he was changing his diaper, and grabbed his legs and pushed them forward and it popped," the mom said.

Danielle says she and Finnegan, who used to live in the Port Charlotte home, have since split up.

She says she's only spoken with him a few times, but he's been able to see their two sons under supervision.

"I'm really happy about it because we've been through so much, me and the kids, and he hasn't had to do anything. But now he gets to pay for what he did," said Weinrich.

And now, seven-month-old Aiden is doing just fine.

"He's changed a lot. He used to sit there in his swing and not smile. Now he tries to talk and you can tell he's a lot happier now," said Weinrich.

Aiden still can't walk and Weinrich doesn't know if it's related to his fractures. But she says Aiden is already scheduled for a checkup Wednesday at the doctor's office.

CHARLOTTE COUNTY: A Port Charlotte man is under arrest accused of breaking his two-month-old son's leg and deputies say this wasn't the first injury to the tiny child.

The father of the young boy is behind bars because according to reports by the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office, doctors found that in just two months of the baby's life, he suffered three fractures in his legs.

The reports say his father, Bryan Finnegan, was watching young Aiden when he started to fuss. Investigators say Finnegan tried to change his diaper and pushed Aiden's legs forward.

Aiden's mother, Danielle Weinrich, says she came home and realized, "[His leg] wasn't bruised or swollen or anything. If you moved it he would cry, so we went to bed and the next morning we woke up and it was swollen."

On Christmas Eve, Weinrich brought Aiden to the hospital and according to deputies' reports, doctors found two previous fractures in Aiden's legs that were healing.

She says it was only then that she realized the boy's injuries weren't accidental.

"He told my dad, who told my mom, who told me because he wouldn't tell me that he was changing his diaper, and grabbed his legs and pushed them forward and it popped," the mom said.

Danielle says she and Finnegan, who used to live in the Port Charlotte home, have since split up.

She says she's only spoken with him a few times, but he's been able to see their two sons under supervision.

"I'm really happy about it because we've been through so much, me and the kids, and he hasn't had to do anything. But now he gets to pay for what he did," said Weinrich.

And now, seven-month-old Aiden is doing just fine.

"He's changed a lot. He used to sit there in his swing and not smile. Now he tries to talk and you can tell he's a lot happier now," said Weinrich.

Aiden still can't walk and Weinrich doesn't know if it's related to his fractures. But she says Aiden is already scheduled for a checkup Wednesday at the doctor's office.

Manatee man charged with beating kids, ages 6 and 9

MANATEE — A 30-year-old man faces child abuse charges after he beat his two children, according to the Manatee County Sheriff's Office.

Leonard Payne Sr., of the 3500 block of 14th Street West, was arrested Tuesday evening at a residence in the 1600 block of 26th Street West, where he had fled with his 9-year-old child. After his arrest, Payne told investigators he had panicked after he used a plastic toy to hit his child, who is autistic, after he tried to rub feces on his 6-year-old child Monday evening, according to a news release. He also hit the younger child.

Investigators said the older child had "severe bruising" and minor lacerations on his back and shoulders. Payne told detectives that he had "wanted to teach him a lesson," according to the report. His wife had to stop him from continuing the beating, the sheriff's office said.

The injuries to the 6-year-old child were less severe.

Payne "stated that he knew he was wrong and that he should have handled the situation in a different way," the sheriff's report states.

The sheriff's office started its investigation after a call was made to a child abuse hotline.

Payne was being held without bond at the Manatee County jail on charges of aggravated battery on a child and child abuse.

Bradenton father jailed after spanking son

MANATEE — A 43-year-old Bradenton man was arrested after he reportedly bruised nearly all of a child’s buttocks from a spanking, according to a Manatee County Sheriff’s Office arrest report.

James D. Bryant was arrested on a charge of child abuse after the boy was in pain when trying to sit down at school Monday.

School personnel contacted the abuse hotline to report the incident.

When Bryant was questioned by investigators, “he believes he didn’t do anything wrong, where he was just being a father. He said he didn’t get carried away spanking his son,” according to the report.

Bryant told deputies he spanked the child three to four times twice using an open hand because the child was being disrespectful.

Byrant remained in the Manatee County Jail Tuesday night on a $2,500 bond, according to the sheriff’s office Web site.

 


TAMPA - May2008, Michael Reid was watching TV when his 17-year-old girlfriend's infant son began to cry. Home alone with the baby, Reid, 27, told authorities he removed the 6-month-old from his crib and tried to comfort him, but nothing seemed to work. He grabbed the baby around the waist and shook him back and forth before dropping him onto a pillow.

The baby stopped crying, briefly. Reid picked him up again and walked outside, while bouncing the boy up and down. When Reid went back into the house, he covered the baby's mouth. The baby continued crying crying so Reid head-butted the infant with so much force, he told Polk County sheriff's deputies, that his head hurt, too.

When his mother returned home, she rushed him to the hospital, where doctors confirmed he had been abused. Reid denied it. The child has survived.

Eleven months later, out on bail and awaiting trial on child abuse charges, Reid again would be entrusted with the care of a girlfriend's infant son.

This time, the baby, 4-month-old Jeremiah Shaneyfelt of Kissimmee, died.

In the past six years, mothers' boyfriends were accused in the deaths of 13 children in Hillsborough, Pasco and Pinellas counties. The most recent - that of little Emanuel Wesley Murray, thrown from a car on Interstate 275 in Tampa - especially horrified the public. The men typically are 18 and 30, unemployed with little education and saddled with criminal records that include substance abuse or domestic violence.

Often, they are the caregivers for children whose mothers work or go to school. They have no emotional connection to the child and usually don't know how to soothe a crying baby or understand why it's dangerous to shake an infant. And they almost always lie at first about how a child was injured.


The majority of the children were white infant boys. Forty-five died of physical abuse with more than half of them suffering head injuries. Most had never been involved with state supervision before their deaths.

Moms were responsible for the majority of neglect fatalities, such as drowning, but the committee also found mothers failed to protect their children from male abusers.



Overall nationally, biological fathers still account for the majority of child abuse deaths - about 31 percent, said Don Dixon, chief operating officer for The Children's Board of Hillsborough County. But with 26 percent of such deaths attributed to mothers' boyfriends, they are "particularly lethal."


"Most deaths don't occur on the first abuse incident," Dixon said. "So we have a window of opportunity."

That's when a caseworker can swoop in and refer moms to shelters or other services. Background checks can be done on boyfriends. If there are problems, children can be removed as a last resort.


VIOLENT BOYFRIENDS

May 5 - Richard Anthony McTear Jr., 21, of Tampa, is accused of throwing his girlfriend's 3-month-old son from a car window while traveling southbound on Interstate 275. McTear is jailed on charges of first-degree murder, aggravated child abuse, kidnapping, felony battery and burglary with battery.

April 28 - In Tampa, Angel Robles, 25, is accused of killing his live-in girlfriend's 11-month-old son, Isiah Ian McGuire. Robles is charged with first-degree murder, aggravated child abuse and sexual battery on the child. Examiners determined Isiah died from multiple internal injuries and trauma to the head.


April 23
- Police say Alfredo Hudson, 21, confessed that he violently shook his girlfriend's 9-month-old daughter, Naomi Petit-Homme, at their Bradenton home. Hudson is charged with first-degree murder.


April 7
- Michael Joseph Reid, 27, a Polk County man, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of his girlfriend's 4-month-old son in Osceola County. In May 2008, Reid was arrested on child abuse charges involving injuries to a different girlfriend's 6-month-old son in Lake Wales. Investigators said the baby was shaken and head-butted. Reid is free on bail awaiting trial in the Polk case.

March 8 - Kenneth Lopez, 21, allegedly beats to death his live-in girlfriend's 2-year-old daughter, Gabrielle Randel, because she would not stop crying in their Tampa home. When Gabrielle didn't go to sleep easily, Lopez allegedly picked her up, wrapped her in a towel and began beating her. Lopez is charged with first-degree murder.

Sept. 5, 2008 - Robert Bradwell, 36, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of his girlfriend's 2-year-old daughter, Makaila Thompson, at their Tampa apartment. Bradwell claimed the child fell into the bathtub while he was outside drinking beer and smoking marijuana with friends, but an autopsy determined Makaila had been beaten.


