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Seventh Circuit Issues Landmark Decision for Parental Rights Against Abusive Social Workers
AFA Center for Law & Policy ^ | 4/17/2003 | American Family Association

Posted on 05/04/2003 11:50:01 AM PDT by Remedy

Chicago --Yesterday, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued a landmark decision upholding the constitutional rights of parents and private schools against social workers performing child abuse investigations.

The court held that social workers violated the Fourth Amendment when they force their way into a private school, Greendale Baptist Academy, to interview students in a child abuse investigation involving no emergency. The court also held that the social workers violated the rights of parents when they threatened to remove the children from the home when they "had no reason whatsoever to suspect that Mr. and Mrs. Doe were abusing their children."

The case arose when social workers, acting on stale information several months old, forced their way into a private Christian school without a warrant, over the objections of the school principal, seized a 10 year old boy with police assistance, and interviewed him about the school’s policy of administering a "swat" as discipline in certain cases. Parents of the students had given written approval of the disciplinary policy.

Based on the information obtained from the child, the social workers then proceeded to target the parents’ disciplinary practices, questioning their own use of corporal punishment. Eventually, the social workers opened files on numerous families in the school, and even sought to remove the school’s accreditation simply because it practiced corporal punishment. The court found these actions violated the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. The court also held the statute under which the social workers acted unconstitutional as applied to the parents and school.

"This is a tremendous victory for parental rights," said Steve Crampton, Chief Counsel for the Center for Law & Policy, which represented the parents. Mike Dean, counsel for the school, commented, "All too often, social workers don’t think the constitution applies to them, and they run roughshod over parents and other citizens. This ruling underscores that even social workers are not above the law."


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: afa; catholiclist; homeschoollist; socialworkers
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To: jimtorr; webstersII
In addition to the present ruling, note that other Appeals courts have similar rulings (quoted with approval by the 7th CC.)

Thus, while not "definitive" nationally, there's LOTSA precedent with the addition of this one.
21 posted on 05/04/2003 2:22:16 PM PDT by ninenot
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To: BlackElk
Ping. May be of particular interest to your lovely wife.
22 posted on 05/04/2003 2:22:59 PM PDT by ninenot
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To: Always Right
"there are also many real cases of abused and neglected children."

Quite true.

A girl I used to know was a social worker, and some of the stories she would tell were heart-breaking. She would get calls from people needing help with the most incredible stories, like people whose families had hardly had anything to eat in the last few weeks. Some had fallen on hard times, others created their own trouble, but lots of them had kids who were really suffering.

She said that there were alot of people in need but there were also low-lifes. Like the time she drove up to a house where they had been dealing with a suspected case of abuse and the father had just shot and killed his two children, then their mother. She arrived just as he shot himself; she heard the gunshot but didn't believe that it would be as bad as what she found when she and the police officer accompanying her went into the home.

Unbelievable stuff. She finally had to quit because it was getting to her.
23 posted on 05/04/2003 2:26:48 PM PDT by webstersII
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To: Remedy
These Socialist workers should be prohibited from ever being abled to sell their wares again....
24 posted on 05/04/2003 2:29:00 PM PDT by azhenfud
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To: Carry_Okie
CPS gets an extra $40,000 if they adopt a child quickly. So they consequently focus upon confiscating kids who are easy to adopt. In addition to their ideological predispositions (here in Santa Crux, CA, the CPS office is reportedly dominated by lesbian women), that's why they raid upper middle-class, white Christian families.

When trying to figure out why govt workers are doing something off the wall, "follow the money" is a useful investigative policy

Also, a raid on a middle-class home is less likely to get you shot, and the neighborhood erupting in riots that will be blamed on you and your dept, then trying that in the "inner city" areas where a disproportionate amount of abuse occurs.

25 posted on 05/04/2003 2:46:56 PM PDT by SauronOfMordor (Heavily armed, easily bored, and off my medication)
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To: SauronOfMordor
When trying to figure out why govt workers are doing something off the wall, "follow the money" is a useful investigative policy.

It is an especially fruitful venue when dealing with the environmental movemint, or the UN.

26 posted on 05/04/2003 2:54:59 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (California! See how low WE can go!)
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To: Remedy
This really is a landmark ruling. Case workers have been getting away with breaking the law for years, sometimes based on religious discrimination.

I used to be a case worker, but with a private agency in NYC. After the city took kids from their parents, we supervised the cases. However, I can say that I never saw cases like the ones that figure in this decision. All of the cases I was familiar with involved serious abuse or neglect. There was no trolling for cases.

For some strange reason, most of the criminal acts by caseworkers I'm familiar with happened in the Midwest.

27 posted on 05/04/2003 3:51:07 PM PDT by mrustow (no tag)
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To: Remedy; TxBec
They can still get away with this in public schools though.
Send your children to a government school, and you allow intrusion of your privacy by agents of the state.
A false allegation of "abuse", and you could lose your children.
Of course, you might get them back, after spending thousands of dollars on attorneys, court costs, and years of hearings.
Better not to place your children into the hands of the state in the first place.
28 posted on 05/04/2003 11:11:19 PM PDT by ppaul
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To: ppaul

A false allegation of "abuse", and you could lose your children.
Of course, you might get them back, after spending thousands of dollars on attorneys, court costs, and years of hearings.


Citizen Magazine Feature - Beware the home invaders Every year our office receives more than 100 calls from fearful families with authorities on their doorsteps, demanding entry-or else.

