Another Case of Child Abuse – How Could This Have Happened?

Posted on November 30th, 2009
Read 189 times.

I crawled out of bed this morning and sat down in front of my computer to check my emails like I do every morning. It was gloomy looking outside and something told me before I opened the first one that today was not going to be a good day. And once I looked over my emails it only confirmed my thoughts.

I had an email from one of our concerned readers pointing out to me a link of a case in Texas that she thought I would like to hear about, and she was right. I stand corrected, I didn’t want to hear about it but I needed to know about it even though it made me sick on my stomach when I read it.

It was an article from The Houston Chronicle about a little 3 year old child that only weighs 17 pounds. This sweet innocent child is literally fighting for his life right now. In the introduction to the article it states:

Now doctors are introducing him to what’s been missing most in his short life: food.

I cried then and I have to admit I am crying now. I can’t imagine this poor little boy and the pure hell this child has been going through and yet he continues to fight to live.

Three year old Kayvon Lewis was admitted into the hospital last month where doctors say he was extremely malnourished, dehydrated and at risk for heart failure and liver damage. This little boy can’t walk and he can’t even talk. He is blind and suffers from seizures at times as much as five times a day.

Kayvon mother, 30 year old Marcia Holliday is now in jail and she has been charged with injury to a child causing serious bodily injury by omission which is a first degree felony. Authorities say the mother was literally starving the boy to death which is a form of abuse that doctors don’t see very often.

It is reported that the mother brought Kayvon to the Memorial Hermann Children’s Hospital on October 15th. She told the doctors there that her son was not eating or drinking and he had not wet his diaper all day. She mentioned nothing about the child being so underweight or that he wasn’t able to do any of the things a normal child his age normally can do, like walk or talk.

A medical examiner that checked the child out said Kayvon couldn’t walk, crawl, sit up without support, pass objects between hands, say mama or dada, wave bye bye and he doesn’t orient to voice. A CPS caseworker said, “Kayvon T. Lewis’s nutritional level was 9.2 when a normal level is 45 and a low level is 18.”

Doctors claim that even though they found that Kayvon had seizures, scoliosis, and asthma underlying health problems, none of the conditions could be responsible for his starved state. The report says that the only reasonable explanation for his starvation is physical neglect.

OK so the mother can be blamed for this clearly as she was the responsible one for her son. But as I read more on the report I got really upset. The CPS had received a complaint which they investigated first in January 2008. They did find Kayvon’s mother intoxicated on drugs and the child appeared to be a failure to thrive child. They ordered sessions with a state dietitian and physical therapy for him. No one noticed anything about the abnormal size he was for his age. They didn’t find anything to say he was in enough danger that he should be taken from his home according to the court documents.

The case remained open though and on March 27, 2008 they found after taking a drug test that the mother tested positive for marijuana yet she promised to enroll in a series of early childhood intervention classes so they left the boy in her custody and on April 1, 2008 they closed the case.

The next month Kayvon was taken to Dr. Niala Siddiqi just before he turned 2 years old and he weighed 18 pounds and 6 ounces. By August 28, 2009 instead of gaining weight the poor boy had lost more than a pound. According to one of the doctors that examined Kayvon, any child who maintained such a low weight for more than half of his life should have been a red flag alert that he was suffering from starvation.

Holliday of course denies starving her son. “Everything they say (CPS) is a lie. He wasn’t eating or drinking,” she said. “He has a lot of problems going on.

Since he has been in the hospital his liquid intake is monitored closely. They say at this point too much food can overwhelm the underdeveloped organs in his little body. Dr. Rebecca Giradet, an associate professor at the medical school and staff physician at Memorial Hermann, said, “Since their bodies have not been seeing normal quantities of fats and carbohydrates, their bodily functions kind of shut down. It’s very dangerous to suddenly feed a starved child normal food. They can go into liver failure, heart arrhythmia. The pancreas does not make insulin anymore. All those functions are not working.”

They had to place a white mesh glove on his left hand because he has starved for so long that he had started sucking his thumb and he did it so much that he had it raw and a sore had formed on it.

Amazingly Kayvon wasn’t the only child at home. He also had a 5 year old sister and a 6 year old brother and neither of them showed any signs of starvation or of abuse, thankfully. They are both are in foster care right now.

A doctor said that Kayvon is now out of intensive care but he still hasn’t been given solid food, not even Crackers or Cheerios. My kids were eating vanilla wafer cookies before they were even a year old. I feel so sorry for this little boy.

Please remember little Kayvon Lewis in your prayers. Somehow this child has got a will to survive. If not he would have passed away a long time ago. Maybe our prayers can give him the strength he actually needs to continue fighting and he will eventually be able to go on living and perhaps look back at what has happened to him and say he knew he could beat this. My prayers are with him.

I know this is a different kind of abuse we here at BNN have been writing about but nevertheless this is still a child in need. A poor helpless child that somehow by the Grace of God is still hanging on to live. So I think it is proper to add his name to my list of children to pray for. Would you please join me? Here is my list: Caylee Anthony (found dead), Adji Desir (remains missing), Haleigh Cummings (remains missing), Somer Thompson (found dead), Elizabeth Olten (found dead) , Masaraha Ross (remains missing), Alex Mercado (drowned) Rebecca Marie Allen (found alive), Sandra Cantu (found dead), Anthony Holland (found alive), Shaniya Davis (found dead), Hassani Campbell (remains missing), Giovanni Gonzalez (reported dead), Neveah Buchanen ( found dead) and Shannon Dedrick (found alive), Angel Miguel Perez (found safe) Luis Martinez (found dead) Luke Finch (still missing) and Kayvon Lewis (fighting for his life).

Jan Barrett

As a favor to our readers I am posting these web sites. Please consider signing these petitions. Something has got to be done to protect the future of the world which is our children:

Stop the abuse and murder of the children in the U.S.

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/16/stop-the-abuse-and-murder-of-the-children-in-the-us

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/change-sex-offender-laws

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15:03 11/21/2009

November 22nd 2009

SEVEN boy boarders at one of the State’s most exclusive private schools have alleged they were raped by their female house mistress earlier this year.

The boys have told police that the offences took place on the school grounds between February and June.

Their 40-year-old “house mother” (pictured left) appeared in Forster Court last week charged with 34 counts of aggravated sexual assault and aggravated indecency with the students.

She was first arrested in August over offences against one boy, but has since been charged with assaulting six other students after continuing police inquiries.

Her identity and the name of the school have been suppressed to protect the boys.

The revelations have rocked the exclusive school, among whose well-heeled alumni are former politicians, top-level sportsmen and the sons of several powerful Australian and international identities.

At the time of the alleged offences, the woman was employed by the school as a “caring” mother figure, organising beds and uniforms.

She lived in a flat adjoining the student dormitories.

She is alleged to have had sex with the seven boys under “aggravated circumstances” 24 times at the school this year.

Under the Crimes Act, “aggravated” is a term applied to sex acts committed with persons under the age of 16.

Court documents allege she had sex with one 11-year-old boy eight times while he was “under her authority” in the space of five months.