May 12, 2008
- The bodies of Lisa Freiberg, 26, and her children Zachary, 7, and Savannah, 2, are found dead in their Lutz home. Freiberg's live-in boyfriend, Edward Allen Covington, 35 is accused of choking, beating, stabbing, dismembering and mutilating the family, along with the family dog.

Abuse case suspect sees court
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 at 11:52 p.m.

TRENTON - Matthew Roland's live-in girlfriend told investigators she tried several times to get Roland to call for help for his daughter, Kristina Hepp, the night before the 4-year-old died.  Chelci Rae Folds said he wouldn't make the call because he didn't want to go to jail for child abuse.

Folds apparently took no other actions, and a medical examiner later determined Kristina could have survived her injuries had she received medical care.

On Wednesday in the Gilchrist County Courthouse in Trenton, Folds, 19, made her first court appearance since being charged with child neglect by failing to protect. 

Folds had been living in a Waccasassa mobile home with Kristina and Roland, 23, when Kristina was found dead inside the home on April 27.

Roland was subsequently indicted on charges of first-degree murder and aggravated child abuse. The state is seeking the death penalty for Roland.

According to the Gilchrist County Sheriff's Office, Folds moved into the home in February, a day or two before Roland was given custody of Kristina.

During Folds' court appearance Wednesday morning, her stepfather said she saw very little of Kristina in April because Folds was working and Roland, an unemployed sheet metal worker, was the adult at home tending to the little girl.

In Fold's arrest report, Lt. David A. Aderholt noted that Folds acknowledged seeing bruises on Kristina's face and head and noticed the little girl was unable to walk or speak, was grinding her teeth and was unresponsive.


The arrest report stated that "Folds was aware of a prior incident when (Kristina) suffered injuries also as a result of the father that concerned her at that time as well as this incident, Folds failed to seek medical attention for the child."


Shelnutt said Folds was the only person working in the household and that during the last month of Kristina's life she saw very little of the child because Roland would have her ready for bed when Folds returned home from work.

"The courts knew he (Roland) was a violent person. Child welfare knew he was a violent person. Me and my wife and Chelci, we did not know this," Shelnutt said.

If Folds is able to post a $50,000 bond, she will be allowed to move back into the Mayo home of her mother, Barbara Folds, and her stepfather. However, she may not have unsupervised contact with anyone under age 18 and may have no contact with any of Kristina's maternal relatives.

If convicted of child neglect involving great bodily harm, Folds faces a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.

Another abuse report linked to Tampa baby tossed and killed on interstate

By Justin George, Thursday, May 7, 2009

TAMPA — Someone reported at least one instance of child abuse involving Emanuel Murray in the baby's brief three months of life, even before he turned up dead along Interstate 275, the Department of Children and Families said Wednesday.

DCF Deputy Regional Director Jan Gregory did not know who made the claim, when the abuse may have happened, or who might have been involved. Gregory said the report could be released publicly today.

It's also unclear if Richard "Ricco" McTear Jr. was a subject of the DCF investigation. He has been charged with homicide in the baby's death. Until recently, McTear lived with Emanuel's mother, Jasmine Bedwell.

Early Tuesday, Hillsborough County sheriff's deputies say, McTear, 21, showed up at Bedwell's apartment, attacked her and threw the baby onto the concrete floor. Then, deputies say, he picked up the child and drove away, flinging the infant out of the car on Interstate 275 around Fowler Avenue.

Since April 16, McTear had been a wanted fugitive who had not followed his probation requirements. On state supervision since June 30, 2008, he had been required to complete two years of probation for a felony battery charge, according to state probation records released Wednesday.

Probation officials last had face-to-face contact with McTear on March 12. His probation officer, Elizabeth Kartes, tried to check on him again when she visited Bedwell's home on April 8.

He was gone.

Bedwell, 17, told her that he didn't live there anymore. She said McTear hit her three different times and left. She told Kartes he faced new charges of false imprisonment, child abuse, burglary and battery.

The probation officer checked arrest records. She couldn't find these new charges or anything Bedwell had described.

Jo Ellyn Rackleff, a spokeswoman for the state probation office, surmised that Bedwell either had just filed a police report when the probation officer showed up or was going to.

She continued to search for McTear. Six days later on April 14, Kartes sent a probation violation report to the court, saying McTear had absconded from supervision and hadn't completed his required public service hours.

On April 16, a judge issued a warrant. On April 20, the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office assigned a warrant detective to the case. The detective went out twice looking for McTear but couldn't locate him, sheriff's spokeswoman Debbie Carter said.

It's unclear whether Bedwell ever filed a sheriff's report against McTear for the attack she mentioned to the probation officer.

She didn't return a phone call. But she did ask for a temporary injunction or restraining order against McTear on April 7 saying he had beaten her and threatened her. To persuade a judge to grant the order, she needed to show up for a court hearing Monday.

She didn't.

With Emanuel dead, a national outcry followed on cable television and on the streets in Tampa, with people asking why Bedwell didn't do more to protect her son.

Domestic violence abuse experts and victim advocates leapt to her defense in e-mails and letters to the editor saying it's impossible and unfair to second-guess what Bedwell should have done.

Many victims are too scared to follow through on securing restraining orders, fearful that just asking for one could set off their abuser. Sometimes abusers use charm or tears to beg for forgiveness, victim advocates said. Other victims' lives are so busy or entrapped that they can't even get free enough to drive to court.

"It's very frustrating," said state Rep. Michael Scionti, D-Tampa, a former Hillsborough County prosecutor who serves on the board of the Family Justice Center of Tampa, a domestic violence outreach center. "They'll go so far to try and help themselves, but because they're just victims to this cycle of violence, they don't have the confidence, the strength, to break free from their abusers."

At least two other ex-girlfriends in McTear's life tried to obtain restraining orders, as well. One didn't show up in court, too. The other failed to finish required forms.

McTear has an arrest record for domestic violence dating back to the age of 14, state records show.

At his first appearance before a judge Wednesday, he heard his charges: felony kidnapping of a child, two counts of felony battery, aggravated child abuse, two counts of burglary of a dwelling with assault or battery, child abuse, false imprisonment, violating the probation of his prior felony battery conviction and first-degree murder.

He was denied bail.

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Tampa's Moslim Al-Assadi faces new abuse charges after son describes dunking and burning punishments

Robbyn Mitchell and Drew Harwell, Times staff writers
Thursday, May 14, 2009

TAMPA — A man previously accused of torturing his daughter
faced new charges Wednesday after his son told investigators that his father punished him by shoving his head into a bucket of water and burning his hand with a hot frying pan.

Moslim Al-Assadi, 35, of 8901 N Boulevard was first arrested April 2 after detectives came to Oak Grove Elementary School to talk to his 10-year-old daughter.

The girl told Tampa police that in July 2008, Al-Assadi dunked her head into a tub of water until she could not breathe to punish her for finding his pornography. Police took the children from the Iraq native and single father, charging him with one count of aggravated child abuse.

As the investigation continued, Al-Assadi's son told detectives that his father made him go outside and fill a bucket with water, then tied his hands behind his back, turned him upside down and dipped his head into the bucket of water as a punishment. According to an arrest report, the grade school-age boy also said that his father once burned the bottom of his hand with a hot frying pan after he improperly prepared a meal.

Authorities have responded to six calls about alleged mistreatment since the family moved to Tampa in 2006. The children's mother, Arlene Heintzelman, 34, stayed in Pennsylvania when Al-Assadi moved, according to Hills­borough court documents. In 2003, two of the couple's three children fell from a two-story window while under her watch, according to Northumberland County court documents.

Police rearrested Al-Assadi on Wednesday and charged him with two more counts of aggravated child abuse. He was being held at the Orient Road Jail without bail.

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Man charged with child abuse; child had bruising, reaction to soap in mouth

OCALA - A 34-year-old Ocala man accused of beating his 8-year-old stepdaughter so hard she child could barely sit and forcing her to keep a bar of soap in her mouth for approximately 30 minutes was arrested Wednesday.

He was charged with child abuse, according to an Ocala Police Department report.

