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-Land of the Free
Mom Ignores Doctor When Her Sick 2-Year-Old Starts Feeling Better, Child Services Send a SWAT Team
2019-03-28
[Reason] Chandler, Arizona, cops broke through the door of a family's home in the middle of the night, stormed in, pointed their guns, handcuffed the father, and watched as the state's Department of Child Safety (DCS) took custody of the parents' three kids‐all because mom had decided her toddler's fever was not serious enough to merit a trip to the hospital.

It was dinnertime on February 25 when the pregnant mother took her 2-year-old to the doctor with a fever of over 100. The doctor told her to take him to the emergency room, fearing that because the boy was unvaccinated, perhaps he had meningitis‐a life-threatening disease.

The doctor called the hospital to alert them. But by the time the mother and child left his office, the boy was "laughing and playing with his siblings," according to this excellent piece by Dianna M. Nanez in The Arizona Republic. Mom took his temperature again, and it was almost normal. So instead of going to the emergency room, the family went home. The mom called the doctor to say her boy's fever had broken and she wasn't going to the emergency room. The doctor told her she should go anyway, so she agreed she would‐but then she didn't.

That's when the madness began.

The hospital called the doctor to tell him the toddler hadn't arrived. The doctor called DCS. And DCS requested the cops check on the family as a caseworker headed over.

And then, according to The Arizona Republic:

It was about 10:30 p.m. when two police officers knocked on the family's door. The officers heard someone coughing.

Officer Tyler Cascio wrote in a police report that he knocked on the door several times but no one answered.

A neighbor approached the officers and police explained the situation. The woman said she knew her neighbor and that "she was a good mother." At the request of officers, the neighbor called the mother and said police wanted to speak with her.

The DCS caseworker arrived and updated police on the toddler's fever and the mother choosing not to take her child to the hospital. The officer called the family's doctor, who repeated her recommendation that the mother take the child to the hospital. ...

At about 11:30 p.m., the caseworker informed officers that DCS planned to obtain a "temporary custody notice" from a judge to remove the child for emergency medical aid.


Just after midnight the caseworker got that notice, which is required by law. Matters subsequently escalated:

Cascio wrote that officers consulted with the police criminal investigations bureau and SWAT.

"Based upon the court order, the intent of DCS to serve the order, and exigency to ensure the health and welfare of the child, the decision was made to force entry to the home if the parents refused to respond to verbal requests," according to police records. Police knocked, saying they had a court order and would force entry if needed, according to police records.


And force they did:

It was after 1 a.m. when officers kicked down the family's door. One officer carried a shield, while another was described as having "lethal coverage." Officers pointing guns yelled, "Chandler Police Department," and entered the house.


The rest of the story is equally nuts. The kids were all placed in separate foster homes. When the case got to juvenile court 10 days later, DCS requested it be closed to the public. The judge refused.

But then it seemed as if DCS decided to make everything harder for the parents, because now the press was interested, as was the Arizona DCS Oversight Group, a local organization that fights for families' rights, and a state legislator, Rep. Kelly Townsend (R–Mesa), who had helped write the law requiring DCS to get a warrant before removing a child. Townsend has been lobbing zingers like, "What about the parents' rights to decide what's best for their child? Parents felt the child was fine. Next thing we know, the Gestapo is at their door."

In court, DCS tried to convince the judge, Jennifer Green, to bar the press from covering the dispute. A lawyer for the agency even claimed that the parents had gone against the best interests of the children by involving the media. Green rejected this argument, saying, "In Arizona we like our courts to be open."

However, the judge ultimately sided with DCS, ruling that the children's removal was lawful and telling the parents "to remember that the state had them on a family-reunification plan and wants them to regain custody of their children."

The children's grandparents are undergoing a DCS review, and hope to be permitted to temporarily shelter the kids once that's approved. But there's no telling how long it will be before the kids can just go home to mom and dad.
This is your liberal utopia. The state controls your children. They just live with you and your parental responsibilities and judgement are either void or secondary to the state's judgement.
Posted by:DarthVader

#10  A way station in the underground railroad of healthcare.
Posted by: Skidmark   2019-03-28 23:47  

#9  This is not the first time overzealous doctors and child protective service social workers have combined to kidnap children from their caring parents. Recall Justina Pelletier, who spent sixteen months in a locked hospital psych ward, her parents forbidden to have unsupervised contact with her, because the doctors at Boston Children’s Hospital disagreed with the diagnosis of the experts at Tufts Medical Center.

I know of a similar case in California where a young child with a rare fragile bone disease (I don’t recall the precise name) was taken from his single mother and put in foster care on the assumption that the clearly loved child was being abused. When she finally got the boy back years later, she fled with him to the far side of the country must to make sure California child protective services couldn’t get their hands on him again. They stayed overnight with us on the way — he was charming, bright, and visbly relieved to be back with his mother.

The website MedicalKidnap.com is a bit obsessive about collecting stories and statistics on the subject.
Posted by: trailing wife   2019-03-28 21:22  

#8  Can't imagine any malpractice attorney telling the doctor to do differently...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2019-03-28 16:54  

#7  There has to be more to this.

Otherwise, this is the sort of thing that gives rise to armed revolutions, dead police, and bureaucrats hanging from lamp posts.
Posted by: Injun Bucket8891   2019-03-28 14:40  

#6  Agree with 49 Pan. Something else is going on here.

I'll abide by the 48-hr rule......for now.
Posted by: Mullah Richard   2019-03-28 12:43  

#5  Everyone in DCS and police involved in this should be fired without pension or references or anything. Such horribly bad judgement they shouldn't be allowed to work in garbage pickup.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2019-03-28 12:37  

#4  See earlier post
Posted by: Skidmark   2019-03-28 12:00  

#3  "Come on! We got all this equipment and some grant money from Homeland Security. We're all jumped up on Tacti-Cool(tm). And you want us to knock on the door and say "Excuse me, ma'am"? Ain't gonna happen."

On the plus side, this is a nice object lesson in why the Founding Fathers didn't trust governments - even their own.
Posted by: SteveS   2019-03-28 11:48  

#2  There has to be more to the story. They were already on a state reunification plan, sounds like there were some prior abuse or neglect issues going on...
Posted by: 49 Pan   2019-03-28 11:44  

#1  SWAT? More than overkill.
Posted by: JohnQC   2019-03-28 11:29  

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