She is alleged to have had sex with the other six boys in her care 14 times during the same period.

The woman, who is out on bail, is also accused of having committed an act of indecency in front of four of the boys in April this year. Court documents also allege the woman incited one of the boys, aged 12, to commit an act of indecency.

She has since been sacked from the school, which faces the prospect of more alleged victims coming forward as police investigations continue.

The woman arrived with her mother at Forster Local Court last week before walking into the adjacent police station, where she is required to report to officers three times a week.

She sat in the court’s waiting room with her head on her mother’s shoulder while waiting for her court hearing.

When approached by The Sunday Telegraph, the woman declined to comment.

Detectives first arrested the woman on August 18 when she was charged with five child sex offences allegedly committed against one 12-year-old boy.

After intensive police investigations, six other boys came forward alleging they also had sex with the woman. She was rearrested and charged with an additional 29 child sex offences. The charges include 24 counts of aggravated sexual intercourse with a child under 16, nine of aggravated indecency with a child under 16, and one count each of inciting a person under 16 to commit an act of indecency and committing an act of indecency with a child under 16.

In a brief mention of the matter, Magistrate Shaughan McCosker granted a continuing suppression order last week.

The case is the latest in a series of sex cases to reach court this year involving teachers at a number of elite schools.

But in other cases, where the alleged crimes were committed years ago and victims are now older, there have been no suppression orders.

Four former teachers from exclusive Knox Grammar School on Sydney’s north shore were this year charged over child sex offences from the 1980s.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sunday-telegraph/boarding-school-carer-had-sex-with-boys/story-e6frewt0-1225801629559

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,27574,26383798-421,00.html

15:55 11/19/2009,

November 19th 2009

A 54-year-old woman has been placed under house arrest after pleading not guilty to defiling her nine-year-old grandson. She was also accused of holding him against his will, taking part in sexual activities with him and committing indecent assault.

The cases allegedly happened in various localities throughout this year and in previous years.

Police Inspector Louise Calleja told the court that the police had initially launched an investigation of the boy’s uncle and taken him to court. During the boy’s testimony before the court, this second case of defilement came to light.

The woman was granted bail against a personal guarantee of €5,000 and ordered not to leave her home.

http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20091119/local/woman-54-accused-of-defiling-grandson-aged-9

14:17 11/20/2009,

November 20th 2009

QUEBEC, Canada — A 55-year-old woman was given a sentence without any jail time, and was ordered to pay several thousand dollars, for sexually assaulting her teenage son.

Marie-Jeanne Bedard, (pictured left) who lives in the suburbs of Quebec City, was handed Friday a two-year sentence to be served outside prison. She must also give her son $3,500, and has been ordered to pay for the therapy he’s needed over the years.

The assaults occurred between January 1993 and March 1994, when the boy was 13.

In handing down his sentence, the judge said he took into account the fact that Bedard was living through what he called a troubled period in her life.

But the Crown was disappointed. It had been seeking a jail term.

The victim noted one positive result from Friday’s sentencing: people will now know what his mother did to him. The judge lifted a publication ban on Bedard’s identity, which had been kept secret to protect the victim.

But the son held a news scrum outside the courtroom, and told reporters he wanted his mother’s identity made public.

“I lived with that secret inside me for 14 years,” he said.

“Today I’m tired of living with that secret.”

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5jb28ZChRqKYBz8dfqLkM9Q7FT3JA

French Language News Reports On This Case:-

http://www2.canoe.com/infos/societe/archives/2009/11/20091120-130512.html

http://lcn.canoe.ca/lcn/infos/faitsdivers/archives/2009/11/20091120-111433.html

http://www.radio-canada.ca/regions/Quebec/2009/11/20/003-bedard_peine.shtml

01:35 11/19/2009, noreply@blogger.com (To_Catch_A_Female_Predator), charged, child porn, nov-09 cases, usa, victim(s) – gender unknown, To Catch A Female Predator

November 19th 2009

A federal grand jury in Peoria, Illinois on Wednesday indicted Dustin E. Mandrell, 25, of Clinton on one count each of producing and possessing images of child pornography.

Co-defendant Ruby Roberts, 19, of Sullivan, Illinois is charged with one count of possession of child pornography.

Mandrell also is charged with committing a felony involving a minor while designated as a sex offender. The indictment also seeks forfeiture of camera and computer equipment and related items used in the commission of the alleged offenses.

Mandrell and Roberts are in the custody of DeWitt County authorities on unrelated charges. They both are charged with possession of child pornography on or about Aug. 1.

The indictment alleged that on Aug. 5, Mandrell coerced a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing a visual depiction of that conduct. Mandrell has a prior sex offense conviction in Illinois.

Mandrell, charged as a registered sex offender, faces enhanced penalties of up to life in prison for production of child pornography with a mandatory 10 years in prison to be served after any prison term imposed. If he is convicted of possession of child pornography, he faces a mandatory minimum of 10 to 20 years in prison.

Roberts faces statutory penalties of up to 10 years in prison with terms of up to life on supervised released following any term of imprisonment if convicted of possession of child pornography.

The charges were the result of an investigation by the U.S. Secret Service and members of a working group including the Bloomington and Clinton police departments and Illinois State Police.

http://www.herald-review.com/news/local/article_011ff0ab-6641-5c28-bcc9-300bd02c075c.html

10:46 11/10/2009
November 10th 2009

Article from The Guardian (UK) by Theresa Gannon

To protect children against female sexual abusers, society must change its mindset to accept that this is not a male-only crime.

The rise in the number of children identifying a female as their sexual abuser is worrying.* (ChildLine Casenotes: What boys talk about to ChildLine) However, it is not surprising.

As a professional working with both male and female sexual abusers, I have often been faced with male sexual abusers who report having been sexually abused by a female when they were children. Yet there are very few women in prison for sexual offences against children. So where are all the female sexual abusers?

Historically it has been hard for society to accept that women abuse children: we believe women are nurturers. Because society has got stuck in the mindset that only men abuse children, victims of female abusers fear telling anyone in case they are disbelieved. Boys, in particular, appear reluctant to tell others that they are being abused by a woman.

The figures released by the NSPCC challenge the idea that sexual abuse is a male-perpetrated crime. Female sexual abuse has begun to receive more attention in society as the result of several recent high-profile cases – such as that of the nursery worker Vanessa George.

Despite the increase in the number of children identifying a female as their sexual abuser, very few children have officially reported this abuse. Where, then, do we go from here? Are we doing all we can to protect and safeguard children from sexual abuse? What should we be watching out for?

Recently I interviewed convicted female sexual abusers in England to understand more about how they abuse children. The results shed some light on how we can further protect children.

First, like male sexual abusers, all women who abused children knew their victims well. However, unlike their male counterparts, female abusers tended to offend alongside a man – in fact, well over half did.

Being female also seemed to have advantages for keeping the victim “quiet”. Sometimes women used the very fact they were female to dissuade the victim from “telling” (“who would believe you?”). What can we take from this?