On April 26, an officer contacted the victim after receiving a report about bruising on the child’s bottom and swelling of her eyes and lip because of an allergic reaction to soap in her mouth.

The officer spoke to the girl’s stepfather, Rana Ramkissoon, 34, and he told the official he punished the little girl for getting in trouble in school.

Three days later, the little girl was tested and had scratches on her face and bruising on her rear. She told an official from Kimberly’s Cottage that on April 24 Ramkissoon picked her up from school. When told she received a note from her teacher about getting in trouble, she said he slapped her in the face multiple times. When she got home, she said, he beat her with a belt and got a bar of kitchen soap and placed it in her mouth.

Detective Stephanie McQuaig developed probable cause to arrest Ramkissoon for child abuse. Two officers went to his home to arrest him, but he ran from away. He later returned to the residence and was arrested.

In August 2006, Ramkissoon was adjudicated guilty for abusing the victim’s younger sister in late 2005. At the time, the child was 5.

Austin L. Miller

Man charged with felony battery and child abuse

OCALA - A 44-year-old man who reportedly abused a woman and her 11-year-old son was arrested by deputies and charged with felony battery, child abuse, battery on a law enforcement official and resisting without violence, according to sheriff’s officials.

Because the incident involves child abuse, officials would not disclose the relationship between the man arrested and the victims.

The woman called the Sheriff’s Office on Wednesday and told them she was beaten by Karl Andreas Zahradka. She said she and her 11-year-old son have been abused by him for years. The victim and Zahradka have children together.

The woman said on Wednesday she asked Zahradka to help her wrap a wound on her right ear she said was caused by him. The victim said Zahradka became agitated and began punching and pushing her. She said the ear began to swell and was bleeding, so she went to the hospital for treatment.

When she returned, she said Zahradka got upset while looking for scissors, and began hitting her 11-year-old son with a wooden drum stick. The woman then called deputies.

After taking photographs of the victims injuries, deputies went to arrest Zahradka. He refused to go with officials and was bitten on the right leg by a K-9 dog. He was treated for his injury and then taken to the Marion County Jail.

Officials noted they’ve visited the northwest home on at least two occasions where callers have reported alleged child abuse. Each time, the woman and the 11-year-old boy denied the allegations. However, on Wednesday, they admitted that the allegations were true, but said they did not want to cooperate with officials out of fear.

Infant death suspect was awaiting trial in earlier child abuse

Published: April 7, 2009

 


Michael Reid Jr.

A 27-year-old Davenport man who is charged with killing an infant in Osceola County on Monday was out on bail awaiting trial in an earlier child abuse case.

Osceola County deputies arrested Michael Joseph Reid Jr. on a charge of first-degree murder. The 4-month-old infant died Saturday as a result of his injuries, which were consistent with child abuse, investigators say.

In May, Polk County deputies arrested Reid in the abuse of a different child. Reid was charged then with aggravated child abuse, child neglect, unlawful sexual activity with a minor and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

The infant was seriously injured during the May incident, which involved a head butt, Polk deputies say.

Lehigh Acres teen's death led to 'wake-up call' at DCF

By AMY BENNETT WILLIAMS • awilliams@news-press.com • March 29,2009

While she was alive, 13-year-old Michelle Fontanez often felt weak and afraid.
Yet in death, she became strong.

What happened — or didn’t happen — in the last few days of the Lehigh Acres 13-year-old’s life has had transforming power.

It’s helped remake the agency that should have protected Michelle from the man who allegedly raped and killed her in 2006: her stepfather, Alberto Hernandez.

Hernandez goes on trial Tuesday. He’s facing the death penalty, charged with first-degree murder, sexual battery on a family member and aggravated child abuse.

George Sheldon, secretary of Florida’s Department of Children and Families, calls Michelle’s death “a wake-up call” — a tragedy that signaled to state leaders that something was seriously wrong with DCF in Southwest Florida.


“Since Michelle’s death, DCF has tightened down on making sure kids don’t slip through the cracks,” said Lee County circuit judge James Seals, who oversees child dependency court in Lee County. “There’s much more emphasis now on training ... there’s more oversight to make sure that important things don’t escape their notice.”

'Not my problem'

That wasn’t always the case.

Although Michelle told DCF caseworker Erica Cesare she feared Hernandez, that he’d been sexually abusing her since she was 5, the agency didn’t ask a judge to shelter Michelle.

Another social worker told Cesare that Michelle was afraid to go home and might hurt herself. Cesare’s reply: “Not my problem.”

Instead, the agency sent the girl back and asked Hernandez to leave while they investigated. He moved to a neighbor’s, then returned a few days later to allegedly rape and kill Michelle.

Later examination revealed a number of blunders:

• DCF hadn’t checked the family’s past, although The News-Press was able to learn that child abuse complaints against her mother, Migdalia Hernandez, twice led to children being removed from the home in Massachusetts. (The News-Press has repeatedly tried to speak with Migdalia; she has never responded. She has been charged with no crime in this case.)

One killed in attempted-murder suicide in Miami-Dade; child called police

A man shot and killed his wife early Sunday morning before turning the gun on himself.

Details are few, but Miami-Dade police said the incident happened around 9:30 on the 6700 block of Southwest 14th Terrace.

A child who was at the home contacted the police.

The wife, whose name was not released, died at the house. The man, whose name was also not released, is in critical condition at Ryder Trauma Center.

Last Sunday, a man shot his wife and three others before killing himself after a domestic dispute.

On February 25, Pablo Amador, a piano teacher and father of four, killed his wife, two daughters and then himself with a gun.

March 09, 2009

Toddler dies after apparent beating, deputies say

TAMPA -- A 2-year-old girl died Sunday after deputies say her mother's boyfriend beat her inside a Tampa hotel. Gabrielle Randel cried and cried Saturday night when 21-year-old Kenneth G. Lopez, left, thought she should be sleeping, sheriff's spokeswoman Debbie Carter said. So, Lopez wrapped the girl in a towel, wound a sheet around her face and body and beat her with his hands, Carter said.

Sunday morning, at 5 a.m., Gabrielle's mother, Danielle McCleary, 23, called authorities to report her child was unconscious and not breathing. Gabrielle was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital with blunt trauma to the forehead, multiple bruises, abrasions and a hand mark on her body, according to an arrest report.

She was pronounced dead at 1 p.m. Sunday, Carter said.

McCleary told deputies she and Lopez had been living at the Homestead Studio Suites Hotel, 5401 Beaumont Center Blvd. just off of Hillsborough Ave., for two weeks after moving here from Illinois.

Also in Room 108 at the time was Gabrielle's 3-year-old brother, who is now in custody of the Department of Children and Families.

When questioned about the incident, Lopez admitted to beating the girl, Carter said. He was charged with aggravated child abuse.

Additional charges stemming from the toddler's death are pending a Medical Examiner's review.

Police Say Lake County Man Killed Girlfriend's Child

Thursday, March 05,2009

TAVARES -- A Lake County man was charged with second-degree murder and child abuse after the death of his girlfriend’s young son.

David Tatara, 27, was watching the 15-month-old in December.

He told investigators he found the boy on the floor under his playpen, and that he likely got hurt climbing out.

The boy died days later.  Doctors said he had six partially healed bone fractures.

Months prior to Blake's death, the Department of Children and Families closed a case involving abuse allegations in the home.

DCF has since admitted it was negligent in monitoring the child's well-being

Couple charged with child abuse

PANAMA CITY — A Panama City woman and her boyfriend were arrested Tuesday night on accusations of abusing an 11-year-old boy with Downs Syndrome, authorities said.  

Tina Gainer and Shelton Deon Watson Jr., both of Panama City, were arrested on charges of child abuse after they were reportedly observed at the Massalina Public Housing complex holding down Gainer's son and striking him with a leather weightlifter's belt, according to Panama City Police Department officials.

According to multiple eyewitnesses, Watson, 31, held the boy down while Gainer, 45, struck him in the face, chest, legs and crotch with the belt, causing bodily harm, police said.

Police investigators said the child has been removed from the mother's custody and place with the Florida Department of Children & Families, where he will be placed in foster care.

The child did not require immediate medical attention, investigators said but was scheduled to see a physician Wednesday.