The Calabretta family finally had its rights vindicated by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals-one step below the U.S. Supreme Court. In a decision issued Aug. 26, 1999, the court ruled that police officers and social workers must obey the normal rules of the Fourth Amendment even when their purpose for entry is to conduct an investigation designed to protect children.

The court said, "We have been adamant in our demand that absent exigent [emergency] circumstances, a warrant will be required before a person's home is invaded by the authorities."

The 9th Circuit's condemnation of the officer's and social worker's action was not limited to the initial entry. They also pointed to the strip search of little Natalie as a violation of both the parents' and child's rights:

An unlawful entry or search of a home does not end when the government officials walk across the threshold. It continues as they impose their will on the residents of the home in which they have no right to be. . . . The strip search as well as the entry stripped the mother of this authority and dignity.

As a result of the 9th Circuit decision, the local authorities agreed to a $150,000 settlement with the Calabretta family and HSLDA. Likewise, Robert and Maria Kennedy received a $76,000 settlement after their constitutional rights were violated. HSLDA has pursued a number of such cases, many of which have ended with similar positive results.

The normal rules of the Fourth Amendment have been clear for more than 200 years. Government agents may not enter a home to "protect" children unless: (1) they have probable cause to believe there is an emergency requiring immediate action; (2) they have a valid warrant; or (3) they have obtained free and voluntary consent. These rules also protect families dealing with more routine investigations.

The tragedy of such incidents is found in the extraordinary number of child-abuse investigations that are erroneous from the beginning. Fifty five percent of all child-abuse investigations are eventually deemed "unfounded," according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. In other words, these cases lack even the scanty evidence required for further investigation or intervention. A far smaller percentage of cases ever result in a judicial finding of neglect or abuse.

False reports of abuse could be reduced if social agencies refused to pursue anonymous reports. There are sound reasons why the identity of the person calling in an alleged case of abuse should remain confidential (names can be withheld from the person being investigated until they testify at trial). However, police and social workers should always know to whom they are talking-a point that victims of The Knock might remind them of.

Anyone truly concerned about a child should be willing to give his name and phone number to police or social workers on a confidential basis. Anonymous tips of child abuse are frequently a guise for retaliation stemming from an unrelated dispute between adults and should be banned.

Why We Are Here The American Family Advocacy Center was founded to help families who find themselves involved in interventions with state Child Protective Services (CPS) agencies. Statistically speaking, the vast majority (80-90%) of child abuse/neglect reports are false.

Targeted families are caught up in a tangled web of legalities and lies. Their children are traumatized and abused by the very agencies who profess to protect them. The parents are labeled ‘perpetrators’ and presumed guilty or unfit. Their character is publicly maligned. Their children - often the only people who can actually prove the parent’s innocence - are kidnapped and secreted away from all contact with their beloved parents, then systematically ‘trained’ and coerced to disclose abuse.

Child Protection Reform - America's child protection system has immense power. It operates in secrecy. It enjoys total immunity. Parents and children have few meaningful rights. Under current law, the system created to protect children has become America's greatest source of family and child abuse. It desperately needs substantial reform. (this site features Real-audio and written testimonials)

Family.org - CitizenLink - FNIF News - Child Removals on the Rise "Child Protective Services receives money for every child they take from a family. They're rewarded with federal dollars," Dacus said.

Citizen Magazine Feature - Invasion of the Home Inspectors

Why do young families need Big Brother looking over their shoulder? The reason, officials reply, is a profound one: to stop child abuse before it starts. Critics, however, say the nation's foremost home-visitation program is often more than a little intrusive.

TAKING THE NATION BY STORM

That program is Healthy Families America (HFA)--a project of Chicago-based Prevent Child Abuse America (PCAA). Healthy Families began by launching home-visitation programs in Hawaii, and today there are more than 300 HFA programs in 40 states and the District of Columbia.

Most expectant parents know little or nothing about in-home visitation. But thanks to Dianna Lightfoot and Dr. Stan Watson of the Alabama Family Alliance, that is beginning to change.

Lightfoot is director of the Alliance's Physician's Resource Council, as well as a licensed counselor and teacher who in the last eight years has served on 10 boards dealing with child abuse. Watson, director of research at the Alliance, has an extensive background in social sciences and holds his doctorate in political science.

Lightfoot attributed the rapid growth of Healthy Families to the willingness of legislators to fund its programs.

"Indiana began [its Healthy Families program] five years ago with a budget of about a quarter of a million dollars," Lightfoot said. "Now the program's budget is close to $40 million."

Resources For Families On The Web The links below will guide you to a vast amount of information, support, and resources available to American Families who have been "provided services"(read - "violated") by Child Protective Services/Family Services.

29 posted on 05/05/2003 8:53:40 AM PDT by Remedy
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To: Remedy
SCORE ONE FOR THE GOOD GUYS. GOVERNMENT NANNIES ARE USELESS.
30 posted on 05/05/2003 7:13:03 PM PDT by goodseedhomeschool
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To: Remedy
Homeschooling and H.S.L.D.A. ARE the way to go.
31 posted on 05/05/2003 7:15:20 PM PDT by goodseedhomeschool
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To: Remedy
The problem is, most of the time the state social workers do not need a search warrant because the parents usually allow them free and voluntary consent to come in the home. The social worker askes, "May we come in?" The parent, wanting to appear cooperative (after all, "I have nothing to hide", he or she thinks) says, "Sure". After that, anything the social worker sees or hears inside the home is fair game.
32 posted on 05/05/2003 10:32:30 PM PDT by ppaul
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