The first step towards protecting children from abuse is to be aware of the various forms it can take. It would be a sad state of affairs if we felt unable to trust anyone with our children, but we should not accept that they are automatically safeguarded from abuse just because a female is present. . Parents should remain vigilant.

We may already tell children they shouldn’t “keep secrets” with adult males. Children may also be told to report any inappropriate touching from males. But are children aware that an abuser may be female? Are we taking the trouble to make it clear to children that women may also touch inappropriately and ask children to “keep secrets”? I am not suggesting we become hyper-vigilant to the point of ridiculousness. But it is our responsibility to ensure that we protect children from all types of sexual abuse.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/nov/10/female-sexual-abusers-children

Michigan Woman Charged with First-Degree Child Abuse in Shaken Baby Case

November 20, 2009 by
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18-Year-Old Joy Gutowski Faces 12 to 15 Years

A Manistee, Michigan woman stands accused of first-degree child abuse after doctors say her 3-month-old baby was shaken.
In early September, 18-year-old Joy Gutowski had her infant son taken out of her custody and put into foster care after she took him to the   hospital with suspicious injuries.
Baby’s Injuries Found to be Consistent with Shaking

 

Gutowski claimed that the baby fell off of the couch when she left it alone in the room for a moment, and landed on its head.

Doctors at Manistee’s West Shore Medical Center reported to Sheriff’s deputies that the child’s injuries, including a skull fracture and bleeding on the brain, were consistent with injuries caused by shaking an infant. The child was transported to the DeVos Children’s Hospital, where a team of specialists performed a second exam and came to the same conclusion.

Allegedly Abusive Mother Loses Custody

The infant, now 5 months old, remains in foster care in the Grand Rapids area. The prosecution reports that he is alive and “recovering.” Gutowski is also the mother of a 1 1/2 year old son, who has also been removed from her custody. The father of the children, 21-year-old Steven Boss of Manistee, is not currently being charged.

Child abuse experts say that the effects of shaking a baby may not be immediate. The National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome indicates that while the most sever injuries cause by shaking infants may be noticed immediately, lesser injuries may go unreported and undiagnosed for weeks or months, if noticed at all. The long-term effects of this head trauma can be permanent, taking a toll on motor skills, reflexes, language skills, and more.

While Gutowski maintains that the baby did, indeed fall off of the couch that day, reports from the prosecution indicate that she has admitted to shaking the baby on at least two occasions because he would not stop crying. This on-the-record admission by Gutowski means that the prosecution will likely have an easy time getting a conviction.

If convicted, the felony charges could send Gutowski to prison for as much as 15 years. A preliminary hearing is set for November 25th.

16:42 11/16/2009

November 17th 2009

Article from The Daily Mail (UK)

It seems unthinkable, but ChildLine says calls from boys abused by women have doubled in a year. This deeply disturbing investigation reveals the terrible impact of a crime that society has never dared to confront.

Bill Jenkins’s memories of the childhood abuse he suffered are as sharp as the pain that accompanies them.

He remembers the diamond pattern on the linoleum bathroom floor tiles, the Moby Dick mural on the wall, the door handle which seemed so high up next to his six-year-old frame.

He vividly remembers, too, how he was expected to bath and touch his naked abuser, an ordeal which left him confused and ashamed, and changed the course of his life. ‘The vision in my head is crystal clear,’ he says.

What took place in the bathroom of that house in Sussex 50 years ago is shocking enough, but what makes it even harder to comprehend is that Bill’s abuser was his foster mother – a woman entrusted with caring for him when his own parents couldn’t.

‘My lasting feelings about my childhood are feelings of fear,’ says the 55-year-old from Thorpe in Surrey.

‘I was always frightened of her and what she forced me to endure affected the rest of my life, but as a society we have a mental block about female abusers. We are shocked when we see it happens. We can’t believe that women are capable of such things.’

But the stereotypical belief that sex abuse is a male crime was shattered last week by an astonishing report from ChildLine which revealed that the number of children reporting sexual abuse by women has doubled over the past year.

The latest figures from the children’s telephone helpline show a 132 per cent rise in complaints of female sexual assaults. Where the children specified the gender of their abuser, nearly a quarter of all calls involved women assailants and the majority of those involved the callers’ own mothers.

And while girls are still more likely to be sexually abused by a man than a woman, the opposite is true for boys. Research for the helpline found that boys were more likely to say they had been abused by a woman than by a man.

‘This report has shattered common myths about sexual abuse,’ says ChildLine founder and president Esther Rantzen.

‘We’re trying to reach out to boys because we’ve always been concerned about two things: one is that four times as many girls were ringing ChildLine as boys, and the other is that suicide is the most common reason for young death among late teenage boys and early 20s young men.

‘The obvious conclusion is that they are allowing really distressing problems to build up without actually being able to ask for help.

‘So it became very important to ChildLine that boys felt able to ring us – and more of them are. But what it’s revealing is how many of them are being sexually abused by women.’

Historically, of course, it has been hard for society to accept that women abuse children at all. This is something which, according to Bill Jenkins, makes it even harder for boys to come forward and speak about what happened to them.

‘What chap, regardless of age, wants to admit his abuser is a woman?’ he says. ‘It’s not something that men will readily admit to. It implies you are a wimp.’

This emotional conflict is echoed by the voices of more recent victims, desperate boys and young teenagers who turn to ChildLine for help. Many of them fear being seen as unmasculine and worry that what is happening to them will be dismissed as a teenage rite of passage.

‘I’ve been having sex with my aunt – she’s 28,’ says one 15-year-old caller, in a harrowing transcript of his call. ‘I want it to stop ‘cos I know it’s wrong and my mother would go crazy if she knew but we keep doing it.’

And another 15-year-old: ‘Sometimes when Mum is very drunk she touches me and tries to get me to touch her. It makes me feel really weird. It’s not right.’

Following the case of Vanessa George, who pleaded guilty last month to seven counts of sexual abuse and distributing pornographic pictures of children at the nursery where she worked, the traditionally-held image of women as carers and nurturers, incapable of behaving in such a despicable fashion with a child, is being challenged as never before.

‘Years ago, people were very shocked to hear that children were abused at all,’ says child psychotherapist Diana Cant, who works with the victims of female sex abuse.

‘The same is now true about female sex abuse. People can hardly bear to think about it or get their minds around it. We want to push it away. It flies in the face of the image of mothers as carers.

‘It’s important for people to realise that it does happen and, as we do that, it becomes easier for survivors to talk about it. Many children go through life believing they are the only people to whom this has happened. There’s an enormous therapeutic benefit in realising that they are not alone.

‘For it to be more publicly recognised is enormously important in helping people get help.’

Experts have known for years that women are just as able to abuse children as men are. Detective Chief Inspector Graham Hill, of the Child Exploitation And Online Protection Centre in London (CEOP), has interviewed several female sex abusers.

‘There’s this cultural perception of women as the home-makers, and that men are the sexually aggressive ones,’ he explains.

‘Society as a whole has bought into that and the law has been shaped around that. The reality is very different. But those attitudes are ingrained.