Gainer and Watson were taken to Bay County Jail and are expected to make a first court appearance Wednesday, jail officials said.

Welfare workers warn not reporting child abuse can be deadly

Welfare workers warn that child sexual abuse flourishes because, far too often, adults fail to act when children cry for help.

Since she was a small girl, her father had been molesting her, she told classmates, who in turn told their parents.

On Wednesday, days after she told friends to ''pray for her,'' Priscila, 14, was shot and killed by her father. Pablo Josue Amador also killed his wife, another daughter and then himself.

Child welfare authorities say the Amador family's tragedy should serve as a dire warning: Secrets can kill.

Jacqui Colyer, the new Miami administrator for the Florida Department of Children & Families -- on the job less than two weeks when the killings occurred -- wants teachers, coaches, counselors, pastors and parents to understand how lethal sexual abuse can be. And to act -- quickly.

Failing to report a reasonable suspicion of abuse, Colyer said, is not merely misguided. It's against the law in Florida. And it also leaves children at great risk, she added.

''We all have to be held accountable,'' Colyer said.

Sometimes, said John Schuster, spokesman for the Miami-Dade schools, children will disclose their abuse to a teacher, who is obligated under the law to report it. ``Our educators are in a unique position, because they may be the only person the child feels he or she can talk to when something like that happens.''

DCF is investigating the deaths of Priscila, 14, and her 13-year-old sister, Rosa, Colyer said, because administrators are concerned Priscila may not have been the only victim of Pablo Amador, who was a music teacher and gave private lessons in his home.

''He had children in his home all the time,'' Colyer said. ``His house was the house of music. There could be [others] now who come forward and say something.''

''His own daughter took a long time to disclose this. There could be others,'' she added.

Amador, 54, a former tenor with the Greater Miami Opera chorus, shot and killed his wife, Maria Joy, 47, and daughters Rosa and Priscila shortly before 6 a.m. Wednesday inside their Palmetto Country Club Estates home, police say. His son, Javier, fled unharmed and called 911. Another daughter, Bea, was not home.

`IT WAS TOO LATE'

Two of Priscila's classmates each told one of their parents that the girl had told them in recent weeks that her father had been molesting her since elementary school. The father of one of the classmates said Thursday that Priscila had given a ''desperate'' letter to his daughter before her death and that he had read it.

The father did not say why he did not report to authorities the teen's disclosure.

The mother of the other classmate told reporters she had planned to call authorities, but ran out of time. 'I was just telling my daughter, `We gotta do something; we gotta do something,' '' she said.

``It was too late.''

Experts say adults in such circumstances may have doubts that the accusation is true.

KIDS DON'T LIE

But ''children do not lie about this. They just don't,'' said Trudy Novicki, a 25-year state prosecutor who is now director of Kristi House, a full-service residential program for victims of sex abuse.

Cheleene B. Schembera, a 27-year child welfare administrator and inspector general at DCF, who now works as a consultant, said the pressure on a child is to keep the family's secret. ''What motive would a child have to lie?'' she asked. ``In almost every instance, the child has no motivation to lie -- and the consequences of telling the truth are so much more detrimental.''

And there's another misperception that can lead adults to not report suspicions of abuse: that child abuse only occurs in poor, uneducated, marginal families, not professional, middle-class families.

Experts say child neglect and physical abuse are indeed far more likely to occur in struggling families, but child sex abuse occurs across all demographic categories.

Novicki said she has seen child sex abuse victims who were molested by clergymen, teachers, an FBI agent and the parent of a former Miss America. ''I can't think of a profession you can name where we have not come across a perpetrator,'' she said.

``It cuts across all socio-economic lines.''

ACT QUICKLY

Schembera, who has reviewed scores of sexual abuse cases in her career, said adults who are confronted with allegations of sexual abuse need to act quickly, because families coping with the potential exposure of their worst secrets are at enormous risk.

For the abuser, ''the fear of being disclosed is so great that they could engage in any number of behaviors -- and killing the entire family might be one of them,'' Schembera said.

''`Once you learn of this sort of activity, you have a moral and legal obligation to report it immediately and without delay,'' she said, ``because no one knows which of these cases is going to end up in a horrendous event of this magnitude.''

DEFEND Comments  We agree being silent hurts the children,  however, when a protective parent or someone associated with the protective parent even mandated reporters reports abuse, the child is often removed from the protective parent and placed with the pedophile. 

Tampa Man Charged With Child Abus 

Published: February 14, 2009

TAMPA - A Tampa man is accused of snatching his 1-year-old child out of a moving car during an argument with his estranged wife, putting the child in harm's way, an affidavit states.

Jo'ar Judas Michel, 24, of 8207 N. Brooks St., was held without bail at the Orient Road Jail today. He is charged with felony child abuse, felony interference with custody, felony witness tampering and misdemeanor domestic battery.

Tampa police arrested Michel about 3 p.m. Friday in connection with an incident at his home on Wednesday, an affidavit states.

According to an affidavit, Michel became upset with his estranged wife while she was buckling their child into his car seat because she had disrespected him in front of his current girlfriend.

Michel poked his estranged wife in the cheek, then punched her in the face, the affidavit states.

As the woman climbed into the passenger side of the car to leave, Michel began unbuckling the 1-year-old while the car was moving, the affidavit states.

The woman screamed for the driver to stop and called police. Michel then grabbed his estranged wife out of the car by her ponytail and smashed her cell phone, the affidavit states.

A Cape Coral man accused of severely beating his 7-week-old daughter, has waived his right to a speedy trial.

Geoffrey Scott Hutson, 41, is charged with cruelty toward a child causing great bodily harm to his daughter, Avery.


Hutson on Wednesday waived his right to a speedy trial in the case. A pretrial conference is scheduled for June 2 before Lee Circuit Judge Edward J. Volz Jr.

Hutson is accused of severely beating Avery, causing skull fractures and multiple bruises.

The infant was given a blood transfusion and airlifted to All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg.

She was released from the hospital two weeks later and is back at home with her mother.

Hutson is being held in the Lee County Jail in lieu of $150,000 bail

Man arrested on child abuse charges

updated 10:12 a.m. ET, Fri., Jan. 30, 2009

LEE COUNTY: A North Fort Myers man was arrested on child abuse charges after allegations surfaced that he held a child's face in a puddle of urine as a punishment.

On January 22, detectives with the Lee County Sheriff’s Office received a report of possible child abuse from the Florida Department of Children and Families.


Deputies say the report alleged that Joseph P. Gariano had shoved a juvenile victim to the ground and held her face in a puddle of urine as punishment for urinating on the floor.

There are also allegations that Gariano submerged another juvenile victim underwater in a bath tub because he was angry that the child was crying.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office Child Abuse Investigation Unit took on the investigation.

Detectives assigned to the case met spoke to witnesses that knew about the alleged incident.

On January 29, investigators met with Gariano at Lee County Sheriff’s Office Headquarters and determined probable cause existed to charge him with two counts of Aggravated Child Abuse.

He was arrested and taken to the Lee County Jail.

Parker Man Arrested for Aggravated Child Abuse
02/05/09 - 04:18 PM
Parker Police Department
click for larger image Parker, Fla:

The Parker Police Department has arrested a Parker man for the offense of Aggravated Child Abuse.  Andrew Steven Gordey, 25 years of age, was arrested today stemming from an incident involving his 2-month-old child.  Parker Police was contacted after the child was at the Bay Medical Center Emergency Room.  The child was treated for serious injuries that he received earlier that day.  The child underwent emergency surgery due to the injuries.  Gordey was arrested at a Lynn Haven work site today without incident.  He is being held at the Bay County Jail pending a first appearance in a local court on Friday.  The Florida Department of Children and Families is assisting in this case also. 

Detective Aaron Wilson
Parker Police Department

Published: February 05, 2009 03:54 pm            

PAIR CHARGED WITH ABUSE; CHILD'S DEATH A MYSTERY

18-month-old, who died in March 2008, had been bitten, bruised

By Jeff Waters, Democrat Reporter

Despite bruises to her face and legs, and a human bite wound to the thigh, it still isn't clear what killed 18-month-old Olivia Mackensie Rescigno, found dead in a crib at her Suwannee County home last March. However, the child's mother and stepfather have now been arrested on charges of abuse and neglect, jail records show.