‘When you start to talk about this subject, people tend to not want to know. They shut off because it’s a subject they don’t think is very common. They don’t think it’s something that warrants serious debate. As such, women tend to fly under the law enforcement radar.’

Yet DCI Hill insists ‘ChildLine’s findings are very much in line with our own’.

He adds: ‘We come into contact with lots of female sex offenders and we know that there are a number of women who have a sexual interest in children and that they do sexually abuse children. The idea that’s it’s always a woman being coerced by a man is a myth.

‘Although the number of female sex abusers is still very low compared to men, their offences tend to be of a more serious nature – at the top end of the spectrum.

‘At the same time, women abusers are far more likely to operate alone as opposed to being part of large-scale paedophile networks.

‘Their offending tends to start earlier in life in childhood. It’s not usually of a violent nature. They will start as children with other children.

‘Many female offenders we have spoken to are claiming they were victims of long-term physical and sexual abuse in childhood. But that’s quite a common claim for all sex offenders to make.

‘We don’t see large-scale networks with loads of women,’ says DCI Hill. ‘We see lots of men and sometimes a smattering of women who become involved.’

Disturbingly, he adds: ‘The majority of women we speak to will have abused their own children. Women tend to sexually abuse children who are close to them.’

This makes reporting such crimes even more difficult for child victims, who know that by doing so they may be kick-starting a process which will ultimate tear apart their family and, in all likelihood, see them being put into the care system.

‘If you are being sexually abused by your mother, there’s such a profound and primitive confusion,’ says Diana Cant. ‘It completely confuses sex and care-giving for both boys and girls.

‘They stand to lose everything and they fear that, if they report it, everything they know, their family, will be taken away.

‘And it’s not just their lives, it’s the lives of their siblings. There is also the issue that while one child may feel ready to disclose abuse, their brothers or sisters may not and may deny it, so there’s guilt and confusion there.’

Peter Bradley, an adolescent psychotherapist from the children’s protection charity Kidscape, adds: ‘The last thing a child wants is to be taken away from their mother – even if they’re in an abusive relationship.

‘That’s a huge obstacle when it comes to turning to any kind of authority for help. The message we need to give is that the intervention will be appropriate to the level of abuse and in conjunction with the child.’

And when youngsters do summon the courage to talk about it, the devastation caused by such abuse becomes clear.

Bill Jenkins, who channelled his anger about his own experiences into setting up Securus, a company selling internet protection software for schools and businesses, admits the abuse he suffered as a child had enormous implications in adulthood.

‘I didn’t realise for a long time that by instinct I was a woman hater, because my experience of this woman meant that I thought women were just to be used for sex,’ he says.

‘In my early years, that was it. I got married and had two children, but I couldn’t understand that a large part of marriage is based on friendship. I was never able to give myself totally to my wife. I always held back.’

Bill’s first marriage broke up and he has been married to his second wife for 20 years. ‘I was very open with her from the start,’ he says. ‘But even so, even being aware of that, I find it hard to give myself totally.’

He lives with the memory every day, but adds: ‘Being able to confront your demons is important. That’s the only way to put them behind you. I can’t change what went on, but accepting it helps you cope.

‘The past loses its power over you. I am happy to talk about it now because it helps me and I hope it helps others to seek help.’

It has been discovered that a large percentage of female child abusers abuse their own children

The true scale of the problem is as yet unclear. It is thought that high-profile media cases – such as that of Vanessa George – encourage victims to speak out.

‘When the public hears a story being told they feel they’re not alone, and because they feel less isolated they feel more able to talk about something which is a hugely taboo topic,’ says Peter Bradley.

‘We are not saying the number of offences of female sexual abuse are necessarily increasing, but that the number of reported cases have increased.’

Pointing out that the Vanessa George story really hit the headlines last month, Mr Bradley adds: ‘We’re sure that in this next 12 months the numbers of children reporting abuse by females will increase dramatically.

‘We are just at the tip of the iceberg.’ And while organisations such as ChildLine, which receives twice as many calls from girls as it does from boys, continue to try to encourage boys to speak out, experts are also agreed that more research is essential to protect children and understand what leads women to abuse in the first place.

According to DCI Hill: ‘We are sadly lacking in research in relation to female offenders. Only now, as more women are charged and are subject to sexual offenders’ treatment programmes and to academic research, will we start to understand the subtle differences between male and female offenders.

‘But that is still five or ten years away. What we are saying is that the debate needs to be out there. We need to talk openly about female offenders.’

No doubt many will still struggle with the idea that women are capable of such despicable behaviour.

But until attitudes change it is also clear that female abusers will continue to hide behind the benign image of mother, aunt or family friend and that this tiny minority of wrongdoers will escape notice.

This is an extract from a letter written by Tony, an adult struggling to come to terms with the abuse he suffered at the hands of his aunt from the age of three.

‘I know that the experts say that female sexual abuse is rare,’ he writes. ‘Don’t believe it. There are many out there like me who were abused and who are now causing more abuse.

‘I sometimes wonder how different my life might have been had my mother or someone else listened to the pain of a small boy.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1228366/I-abused-woman-haunts-day.html

Mother abandoned kids to go on drink and drug binge

by Jenny Cornish Nov 17th 2009

Categories: Babies, Toddlers, Latest news

A mum who left her four young children home alone while she went off partying has been given a suspended prison sentence.

Rebecca Stevenson, 22, from Blackburn, Lancashire, reportedly abandoned her two sons and two daughters, aged from just three months to four years, in July this year.

She admitted child cruelty at Preston Crown Court and was jailed for 20 weeks, suspended for two years.

Frankly I can’t believe she got off so lightly.

It was “merciful good luck” that none of the children were seriously injured, the court heard.

Stevenson reportedly put her kids to bed at 9.30pm and then drank a bottle of wine before friends came round when she drank cider and took cocaine.

Then she decided to go off to a house party, and carried on drinking throughout the rest of the next day at pubs before going home at 10.30pm.

Fortunately the children were discovered at 10am that day when Stevenson’s stepfather went to the house.

According to the BBC, the eldest daughter was leaning out of the lounge window and had been crying.

The one-year-old boy was “hysterical” in his cot upstairs and was soaked in urine, while the three-month-old boy was covered in sick in his cot.

The eldest daughter, who was just four, had tried to feed the baby by climbing on chairs to try to reach his milk.

The BBC says Judge Norman Wright told Stevenson: “We have all seen and been amused by Hollywood’s Home Alone, of a much older child, but the consequences of children as young as these being left to fend for themselves are too dreadful to think about.

“They were left to fend for themselves because you had decided to go out for your own personal gratification, drinking and taking drugs.”

Stevenson’s lawyer said the young mother was “under a great deal of stress” and had been depressed because of the break-up of her relationship.

The children now live with their grandparents.

I know a lot of 22-year-olds go out on drink and drug binges, but if that’s what she wanted to do, why did she have four children?

Do you think this was a harsh enough sentence for this woman?

Source: BBC

Omaha Mother Accused Of Child Abuse

POSTED: 2:15 pm CST November 19, 2009
UPDATED: 3:11 pm CST November 19, 2009

OMAHA, Neb. —

Lachya Robinson

An Omaha mother has been accused of child abuse after her son was found with scars and bruises.A report filed by Project Harmony said 5-year-old Delonte Robinson had scars on his back, buttocks and legs. Delonte Robinson also had a large bruise on the back of his neck, according to the report.The mother, Lachya Robinson, 22, allegedly beat the boy with a belt, the report said.

Copyright 2009 by KETV.com. All rights reserved.

Mom pleads guilty to killing her 5-year-old daughter

November 17, 2009 1:57 PM | No Comments

A Maine Township woman pleaded guilty at the Skokie courthouse today to the horrific 2007 child abuse death of her 5-year-old daughter and is scheduled to be sentenced in December, prosecutors said.

Mila Petrov, 31, was charged with first-degree murder in the death of her daughter, Melanie, who died in March of 2007 at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge after years of physical and mental abuse at the hands of her mother, said Cook County Assistant State’s Atty. Rick Cenar.

Petrov pleaded guilty today to first-degree murder for “knowingly and intentionally killing her daughter with blunt force to the head,” Cenar said.

Petrov wept in court today as Cenar read a statement describing how Melanie suffered years of beatings and cruel punishments. He said that the last beating happened on March 13, 2007 and started when Petrov got angry after Melanie vomited.

He said Petrov told authorities she struck her daughter in the back of the head causing her head to hit a wall and that when Melanie denied getting sick, Petrov threatened to put hot sauce on her daughter’s tongue for lying, a punishment she often used, said Cenar.

Petrov then took her daughter into another room and hit her again, causing her to strike her head on the floor, said Cenar. He said Petrov left the room and told authorities that when she returned a short time later Melanie’s sister was beating her. Petrov told police that Melanie was not breathing and that she did not have a heartbeat, but that she did not immediately call an ambulance because she feared she would get into trouble, Cenar said.

He said that instead of calling for help Petrov quickly cleaned her house while her daughter lay dead or dying on the floor. He said Petrov eventually called her husband, Carlos Beltran, and asked him what to do and that he told her to call an ambulance. When help arrived, Melanie was not breathing and did not have a heartbeat, Cenar said.

In June, Carlos Beltran, 34, pleaded guilty to aggravated battery of a child in Melanie’s death and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Prosecutors said he was not home on the day Melanie died but that he knew of the abuse and had participated in the abuse in the past. He was scheduled to testify against Petrov had her case gone to trial.

Cenar said doctors examining Melanie at the hospital were unable to resuscitate her and were immediately suspicious that Melanie had died as a result of child abuse because she was covered in old and new bruises and other injuries, including burns from scalding hot bath water. Petrov, who was nine months pregnant at the time of the crime, eventually admitted to beating all her children but said Melanie was often beat more severely than the others because she “was the baddest,” Cenar said.

“She hit Melanie a lot,” he said.

He also said prosecutors had been seeking the death penalty in the case but are now asking that Petrov be given an extended prison term of between 60 and 100 years when she is sentenced by Cook County Circuit Court judge, Garritt Howard Dec. 10 at the Skokie courthouse.

– Brian Cox

 

17-Year-Old Mother To Be Tried As Adult In Baby’s Death

Infant Died In July

Deb Stanley, 7NEWS Producer
POSTED: 10:39 am MST November 17, 2009
UPDATED: 2:18 pm MST November 17, 2009
PUEBLO, Colo. — A teen mother arrested in the death of her 2-month-old son will stand trial as an adult in his death.Ann Trammell, now 18, of Trinidad, Colo., is charged with knowing and reckless child abuse resulting in death.The infant boy, who was hospitalized July 3 after allegedly falling off a bed at a hotel, was taken off life support and died July 9, according to the Pueblo Chieftain
newspaper.
The paper reported that Trammell and the child’s father, Ronald James Walker, 25, also of Trinidad, were arrested shortly after the incident on suspicion of child abuse. Although Trammell was 17 when the incident occurred, a judge granted a prosecution request to charge her as an adult.Walker has been charged with child abuse causing death.

06:06 11/7/2009

November 3rd 2009

Testimony is expected to begin Wednesday (Nov 4.) in the Genesee County Court trial of a city woman accused of molesting a 2-year-old boy she was babysitting.

Attorneys selected a jury Monday in County Court in the case against Jennifer L. Ferguson, 30.

Ferguson is charged with first-degree sexual abuse, which carries a maximum seven-year prison term. City police arrested her in December after the boy’s mother told police she came home from work and saw Ferguson abusing her son.

Ferguson, of 679 East Main Street, Genesee County, New York is being represented by Public Defender Gary Horton. District Attorney Lawrence Friedman is prosecuting.

http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/articles/2009/11/03/news/6133376.txt

http://www.thebatavian.com/blogs/howard-owens/trial-begins-woman-accused-sexually-abusing-two-year-old/10641

http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/articles/2009/11/05/news/6141666.txt

UPDATE

November 7th 2009

Deadlocked jury in child molestation trial

A jury Friday failed to reach a verdict in the Genesee County Court trial of a city woman accused of molesting a 2-year-old boy.

Jurors deliberated about six hours before telling Judge Robert C. Noonan that they were hopelessly deadlocked on a verdict.

Noonan agreed and dismissed the jury.

District Attorney Lawrence Friedman said he will try the case against Jennifer L. Ferguson again, and Noonan set a trial date for Nov. 30, ironically the original date Ferguson was scheduled to face trial.

Ferguson, 30, of 679 East Main St. is charged with first-degree sexual abuse and accused of molesting the boy while babysitting Nov. 23, 2008.

The boy’s mother testified Wednesday that she came home from work and saw Ferguson with her pants down and the child in front of her on the floor. Ferguson in a statement to police admitted being sexually gratified, one of the factors for the felony sex abuse charge.

Friedman called only one other witness on Wednesday, a city police detective.

Public Defender Gary Horton called several witnesses Thursday, including Ferguson. She testified, saying that she was not sexually gratified and that she pulled her shirt up because the boy asked her to. She said the boy also kept tugging her pants down, Friedman said.

http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/articles/2009/11/07/news/6147711.txt

12:01 11/3/2009
November 2nd 2009

HOOPER, Weber County, Utah — A foster parent has been charged with five felonies stemming from alleged sexual abuse of a teenage boy living in her home.

Jennifer Ann Montag, 40, (pictured left) made her initial appearance in court Monday from the Weber County Jail. She is charged with three counts of forcible sodomy and two counts of rape, all first-degree felonies.

Weber County sheriff’s deputies were called to Montag’s home in Hooper on Wednesday and told she’d been caught by a family member in her bedroom with her 14-year-old foster son, who was naked, according to court records.

Montag allegedly confronted the family member after being discovered, court records state, telling him, “You will ruin our family. I could go to jail, and if I do, I will kill myself.”