Ronald Edward Kramer Jr., 26, of 15318 CR 250, Live Oak, was charged with aggravated child abuse and neglect of a child resulting in great bodily injury. Rebecca Lee Rescigno, 25, same address, was charged with aggravated child abuse and neglect of a child resulting in great bodily harm. They were arrested Wednesday and remained in the Suwannee County Jail as of Thursday on $75,000 bond each.

Olivia Rescigno was found dead in her crib at her Suwannee County home on March 14. According to sheriff's reports, Kramer, a registered sex offender, had "intentionally inflicted a bite wound to (the) victim's left thigh area." Bruises were also apparent on the child's face and legs, reports show. However, none of the injuries would have proved fatal, according to authorities.

"She had injuries that were consistent with child abuse, but not necessarily with death," said Sheriff Tony Cameron.

According to a report filed by Sheriff's Deputy Wayne Kelly, emergency crews responded to the home around 9 p.m. in reference to a report of an infant who was not breathing. The child had been found in her crib by Kramer, who reportedly told Kelly that he laid the child down for a nap around 5:30 to 6 p.m. Kramer then stated he watched TV for about 10 minutes before going outside to help neighbors work on a car.

Around 6:30 to 7 Kramer ate dinner at a neighbor's home but told Kelly he checked on the child before going. After dinner Kramer reportedly opened the back door to hear if the baby was crying. Hearing nothing, he went back outside for about an hour before going back in to prepare food for the child. It was then, Kramer said, that he noticed Olivia was not breathing. Reports state that Kramer told Kelly he "freaked out" and ran to a neighbor's house screaming for help. A neighbor performed CPR on the child until rescue arrived, but was unsuccessful. Olivia was pronounced dead at Shands Live Oak at 9:15.

Rebecca Lee Rescigno, was at work at Pilgrim's Pride at the time.

She and Kramer told Kelly that the infant had mild sleeping problems and chronic ear infections and had been hospitalized just a few weeks earlier for flu-like symptoms.

Rescigno told Kelly that the child was herself responsible for the bruises on her body, stating the infant was having a fit in the crib several days prior, according to sheriff's reports. She stated that the child was jumping around the crib and hit her head on the crib bars. She did not explain how the child received the bite mark.

"Frustrated" dad charged with aggravated child abuse

Manatee County deputies say the father elbowed the child for not eating, threw him to the floor and heard popping and cracking sounds when he rubbed the baby's back.

Bradenton, Florida -- A young father, frustrated with the medical problems of his 3 year-old child, was arrested for aggravated child abuse Wednesday, the Manatee County Sheriff's Office said.

Matthew D. Dix, 21, of 6000 34th Street West was charged after deputies interviewed him about the child's skull fracture reported by doctors at All Children's Hospital.

His fiancée told deputies she had no idea how the child was injured, but later said that Nix has "the tendency to get very frustrated with the baby," the sheriff's office said, adding that Nix "admitted to shaking the baby of several occasions."

Under questioning at the sheriff's office, he admitted to being frustrated Monday night because the child wouldn't eat and had gas and diarrhea, investigators said.

The sheriff's office gave the following narrative of what happened next:

"Nix tried to give the child medicine and scraped the roof of the child's mouth with the dropper, causing the baby's mouth to bleed profusely. Nix admitted to being frustrated, then elbowing the child in the stomach because he would not eat or stop crying. As Nix stood up with the baby he forcefully threw the baby to the floor, causing the child's head to strike the base of a metal floor lamp. Nix went on to disclose that he has shaken the baby on several different occasions. He further recalled rubbing the baby's back hearing popping and cracking sounds. He later added that he has held the baby up, and pulled his arms apart, out of frustration. Nix was provided a doll and demonstrated his actions on video."

Deputies said Nix was taken to jail without incident.

The child, whose identity was not disclosed, was reported in stable condition.

Investigators said Nix and his fiance told them they have been having medical problems with their child and had brought the baby to several different doctors at hospitals in Manatee, Sarasota and Pinellas Counties, for weight loss and possible stomach problems.

.


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 

 

Kashon Scott

The jury found Kashon Scott guilty of manslaughter and aggravated child abuse in the May 29, 2007 death of 3-year-old Zahid Jones Jr. after a week’s worth of trial and seven hours of deliberations Monday.

Manslaughter is a lesser charge than what the state initially charged Scott with: first-degree felony homicide. The jury returned its verdict at 9 p.m. after requesting to listen again to over an hour and a half of evidence police interviews and initially feeling a verdict could not be reached.

“That is a very respectable verdict; I do not find any fault with the jury’s verdict,” said Assistant State Attorney Francine Donnarummo, lead prosecutor for the state of Florida vs. Kashon Scott. “This is justice, this is why we have a trial.”

Scott faces a maximum possible sentence of 60 years in prison, and will be sentenced before Lee County Circuit Judge Mark Steinbeck on Oct. 27 in a Lee County courtroom.

Scott’s attorneys, led by Michael Reiter, raised several issues of accused misconduct on the part of the state in a motion to have the trial thrown out Monday morning.

“Even if (Steinbeck) doesn’t, we have the right to ask for another trial and appeal,” said Reiter. Reiter said an appeal would come from the defense at Scott’s request.

Reiter asked Steinbeck to consider ruling on prosecutorial misconduct on the grounds of prosecutors coaching Jack and Jessica Nash, Zahid’s 11-year-old brother and 13-year-old sister, to say “I don’t remember” to defense attorneys; that Jack and Jessica changed their testimony as to Scott’s alibi during the case without notice to the defense prior to trial; and that swabbing of belts potentially used to hit Zahid the weekend before his death destroyed any possible fingerprints and potential evidence to Scott’s defense.

Steinbeck will give the state two weeks to respond to the accusations and a hearing will be set for the judge to rule on the defense’s motions. The judge could rule to throw out the case if he agrees with the defense.

“I’m not terribly concerned,” said Donnarummo, who felt since the content of the motions had been previously discussed and the state’s counter-arguments were strong, it would have little bearing on today’s outcome.

Earlier in the day, the jury heard closing arguments from both the state and the defense.

“From the battered and bruised body of that child... there is no question that child suffered aggravated child abuse... but what would motivate someone to be so blunt to do that to a baby?” state prosecutor Bob Lee told jurors Monday morning about 3-year-old Zahid. “There was a rivalry going on that weekend. A rivalry over the affections of Nicole Brewington. After Zahid Jones Sr. went off to prison, who comes on the scene? The defendant does. We know that weekend that Nicole Brewington is carrying the baby of the defendant. What could trigger what happened? He’s getting out of prison.”

Lee told the jury that Scott focused his abuse on Zahid because of his father, and was less harsh against his brother and sister, Jack and Jessica.

“There are two other children in this family; their names are not Jones, their names are Nash,” Lee said. “That weekend, that man focused upon this baby. Jealousy is a powerful, powerful emotion... and when something touches it off, it can turn violent.”

State attorneys argued throughout the week-long trial that Kashon Scott caused the fatal perforation to Zahid’s bowel through blunt-force trauma.

Though several state witnesses, including Brewington’s sister Latroyer Lamar, testified Scott was at Brewington’s Cape Coral home the Thursday prior to Zahid’s death, a number of Scott’s family members have maintained he was at his brother Chester Scott’s house until late Saturday evening, allegedly after Zahid’s symptoms began.

“All three statements of Jessica, all four statements of Jack, my client’s statements, all consistent... Zahid threw up on Saturday, before my client got there,” argued Michael Reiter, Scott’s lead defense attorney.

The state argued Zahid became distressed on Sunday, after Scott arrived and allegedly “whooped” Zahid in one of the home’s bathrooms the previous night.

“(The state) doesn’t consider just vomiting and pain to be part of the distress; yes it is,” said Reiter. “You didn’t hear one bit of evidence... that anyone said my client caused that blow... they want you to jump to that conclusion, there’s no evidence to support it.”

During a police interview, Scott said multiple times that he didn’t hit Zahid over the weekend prior to his death, but that he would take the blame to protect Brewington. Scott also told Cape Coral Police Department detectives Christy Ellis and Scott Johnson and Lieutenant Michael Urraro that he punished Zahid with a belt to “make him a better man than his father.”

“He said, ‘I’m willing to take the heat,’” Reiter told jurors. “Don’t you let him do that. Don’t let him take the heat for somebody else.”

A major component of the state’s case against Scott was testimony from Jack and Jessica regarding alleged abuse of Zahid; Jessica testified last week that she heard Scott “whooping” Zahid in a bathroom of their home the Saturday night before he died. Jack said Scott hit him and Zahid in the chest over that weekend.

But the defense demonstrated inconsistencies in the childrens’ statements during the trial versus those made during previous interviews and depositions taken several months prior by attorneys.

Jack and Jessica had trouble remembering statements posed by the defense regarding what they had told police, and sometimes gave conflicting statements to ones they had made previously, making this a major crux for the jury.

“Their main witnesses were children,” said Donnarummo.

Donnarummo said the state was not at fault for telling Jack and Jessica to say “I don’t know” if they didn’t know the response to a question.

The families of Scott and Jones, including Zahid’s biological father Zahid Jones Sr., were dismissed separately following the reading of verdict and dismissal of the jury.

Dade County Father Charged With Child Abuse

Published: June 5, 2008

DADE CITY - The 26-year-old father was upset that his baby wouldn't stop crying and had a soiled diaper, according to a Pasco County Sheriff's Office report.

The father picked the 2-month-old up by the arm, heard a "pop" and immediately put the infant down, the report states.

That was May 30. On Wednesday, Timothy Shawn Smith, 26, of 37313 Rose Ave., was arrested on a charge of aggravated child abuse.

At first, Smith reportedly told the baby's mother and deputies that he rolled on top of the child as they slept. A child abuse expert, however, determined the injury was not consistent with the father's statement.

In the expert's opinion, the baby had been abused, according to the report. The injury was consistent with forcefully grabbing and twisting the child's arm, another report states.

The infant was taken to Pasco Regional Hospital and then transferred to St. Joseph's Hospital in Tampa, where he was treated for a fractured right arm, according to sheriff's officials.

Smith later said he grabbed the baby by the arm, a report states.

In April, Smith was arrested on another child abuse charge stemming from a Sept. 13 incident. Sheriff's office reports say two mothers left children with Smith at a New Port Richey home while they went to Wal-Mart. When the women returned, one girl had what looked to be a red handprint on her face.

The girl's mother asked Smith what happened. He said the child fell off her bike and bruised her face. Asked if he had hit her, Smith reportedly said no, got angry, called his mother and then took a cab to Dade City.

A deputy asked the woman if there were any previous incidents of violence with Smith and she replied that he had kicked her in the stomach knowing she was pregnant, the report states. He was not charged in that allegation.

The other woman's children, who were left with Smith that day, said they didn't see the girl fall off the bike but they did hear a slap from the back room where Smith was at the time, according to the report.

A physician at Spring Hill Regional Hospital examined the girl's injured face.

"He said he believed it to be a handprint and he could not imagine anything on a bicycle to case the injury," the report states.

Smith posted $5,000 bail and was released from jail two days after his April arrest on a warrant. Coincidently, he was arraigned Wednesday in that case, and a pretrial hearing is set for Aug. 11.

He was being held on the new child abuse charge today at Land O' Lakes Jail, with bail set at $50,000.

When Smith was 15, he was charged as an adult with first-degree arson on allegations he torched a mobile home in Dade City. No one was injured, but the home was destroyed. Smith was convicted and served two years in state prison, according to records

Orlando-area father arrested on 350 counts of sexual abuse.
Susan Jacobson Sentinel Staff Writer March 3, 2008
 
 The Seminole teens, who suffered for years, escaped and sought help, deputies say. Two children suffered years of abuse at the hands of their father, investigators said Sunday as they described a litany of horrors including sexual assault and stun-gun shocks on the daughter, as well as beatings with PVC pipe, belts and a paddle on both victims.The ordeal, in which the brother and sister also reported being threatened with guns and forced to drink alcohol, ended during the weekend when they escaped from their home and contacted the Seminole County Sheriff's Office.
 
The father, 37, was arrested on 350 counts of sexual battery by a custodian of a victim younger than 12. He also was charged with 10 counts of aggravated battery using a deadly weapon, three counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, child cruelty and child neglect. He is being held without bail at the Seminole County Jail.
 
The children's mother, 36, was arrested on a charge of child neglect and released from jail. Investigators say she let her husband abuse the children and twice allowed him to put guns to their heads and threaten to kill them." The children lived in constant fear and . . . [their mother] failed to protect them," a sheriff's report states. Reached at home, the mother would not comment on the charges. It's still under investigation," she said. "There's nothing to say until the investigation is done."
 
 Her daughter, 13, the girl's 14-year-old brother and another brother, 17, are in the custody of their aunt and uncle in Orange County, the aunt said. The Orlando Sentinel is not naming the family to protect the children's identities.
 
The charges outlined in the report involve only the younger children. The older brother has been living with his aunt and uncle. The younger children were held virtual prisoners at home and were home-schooled, their aunt said. They now want to attend public school to be around other kids, she said. The girl, who was out of school for about a year, formerly was active in chorus and track and enjoyed learning.
 
On Friday, the 13- and 14-year-olds saw their opportunity for escape when their father was working out. They sneaked out the back door and contacted the Sheriff's Office. The girl told deputies that her father had sexually abused her more than 350 times starting when she was 7 and ending Thursday. The findings of a sexual-assault examination "were consistent" with the girl's allegations, according to the sheriff's report. She also said her father tied her to a bed, put socks over her hands and feet and in her mouth and shocked her with a Taser.
 
The child's aunt said the father insisted she wear oversized clothing to avoid revealing her body. The woman also alleged that he denied the children medical care. Both younger children told investigators that they were beaten with a wooden paddle called, "The Be Good Paddle" as well as with belts and a pipe. At least a year ago, the state Department of Children and Families got involved with the family and provided a caseworker for the older son, his aunt said. Details were not available late Sunday. The aunt said she and her husband thought the father was controlling, but they had no idea the extent of what investigators say went on. The children have scars, she said, but are safe for now. Mentally, it's another story. "The kids have been through so much," the woman said.
 
 Susan Jacobson can be reached at sjacobson@orlandosentinel.com or 386-851-7903.

MessengerOfPeace.jpg

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla —  Three weeks after they were found strangled in their home, the wife and 7-year-old son of professional wrestler Chris Benoit were being buried Saturday.

Benoit killed his wife, Nancy, and son, Daniel, in their home in the Atlanta area, placed Bibles next to their bodies and then hung himself on the cable of a weight machine, authorities said.

Nancy Benoit's parents, Paul and Maureen Toffoloni, live in Daytona Beach.

Anabolic steroids were found in the Benoits' home, leading officials to wonder if the drugs played a role in the killings. Results of toxicology tests on the three have not been released.

Benoit, born in Montreal, was a World Wrestling Entertainment star with a wholesome family man image. Despite that appearance, however, Nancy Benoit filed for a divorce in 2003 alleging "cruel treatment." She dropped the complaint, as well as a request for a restraining order in which she alleged Benoit threatened her and broke furniture.     End

 

Mom Who Pressure-Washed Kid Charged With Child Abuse

(The state working to combat child abuse with compassion)

POSTED: 3:41 pm EST March 7, 2008
 
ORLANDO, Fla. -- The mother who was videotaped while spraying her 2 1/2-year-old daughter with a high-pressure water hose at an Orlando car wash on Feb. 24 has been arrested and charged with child abuse.

Nikki Ramirez, who is pregnant, told authorities she did it because the child was throwing a tantrum, and that she did not have the hose on full blast.
She was picked up from her home by Orange County detectives, and taken to the Orange County Sheriff's Office for questioning. From there she will be taken to the Orange County Jail.

The surveillance video from a car wash near Rouse Road and the East-West Expressway showed the toddler trying to hide her face as her mother sprayed her in the face and down her legs.

"After looking at her statement, statements of the car wash manager and looking at the video evidence, we feel that we have a child abuse case here, so we made an arrest," Sgt. John Allen of the Orange County Sheriff's Office said. "We're talking about a felony crime. We want to be sure. We returned to the car wash today, did some further examination of the pressure washer."