Sheriff’s detectives interviewed the alleged victim, who informed them that he “would protect the family and not get anyone in trouble.” The teen said he’d spoken with Montag, and she’d told him not to disclose their alleged sexual contact to police, the charges state.

During an interview with Montag, detectives said she admitted to being in a bedroom with the naked teen, which they said would have amounted to lewdness. But investigators said a Division of Child and Family Services caseworker interviewed the boy’s sister, who also lived in the Montag home. The girl allegedly told the caseworker she was aware of a sexual relationship between her brother and Montag.

Montag’s husband told deputies the couple became foster parents about four months ago. He said he had called the family’s caseworker about possibly having the alleged victim and his sister removed from the home.

Montag’s bail is set at $100,000. She remains in jail.

http://www.deseretnews.com/article/705341584/Foster-parent-faces-felony-charges-of-sodomy-rape.html

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=8540992

http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_13703180

18:22 11/9/2009
November 3rd 2009

The case of a Henryville woman charged with having sex with two 12-year-old boys will go to trial today.

Sheila K. Granger, 33, (pictured left) reportedly knew the boys from church, and her husband coached them in a youth football league. The charges, eight counts of child molesting and one count of child solicitation, date from August 2007 through August 2008.

According to a probable-cause affidavit, Granger purchased numerous gifts for one of the boys and took him roller skating, to dances and to games at school. Both boys said she performed oral sex and had intercourse with them.

Many of the incidents allegedly occurred at Granger’s home on the 200 block of Robyn Avenue, but one of the boys claims one of the encounters took place in the back of the hair salon in New Albany where Granger worked.

Granger and her husband were involved in the community, with Granger attending school board meetings and school athletic events. She also sometimes volunteered with the youth program at Safe Harbor Christian Church, according to church officials.

Clark County Deputy Prosecutor Brittany Blau said Tuesday that she did not anticipate any plea agreement would be reached and that she expected the trial will go forward as scheduled. Granger’s attorney, Charles Hectus, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Jury selection is expected to begin at 9:30 a.m. today with opening arguments to follow. Granger faces 106 to 277 years in prison if convicted on all charges.

http://www.news-tribune.net/local/local_story_307214439.html

Previous Reports On This Case:-

http://www.wlky.com/news/18996237/detail.html

http://www.whas11.com/topstories/stories/whas11-topstory-090323-woman-charged-molestation.64516dfc.html

Latest News On The Trial:-

06:06 11/4/2009
November 3rd 2009

A Palatine, Illinois woman has been charged with secretly taking videos of a 14-year-old girl in a bathroom and sending them to a teenage boy the woman met on the Internet, authorities said today.

Mary Cordes, 45, of the 1900 block of North Cambridge Court, was charged with one count of manufacture of child pornography and one count of distribution of child pornography at a hearing in Rolling Meadows branch court.

Bond was set at $30,000. Judge Joseph Urso ordered Cordes not to have contact with the girl.

Cordes met the 16-year-old boy on the Internet and exchanged sexually explicit messages, authorities said. The woman told the boy about the 14-year-old and he asked her to send him naked pictures of the girl, said Cook County Assistant State’s Atty. Shilpa Patel.

Cordes placed a small video camera contained in a pen in the bathroom of her residence and secretly obtained videos of the girl partly undressed, Patel said.

According to Palatine police, Cordes took the video images on a flash drive to work, where she downloaded them to a computer to edit them. She asked a co-worker to help her and the co-worker reported the images to a supervisor. Cordes was immediately fired, said Kurt Schroeder, Palatine police commander.

Cordes is accused of e-mailing the videos to the teenager, Patel said.

http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/2009/11/palatine-child-pornography-rolling-meadows-cook-mary-cordes-michehl.html

http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local-beat/Mary-Cordes-Michehl-palatine-child-porn-68937237.html

http://www.dailyherald.com/story/?id=333942

05:51 10/30/2009
October 29th 2009

A Tahlequah woman charged in May with multiple sexual assault charges has pleaded guilty to charges in Muskogee County.

Tina Anne Marie Unger Shell, 21, pleaded no contest to assault with intent to commit a felony in Muskogee. She was put on a suspended five-year sentence, fined $500 and ordered to pay a $200 victim compensation assessment and a $250 court-appointed attorney fee. She is to be supervised by probation and parole and must complete a sex offender program.

The Muskogee County charge was filed the day Cherokee County prosecutors dismissed three first-degree rape counts, two lewd molestation counts and a count of soliciting sexual communication with a minor by use of technology. Those charges were filed May 14.

Shell’s competency was an issue when the case was in Cherokee County. She was deemed to be competent last month. The charges stemmed from her alleged relationship with a 14-year-old boy she met at Help-In-Crisis. The incidents that led to the charges occurred March 14-21.

Online court records show Cherokee County officials names on the Muskogee County docket sheet.

http://www.tahlequahdailypress.com/local/local_story_302110640.html

Previous Report On This Case:-

http://www.tahlequahdailypress.com/local/local_story_135170416.htm

Mom Charged With Tossing Her Dead Baby In Trash Says She’s Not Guilty

November 7, 2009

woodschristian.jpgThe Escambia County woman accused of throwing her dead infant daughter in the trash and leaving two of her other children alone while she reported them missing has pleaded not guilty.

Christian Rochelle Woods, 21, entered the plea in Escambia County Circuit Court on Friday as her friends and families told the judge that she is a good mother. She is due back in court in February with her trial scheduled to being March 1. She remains in the Escambia County Jail on $250,000 bond.

Woods is charged with manslaughter and two counts of child abuse for leaving the children, ages 18-month and two years, home alone for two days in a home with no power or water. The children were left with only a few cups of Jello to eat.

Authorities said that the little girl found in the trashcan, Myleahya Woods (pictured left), weighed just 11 pounds. Prosecutors say she starved to death. The other two children found in the home, Myleahya ’s twin sister, Mykayhala  (pictured right) and Jaterius Woods, 2, were also severely malnourished. When deputies found Mykayhala under a bed in the filthy Escambia County home, she was in a coma. Escambia County Sheriff David Morgan said deputies first thought Mykayhala was dead until her eyes fluttered.

babies.jpgWoods called deputies to report that her children were missing. But deputies became suspicious. They found Jaterius and arrested Woods on child neglect charges because he showed what they said was obvious signs of abuse. About 12 hours after her arrest, Woods admitted that Myleahya was dead in a trashcan on the back porch of her home.

Prosecutors said Woods’ family members had no idea what was going on with the children, and that she never asked for help.

Mother gets 16 years over abuse of children

The Denver Post

Posted: 11/07/2009 01:00:00 AM MST

 

//

// 0){
document.getElementById(‘articleViewerGroup’).style.width = requestedWidth + “px”;
document.getElementById(‘articleViewerGroup’).style.margin = “0px 0px 10px 10px”;
}
// ]]>A mother who left her children in the care of another family, even though she knew they were being abused, was sentenced Friday to 16 years in prison.  This is a case where rightsformothers should have been terminated a long time ago.

Karen Stillman, 58, who pleaded guilty in July to attempted child abuse with serious bodily injury, was given the maximum sentence by Denver District Judge William Hood.

The Denver district attorney’s office said Stillman left her son and daughter in the home of Eric and Linda Torrez in the 1990s, where they were repeatedly abused physically and sexually.

Stillman’s daughter, who is now 22, spoke at the sentencing hearing, saying her mother knew of the abuse but did nothing to intervene or report it.

Eric Torrez, 47, and Linda Torrez, 46, are expected to go to trial in February. Their 23-year-old son, Patrick, pleaded guilty in October.

Mother Love – Female Abusers

November 3rd, 2009 // ShareThis

By Roni Weisberg-Ross, L.M.F.T., Abuse Topic Expert Contributor

“A Social Problem Does Not Exist For A Society Until It Is Recognized By That Society To Exist” – H. Blumer

The following is the first of a three-part series of articles:

It was in a high school literature class that I was first introduced to the Oedipus Complex, defined as “a boy’s unresolved desire for sexual gratification through the parent of the opposite sex, especially the desire of a son for his mother”. It was in a college film class that I was shown a famous French film entitled “Murmur of the Heart” which took the Oedipal theme and played it out in a contemporary middle class setting. In this film, the sensitive youngest son of a beautiful, tempestuous Italian woman is ushered into manhood by her as he recovers from a heart murmur at a countryside sanitarium. The film would have you believe that although mother and son both realized that they had crossed a forbidden line, neither was scarred by the experience, and that in fact the son was now able to go on and become a man. At the time, I never questioned the implications of this theme.

Mothers have been idealized for thousands of years. So the notion that the most trusted figure in our lives – the Madonna – could betray and abuse us sexually is particularly hard to fathom. And I would contend that that is the primary reason that this particular form of abuse has not been properly identified and addressed in our culture. Statistics, however, begin to set the record straight: A July 2000 Justice Department report found that “woman account for 4 percent of those who sexually abuse children under 18 years of age, and about 12 percent of those who molest children younger than six years of age.” Mind you, these types of studies look at a prescribed definition of abuse – one that more readily fits the notion of the male as aggressor – and does not address other questionable (and damaging) behaviors such as parents (mothers) sleeping with children; bathing, fondling and massaging them; dressing and undressing in front of them; engaging in sexualized talk and making them touch them in inappropriate ways. And it is believed that abuse by mothers is so grossly under-identified and under-reported that these statistics only reveal a fraction of the problem.

Why is abuse by mothers so much more under-reported than abuse by fathers?

Because of the very nature of the relationship. Professionals consider mothers more trusted figures than fathers. And even if there is suspicion of abuse, there is likely not to be any physical evidence. Additionally, a mother’s actions can be more confusing because of her traditional role as the primary physical caretaker and nurturer. In many cases, the child’s family includes only the mother. What child would risk losing his/her only family? She may be the only one available for love and support?

In many instances of mother/son incest the abuse occurs because the son becomes a substitute for the non-existent father. His sense of protecting and taking care of her and being the “man” she needs becomes enmeshed in the abuse. And the type of abuse that takes place between a mother and son doesn’t always fit into social stereotypes. Society views sexual abuse as something violent or coercive and aggressive – and something that usually involves intercourse. But whether coercion is used or not, “if a child is introduced to a sexually stimulating behavior- which is inappropriate to his (or her) psychosexual and psychosocial developmental maturity – by a parent, it is incest and it is abusive” (C.A. Courtois, 1988).

For male victims the situation becomes even more complicated. Boys are less likely to feel victimized and/or to report sexual abuse, especially mother-son incest, because they either see the abuse as something positive (mother love) or they believe that it is either consensual or they are to blame. Especially, if they became stimulated and ejaculated, they believe that they wanted it. Furthermore, boys are more likely to internalize and not tell – in fact disclosure during childhood was the only sexual abuse variable that differentiated the genders in a study by Roesler & McKenzie (1994) – 31% vs. 61%. But the most significant finding in this study was that the long-term symptomological response to childhood abuse among adult male and adult female victims was similar – in other words – abuse has profound negative long-term effects for both sexes. This shatters another myth – that boys can handle incest or childhood sex and may even welcome it as a right of passage.

The psychological consequences of mother/son incest are significant. Because boys don’t tell, they can experience a greater degree of shame, stigma and self-blame than girls. Especially in our current environment, where girls are encouraged to speak up, boys are left to hide something that cuts to the very core of their male hood. In his study on the Psychological Impact of Male Sexual Abuse, David Lisak says one of the most crucial aspects of the experience of male sexual abuse is “a fundamental loss of control: over one’s physical being, one’s sense of self, one’s sense of agency and self-efficacy, and one’s fate”. And yet, as one boy put it, “the thought of losing her was more frightening than her abuse of me.” Lisak refers to the helplessness, isolation and alienation boys experience as they grow up hiding their secret and “seeding the potential for a lifelong struggle with alienation from other people.”

In order to compensate for the feelings of victimization and helplessness that permeated their childhood, adult males abused as boys deal with their masculinity in one of two ways, they either become hyper-masculine and exhibit a lot of anger, especially in relationships with women, or they become passive caretaker types putting everyone else’s needs before their own and exhibiting little or no male ego. Either way they are fighting deeply ingrained feelings of masculine inadequacy. But possibly the most destructive long-term consequence of the abuse is the victim’s inability to trust and therefore to connect with other people. If you have been betrayed by the first and most important figure in your life, how can you ever trust anyone else?

©Copyright 2009 by Roni Weisberg-Ross L.M.F.T. All Rights Reserved. Permission to publish granted to GoodTherapy.org. The following article was solely written and edited by the author named above. The views and opinions expressed are not necessarily shared by GoodTherapy.org. Questions or concerns about the following article can be directed to the author or posted as a comment to this blog entry. Click here to contact Roni and/or see her GoodTherapy.org Profile

14:12 10/30/2009
October 30th 2009

A Topeka, Kansas woman placed on probation in September for three counts of sexually abusing a boy from the time he was 13 years old until he was 16 years old has been indicted in New Mexico on one charge of sexually assaulting the same boy, a court official said Friday.

Jennifer Dawn Liskey, 39, was indicted Thursday by a grand jury in Dona Ana County, N.M., with one count of fourth-degree criminal penetration of a child age 13 to 16, said Brandy Sanchez, an administrative assistant in the district attorney’s office.

In Shawnee County District Court, Liskey was placed on probation based on her no-contest pleas on Jan. 23 to two counts of aggravated indecent liberties and one count of aggravated criminal sodomy. A fourth charge of aggravated indecent liberties with a child was dismissed as part of a plea agreement.

Liskey was a paraprofessional at Robinson Middle School when she met the boy, who was 13. Intimacy between Liskey and the child escalated from kissing to oral sex and sexual intercourse taking place in Liskey’s house, the victim’s home, a car, motels and hotels.

http://cjonline.com/news/local/2009-10-30/topekan_indicted_in_nm_case

Previous Report On this Case:-

http://to-catch-a-female-predator.blogspot.com/2009/09/kansas-da-appealing-against-former.html

23:20 11/1/2009, Danny Vice, THE WEEKLY VICE

Deland, FL (The Weekly Vice) – Patricia Reynolds, a 39-year-old Florida woman was arrested Saturday after she allegedly left her 4-year-old daughter home alone all night to go on a crack-cocaine binge.