Detectives said the second woman in the video is considered a witness and have not filed charges against her.

Many people said this form of punishment was abusive, but some people said it was tough discipline -- a parent's prerogative.

The girl was examined Thursday and a nurse found no bumps or bruises.

"Just because we don't remove the child doesn't mean we're turning our backs on this family. I assure each person who saw the video and was alarmed that we will not turn our back on this child," Carrie Hoeppner of DCF said.

DCF said it can work with the family and offer other counseling services rather than permanently separating the child from the mother.

"Removing a child is an extremely tragic experience for the child. We do that only when there's no other option. We do all we can to help the child, and not all cases require removal," Hoeppner said.

DCF said it is likely the child's grandmother will have temporary custody of the toddler as the state monitors the situation.

Ramirez will be allowed supervised visits with her daughter.  End

DOCTOR SAW PARANOIA IN FATHER BEFORE FIRE

BYLINE:    DON JORDAN, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
DATE: December 29, 2006
PUBLICATION: Palm Beach Post, The (FL)

EDITION: C
SECTION: A SECTION
PAGE: 1A
MEMO: Ran all editions.
A man who killed himself and his two children when he set his suburban Lake Worth home ablaze last week seemed to be "a good parent" but had "extreme feelings of paranoia," said a psychologist who evaluated Tony Camacho and his family in April. Phil Heller, a Boca Raton child psychologist with expertise in clinical and forensic psychology, was appointed by the courts to conduct a series of interviews and psychological tests with each member of the family - Camacho, 39; his ex-wife, Jennie Carter, 37; and their children, Nelson, 10, and Crystal, 8 - to determine the best custody arrangement in the couple's impending divorce. What he found in Camacho was a man who obsessively craved attention, was racked by stress and failed to compromise. "He thought of the world as a very threatening place," Heller said Thursday. "He would only deal with rationality, not with his feelings." The April interviews offered a glimpse into the family's home life, where Camacho was the more active parent while Carter worked long hours. According to court statements, Carter worked as a technician. Camacho was self-employed and worked from home for Adjustable Comfort, which repairs adjustable beds, earning $33,000 a year. Carter could not be reached for comment. "Camacho was a good parent," Heller said. "The kids were never harmed. He took the children to doctor's appointments." But when Heller asked the children, both said they would rather live with Carter. Nelson wanted to take care of his hardworking mom and be the man of the house. Crystal yearned for a female bond. Camacho resented the children's love for their mother, Heller said. "They had a fondness for her that Tony would obscure," he said. "Tony couldn't handle it." Camacho constantly denigrated Carter in front of the children, and when Heller proposed joint custody on the condition that Camacho change his behavior, Camacho wasn't interested, Heller said. He wanted only full custody. Heller recommended that the courts grant Carter custody. That's when the doctor said he saw the full extent of Camacho's obsessive behavior. "He would not stop calling me," Heller said. "He always had something new to tell me. Nobody called obsessively like him." Camacho's emotional problems may have stemmed from a troubled childhood, Heller said. His father abandoned the family after divorcing his mother when he was 5. He grew up in poverty and was forced to quit high school and work to support his family, Heller said. "He really had lifted himself up by his bootstraps," Heller said. Heller never changed his recommendation, and on Dec. 13, the courts finalized the divorce. Camacho was ordered to leave the house on Fairview Street, west of Lake Worth, by Jan. 12 so Carter could move back with her children. She had been living nearby at her parents' home in Lake Worth. Camacho set the house on fire eight days after the ruling, Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office officials said. He died of smoke inhalation after stabbing Crystal in the back, severing her spine and leaving her paralyzed as the flames engulfed their home, according to the sheriff's office. The county medical examiner has not determined whether she died from the wounds or from smoke inhalation. Nelson died of smoke inhalation the next day. Heller said there may have been signs that Camacho could be violent - he was very stressed, he was obsessive, Carter alleged he had been abusive - but said the man took care of his children. "I'm still going through my mind wondering why I didn't think he would kill," Heller said. - don_jordan@pbpost.com

42 CHLDREN WHO HAVE DIED IN OUR COMMUNITY
The names of these local children who died at the hands of caregiver abuse or neglect over the last 10 years were read aloud at Thursday night’s public vigil.

• Keymone Leggett, age 2
• Andrian Zurita, 2
• B.J. Olivarez, 3
• Gretchen Grodin, 1
• Vernon Jackson, 2
• Lexus Bohannon, 6 months
• Barbara Clark, 2
• Sierra Jordan, 15 months
• Rebekah Saint Ulysse, 2
• James Wallace, 6
• Jabriana Christmas, 2
• David Crump, 11 months
• James Cotter III, 4
• Daniel McCray, 23 months
• Jacob Smith, 2 weeks
• June Jolene Bloomberg, 3 weeks
• Michael Anderson, 21 months
• Leah Brown, 2
• Jorge Santos Diaz III, 2
• Gregory Fleming, 3
• Amanda Martinez, 20 months
• Hannah Burns, 7
• Matthew Eubanks, 5 months
• Shane Poling Jr., 2
• Alexis De La Cruz, 6 months
• Devin Ciccarone, 7
• Devon Matthew Clark, 2
• Camren McDowell, 5
• Exavier McKay, 9 months
• Lavontae Williams, 20 months
• Philip Blasone, 2
• Ella Grace Dixon, 19 months
• Lauran Dixon, 5
• Justin Mark Krejci, 14
• Abigail Boran, 2
• Anthony Dume, 2
• Cheyenne Eairhart, 4
• Solycia Divine Clark, 2 months
• Michelle Fontanez, 13
• John Hickman III, 3 months
• Samoria King, 1 month
• Zahid Jones Jr., 3


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

 

A Vigil was held in memory of these children.

Monday, November 05, 2007 11:56:43 PM  
Chris Summerfield
 

A Brevard County father faces child abuse charges after his young daughter almost died in the bathtub.

Chris Summerfield, 21, was arrested Monday.

Investigators said over the weekend, he left his 6-month-old alone in the tub to talk on the telephone.

The young girl slipped, went under and nearly drowned.

A roommate found the child and was able to revive her.

To make matters worse, police said Summerfield should never have been in the house at all, because he had a no contact order with his wife, who was also home.

The family has numerous child neglect and abuse investigations ongoing with the Department of Children and Families

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Father Accused Of Breaking At Least 12 Bones In Infant's Body  

A 2-month-old boy is clinging to life as his father sits behind bars, accused of breaking at least a dozen bones in his infant son's body. 

The child is in Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children. His father, Nathaniel Bozarth, 24, is under arrest and charged with aggravated child abuse.

Investigators with the Orange County Sheriff's Office told News 13 that multiple agencies had been investigating abuse claims for several days after an anonymous caller tipped them off that the boy was not in good shape.

"He was documented with 12 different fractures in different stages of healing to include multiple rib fracture and skull fracture," said Sgt. John Allen from the child abuse squad.

Officials said Borzarth confessed to injuring his son numerous times, but said he appeared to be remorseful.

Officials said the mother was apparently not at home when most of these incidents occurred

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Father's rights activists 

quote from father's rights activist in response to Florida father who burned self and 2 kids to death when he lost custody.
 
the reactions of men's rights advocates Gordon E. Finley, Ph.D. and the activists at the Manumit Exchange to the Tony Camacho case. Camacho, a Florida father of two, was embroiled in a custody dispute when he set his house on fire and killed himself and his two children, ages 10 and 8.

The reaction? One of the activists at the Manumit Exchange wrote:

"This tragedy may not have happened if a presumption of shared parenting (physical joint custody and residency) were law and the father knew that his children were not going to be kidnapped from him by his ex-wife and the State."

Similarly, Finley penned the brief letter Shared parenting may save lives for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, in which he argues that if Camacho had been granted shared parenting, the whole thing would never have happened, thus the family law system is at least partly to blame.

Darlanne Toussaint Burns Girlfriend’s Son with Hot Oil and Hair Dryer, Mom Charged with Abuse, too

darlanne-toussaint.jpgIn Apopka, Florida, Darlanne Toussaint, 24, poured hot cooking oil on his girlfriend’s 17-month-old on, Kenneth. Then he shook the boy hard for 10 minutes, hit him, and used a hair dryer to burn the child’s skin off - all because the toddler wouldn’t stop crying and whining. Toussaint is charged with felony attempted murder. 