According to the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office, a 4-year-old girl dressed in pajamas appeared on her neighbor’s doorstep crying about 5:45 a.m. telling the neighbor that she had awaken to find her mother gone.

Investigators say the woman took the child inside, calmed her down and then walked over to the girl’s apartment, but no one was home. That’s when she called 911, asking deputies to look into the matter.

The little girl told deputies that her mother was home when she went to sleep, but was gone when she awoke.

Deputies searched the neighborhood and then expanded their search to surrounding areas – eventually finding Reynolds later that morning at a gas station known to be a hot spot for drug activity.

After deputies apprehended Reynolds and placed her in the back of a patrol car, she reportedly became violent, banging her head against the partition in the back seat of a patrol car. She then slipped out of her handcuffs and attempted to flee, however deputies caught her. She repeatedly banged her head against the ground as deputies re-handcuffed her.

Reynolds was treated at a local hospital for lacerations to her hard head when she reportedly told a hospital worker that she had been out all night using crack-cocaine.

She was booked into the Volusia County Jail on charges of child neglect, prisoner escape and resisting an officer with violence.

The child was placed in the care of a relative.

Danny Vice
The Weekly Vice

http://www.theweeklyvice.com

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21:15 10/29/2009, Danny Vice, THE WEEKLY VICE

Pensacola, FL (The Weekly Vice) – Donna Powell, 40, was arrested Monday when authorities discovered one of her abandoned children living in a shed on the property of her ex-boyfriend, Jerry “Tom” Gray.

 

The Escambia County Sheriff’s office received a call from Gray’s father regarding the teen that was residing in the virtually uninhabitable shed.

Upon arriving at the scene, they discovered a hungry, upset 17-year-old who had been left there when his mother moved out. Her other son, 13, had also been abandoned but was living inside the residence.

Authorities say Gray’s father contacted them on September 8th stating that he wanted the teenager off of his property. Deputies responded to the complaint and found the teenager living inside a shed with no electricity, running water, air conditioning, or heat.

The teen told officers that he had been living in the shed for approximately one month because he did not get along with her mother’s ex-boyfriend. He could not remember when his last meal was and authorities described him as “visibly upset,” claiming that he wanted to be where his mother was.

Investigators were not immediately able to locate Powell, and both children were turned over to their grandmother Patricia Monroe, who is Powell’s mother.

Powell was booked in to Escambia County Jail and charged with felony child neglect. She was released on $25,000 bond.

Rebecca Diamond
The Weekly Vice

http://www.theweeklyvice.com

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22:11 10/28/2009, Danny Vice, THE WEEKLY VICE

Shela Heights MySpace Profile

Kileen, Texas (The Weekly Vice) – Shela Heights, a 22-year-old Texas woman has been arrested after she allegedly used a clothes iron to burn her 14-month-old daughter.

According to Killeen police, officers were dispatched to Metroplex Hospital after doctors reported a case of possible child abuse.

When officers arrived, hospital staff told them that the child had burns in the shape of an iron across her chest and abdomen – and that the story given to them by the child’s mother didn’t add up.

Investigators say they spoke with Heights, who told them the child fell on the iron by herself. After examining the iron’s shape and the burn impressions left on the child’s body, it was determined that the iron had been pressed against the child’s skin intentionally.

Heights was booked into jail on charges of reckless injury to a child causing bodily injury. She is being held in lieu of $100,000 bond.

Danny Vice
The Weekly Vice

http://www.theweeklyvice.com

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03:26 10/29/2009
October 28th 2009

A Bluffton, North Carolina woman was convicted Wednesday of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old boy while she was baby-sitting him and his sisters.

Susan Tappeiner, 42, (pictured left) was taken into custody after the verdict was announced in the Beaufort County Courthouse in Beaufort. She will remain in the county jail until her sentencing.

Judge Carmen Mullen delayed that sentencing pending results of an investigation by the S.C. Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services into Tappeiner’s claim that she, too, has been abused and that she’s had mental health problems. The investigation is expected to take about three weeks.

Mullen said that before she determines an appropriate sentence, she wants to know “how we got to this point.”

Second-degree criminal sexual conduct with a minor carries a sentence of up to 20 years in prison, Mullen said.

Tappeiner will be placed on the state sex offender registry. She was charged in February with sexually assaulting the boy, who is now 15. The incident occurred on Aug. 15, 2008.

The boy’s mother, whose name is being withheld to protect her son’s identity, addressed the court after the verdict was announced.

“My son was very brave and faced enormous obstacles … in bringing this forward,” she said. “We’re grateful she’s going to be on the sex offender registry and believe she needs to serve time for what she has put our family through.”

Mullen asked Tappeiner to speak after the verdict. As the woman’s husband and parents looked on, she said, “I’m in shock right now. All I can think about is my children.”

In February, the boy told Michael Creason, a Bluffton police officer stationed at the school the teen was attending, H.E. McCracken Middle, about the encounter, the officer testified Tuesday. The boy is now in the eighth grade in another state, according to testimony.

The boy testified that on Aug. 15, 2008, he was watching movies with Tappeiner, her husband and two daughters, his sisters and another neighborhood girl at the Tappeiners’ home.

After everyone fell asleep, he said, Tappeiner grabbed him by the arm and dragged him to her daughter’s bedroom. She locked the door and struck him when he tried to escape, he told jurors. He testified that Tappeiner forced him to perform oral sex on her, then have sexual intercourse. He said Tappeiner told him not to tell anyone what had happened.

Tappeiner, represented by Beaufort attorney Mike Macloskie, did not testify.

Her husband, Mike Tappeiner, told jurors he and his wife had been drinking the night of the incident. He said they went upstairs to bed together and that he did not hear her get up during the night.

The boy testified that he had yelled for help. Mike Tappeiner told jurors he heard nothing, that he had been asleep in the master bedroom across the hall and never awoke.

The boy testified that he returned to his mother’s home, which is near the Tappeiners’ house, after the incident because he was afraid. He said he climbed through a window because the doors were locked and that his mother had not yet returned. When she arrived, he said, he asked her for Excedrin because he felt ill.

Mike Tappeiner had a different story. He testified the boy was asleep on his living room floor with the other children the morning after the incident and that nothing seemed amiss.

Before jurors deliberated, assistant solicitor Dawn Burke gave her closing arguments:

“Would you let (Susan Tappeiner) baby-sit your kids? Your grandkids? … The answer to that is why you should find her guilty.”

Macloskie said in his closing arguments that he didn’t understand how no one — not the other children or Mike Tappeiner — reported hearing the boy yell for help. He also said he didn’t understand how the boy could not have escaped from Susan Tappeiner.

The jury took about two hours to reach a guilty verdict.

http://www.islandpacket.com/news/local/story/1016068.html