Kenneth’s mom, Marlita S. Stokes, 23, was also arrested on charges of child neglect and providing false information to police. Police found text messages on her cell phone that suggested she and Toussaint worked together on inventing a cover up story.

Toussaint sent text messages to Stokes saying that he was a bad parent and that Kenneth had a bad rash and might have scratched himself. Then he sent more messages including one that read, “I burned him.”

Good lord.

Stokes told police that she and Toussaint left their sleeping children (her toddler and his three-year-old daughter) at home unattended while Toussaint took her to work at her job at McDonalds. Then Toussaint drove two other women to work.

Leaving a two kids under four home alone for over an hour? Are you kidding me? Even before the

Kenneth suffered second-degree burns on his genitals, chest, head and back. His spine was also fractured when Toussaint hit him. The boy is listed in stable condition

CENTRAL FLORIDA The Area In Brief

Father arrested on charges of arson, abuse

The girl was treated for her burns and released.

In reality, Stewartson said, investigators found that Stewart had set the fire himself in the hope of gaining an advantage in a custody dispute.

He was being held without bail early today at the Seminole County Jail.

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This is posted here for you to drawn your own conclusion.  The family claims the children have been taken from them unfairly.  They are in the media a lot and many are fighting for them.. Please remember that CPS cannot reveal their evidence and therefore, one will never know all the fact.  The following article is being posted as we who work to Defend Children feel that a great deal of harm is being done by groups no matter how well meaning they are that blatantly accused CPS of stealing kids. 

We ask that anyone who really cares for children go to adoptuskids.com and view the children CPS has put up for adoption.  So many were not in our opinions removed soon enough.

With woman missing, a mother worries

A Seminole woman hasn't been seen since a court appearance Feb. 6, when she appeared to be pregnant.

By CURTIS KRUEGER
Published April 18, 2006


Melissa Steenberge Pound, a 34-year-old Seminole woman with a history of depression, was expecting to give birth to a baby two months ago.

But she has disappeared, possibly with her infant child, and the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office wants help finding her. So does her mother, who is worried about their safety.

"I just want to know that she's all right," Linda Steenberge said.

It is the second traumatic event for the family in as many years.

In 2004, Melissa's then-2-week-old daughter, Susanna, was mauled by Spirit, a wolf-dog hybrid owned by a relative. That event generated wide local publicity and focused attention on the question of whether wolf hybrids should be allowed to live in urban and suburban areas. Spirit was soon put to sleep.

In the latest case, Steenberge said Gregory Steven Pound, father of Melissa's children, was jailed for failing to provide information about her.

Public records indicate Pound is being held without bail in the Pinellas County Jail on a charge of contempt of court, but Pinellas sheriff's Sgt. Jim Bordner said he had no information on why.

Steenberge said her daughter and Pound consider themselves husband and wife, but are not legally married.

Steenberge is especially concerned about her daughter because she has suffered from postpartum depression.

"I think she's ... in depression to where she doesn't know where she is," Steenberge said.

It has happened before. Steenberge said her daughter, after giving birth in the past, became completely disoriented and "she didn't know who she was." She said her daughter did not take her normally prescribed anti-depression medication during her pregnancy.

It's not clear whether Melissa has the baby with her.

She was last seen in a Feb. 6 court appearance, but Steenberge said she seemed to still be pregnant then.

Bordner declined to say whether detectives had checked local hospitals to see if Melissa had given birth. But even if she has, it might not have been at a hospital. Steenberge said her daughter previously had her babies at home.

Melissa last telephoned relatives on Feb. 9 and 11, according to the Sheriff's Office.

After the dog bite two years ago, child welfare workers took the Pounds' four children away and placed them with their grandparents, Steenberge and her husband, in Largo. Since then, the youngest child's facial scars have almost completely healed, but she may have suffered some brain damage from the attack, Steenberge said.

Melissa has been working on a plan with foster care workers designed to help her prove she could safely regain the custody of the children, who are 6, 4, 2 and 20 months. Now, she has not been in contact with the kids for two months, and Steenberge said that's unlike her.

The oldest child has started to notice her mother's absence and recently said, "I hate my life," Steenberge said. When she asked why, the girl said, "Because Mom's not coming to visit and because Mom's not calling me."

Melissa Pound of 9166 Sunrise Drive in Seminole is described as a white woman, 5 feet 5 inches tall, about 120 pounds, with blue eyes and shoulder-length brown hair.

The Sheriff's Office is asking anyone with information to call Detective Ed Judy at (727) 582-6200.

[Last modified April 18, 2006, 01:48:05]

2 week old infant girl's head
dog.jpg
was punctured by this dog

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Father of five loses battle for parental rights

He says he plans to appeal the judge's order. His battle started in 2004.
By CURTIS KRUEGER, Times Staff WriterPublished November 24, 2007


Greg Pound protests outside the criminal courts complex early Friday morning. Greg Pound believes the whole foster care system is corrupt. He regularly complains about the foster care system outside of the criminal courts complex, right near the main entrance. He just had his parental rights "terminated,'' meaning he has no legal right to raise his five children anymore.

Gregory Pound has battled the foster care system for years, ever since a purported "wolf dog" bit his 2-week-old baby in 2004 and child welfare workers took away his children.

He fought back in court, and has become increasingly visible by founding a Web site (www.rescuemykids.com) and staging regular protests outside Pinellas County's criminal courthouse. He even demonstrated outside a St. Petersburg church because a judge in his case worships there.

Now he has lost in court.

This month a judge terminated his parental rights - meaning he no longer has a legal right to raise his five children, ages 2 to 7.

"They called me today and told me that I have no more visits with my children," Pound, 51, said recently.

His wife's parental rights were severed earlier in the battle, he said. Melissa Pound disappeared last year, along with the couple's youngest child.

Gregory Pound said he plans to appeal.

"Love never gets up," he said, adding: "Me and Melissa both love our children, despite what they say."

The Pounds' four oldest children live in Seminole with Melissa's parents, Linda and Stephen Steenberge.

The Steenberges said they assumed at first the Pounds would complete a list of tasks known as a "case plan" to get their children back. But now that the Pounds' parental rights have been taken away, they said they intend to adopt the children.

"It's a tragic situation in the sense that it could have pretty much been avoided," said Stephen Steenberge, 64.

Tampa Bay news media covered the dog bite case in 2004, widely reporting that the Pounds' 2-week-old baby was bitten in the face by a "wolf hybrid." The dog was destroyed.

Since then, Pound has said that the dog belonged to his sister, who denied it was a wolf hybrid.
Soon after the bite, child welfare authorities removed the Pounds' four children from their home. The exact reasons are not clear because the records are not public.

Pound said child welfare officials claimed Melissa was suffering from depression, but he denied that. Pound also said he was asked to take a domestic violence class as part of a case plan in order to get his children back.

The Pounds completed parts of their case plans, but also fought unsuccessfully in court to prove the children should never have been taken away.

When Melissa gave birth to their fifth child last year, they named him Moses, after another baby whose mother sent him on a journey. Shortly after his 2006 birth, Melissa and the infant disappeared.

Pound was jailed for contempt of court for a month last year for failing to reveal her whereabouts, although he insisted he did not know where to find her.

Now, factions of the family are cut off from each other. Greg and Melissa Pound do not have a legal right to visit their four oldest children, who are living with the Steenberges.

Linda Steenberge, meanwhile, said she has not heard from her daughter Melissa and has not laid eyes on her grandchild, Moses.

"That would make me happy, just a phone call from her," Linda Steenberge said.
On the Web site, Pound claims that foster care workers remove children from families for money.

But Pinellas County sheriff's Capt. George Steffen said child abuse investigators work hard to find alternatives to removing children from their homes. "It's the absolute last resort," Steffen said.

When children are removed, foster care workers try to help moms and dads complete their case plans and bring their children home, said April Putzulu, a spokeswoman for the local foster care agency called the Safe Children Coalition.

"We are totally invested in returning children home to safe environments," she said.

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