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Author Topic: Slain teen's placement in foster home questioned  (Read 2568 times)
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MuffyBee
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« on: August 04, 2009, 08:30:47 PM »

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_NORTHWEST_TENNESSEE_SHOOTINGS?SITE=FLTAM&SECTION=US
Aug 4, 7:26 PM EDT

Slain teen's placement in foster home questioned

By TRAVIS LOLLER
Associated Press Writer

ASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- When the 15-year-old girl accused her father of abusing her, she was placed in a foster home while the allegations were investigated. That home was just two doors down.

A week later, the girl's father fatally shot her and her foster father before killing himself in the northwestern Tennessee community of Dyersburg. Now people are questioning the actions of the state agency responsible for protecting children from abuse and neglect.

Officials at the Tennessee Department of Children's Services insist there was nothing unusual about placing the teenager in a house less than 200 feet from the father she accused of abuse.

Agency spokesman Rob Johnson would not speak specifically about the case, citing the privacy of surviving relatives, but he did say the department is looking nto how the matter was handled.

Authorities would not specify the nature of the abuse. Police are still investigating both the shootings and the girl's allegations.

When children bring accusations of abuse, he said, the department tries to place them where they will be comfortable.

"When these things happen, it's not like we spirit them away," he said. "The parents know where the kids are ... unless there's some extreme case, an indication that something could befall the child."

Christopher Milburn, 34, did not have a criminal history.

Neighbor Frank Hipps said Milburn was good friends with the foster father, 46-year-old Todd Randolph. The two had even vacationed together in Las Vegas.

Neighbor Charles Wootton, who called 911, recalled hearing gunshots Sunday night and seeing Randolph lying in his yard across the street. A neighbor who was a nurse tried to perform CPR while holding a towel to the bullet wound in the man's neck, he said.

Randolph's wife, Susan, had been shot as well and was slumped over on the porch. She was taken to the hospital and released the following day. Wootton did not enter the house where the girl was slain.

When a child is placed in a temporary home, all parties must sign a protection agreement, Johnson said. The details of the agreements are different in each case, and he would not disclose what was in this one.

"The goal is to get the child out of the home while the allegations are being investigated," Johnson said. "Sometimes the allegations aren't true."

Ira Lustbader is associate director of Children's Rights, a nonprofit group that sued the state in 2000 over how the Department of Children's Services was run. In general, he said, when a child is taken from a home, that child's safety is the top concern.

"It is good to keep a child within the community so they can retain important relationships," he said. But "safety trumps everything."

Frank Hipps was less circumspect.

"That kid shouldn't have been in that house," he said. "This might have been preventable if she had been placed with foster parents out of the community."

State Rep. Sherry Jones, a Nashville Democrat who leads a legislative committee on children and youth, said the panel plans to look into allegations that child-welfare officials are not removing children from dangerous situations.

"It's ridiculous to place a child two doors down when the department is doing an investigation," she said. "They're not doing what they need to do to keep children safe."
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MuffyBee
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« Reply #1 on: August 05, 2009, 09:53:26 PM »

http://www.stategazette.com/story/1559338.html
Three killed and one wounded in Sunday shooting spree
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Sunday, at approximately 7:37 p.m., Dyersburg Police responded to a 911 call of shots fired in the 800 block of Blake Cove. Officers discovered that four subjects had been shot and three were fatally wounded.

Todd Randolph, 46, 895 Blake Cove, his wife Susan Randolph, 45, and a 15-year-old child were all found shot. Todd Randolph and the 15-year-old were pronounced dead at the scene. Susan Randolph was airlifted to the Med with gunshot wounds and was released later this morning.

The preliminary investigation has revealed that suspect Christopher Milburn, 34, 871 Blake Cove, approached the Randolph home and opened fire first killing Todd Randolph and then shooting Susan Randolph. Milburn then entered the home and shot his 15-year-old daughter.


EMS responders place the body of Christopher Milburn, 34, 871 Blake Cove, into an ambulance. His body was found in a field on Blake Cove close to the tree line next to Upper Finley Road. Milburn is believed to have committed suicide after shooting Todd Randolph,46, 895 Blake Cove, his wife Susan Randolph, 45, and his own 15-year-old daughter.

There were no other people inside of the house at the time of the incident

Police found Milburn's body about a block away with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Dyersburg police officials say the weapon Milburn used was a .40 caliber handgun.
The Dyersburg Police Department and the Department of Children Services launched an investigation into allegations of abuse last week involving Christopher Milburn and his 15-year-old daughter. The Department of Children Services placed the 15-year-old into the care of the Randolph family pending the outcome of the investigation.

Gary Meade is the pastor of St. Mary's Episcopal Church where the Randolphs were members. Meade said he would describe the Randolphs as fiercely committed to each other and wonderful and caring members of the church.
They were generous participants in the life of our community and devoted parents," said Meade. "Todd in particular will be sorely missed by all who were blessed to know him."

A makeshift memorial was placed in the yard at the Randolph residence at 895 Blake Cove by neighbors who knew both the Milburn and Randolph families. The sign reads, "Our prayers are with your family, God bless you, we are here for you". A similar memorial was also placed in the front yard of the Milburn residence.

This field on Blake Cove is where the body of Christopher Milburn was found after he committed suicide. The body was found by police along the tree line Sunday evening.


Police crime-scene tape still hangs from a tree close to the spot where Milburn shot himself with a .40-caliber handgun.

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« Reply #2 on: August 07, 2009, 10:46:29 AM »

Shame this had to happen.  I know in Maine they place kids in foster homes in another county altogether so that there isn't a chance that this stuff happens. 
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« Reply #3 on: August 13, 2009, 08:21:33 PM »

http://www.tennessean.com/article/20090809/NEWS03/908090367/1017/Advocates+debate+placing+foster+kids+close+to+home
Advocates question whether foster kids should be placed close to home
DCS tries to balance safety with familiarity

By Janell Ross • THE TENNESSEAN • August 9, 2009
In the case of Stevie Noelle Milburn, a 15-year-old Dyersburg, Tenn., girl who loved soccer, dancing and singing, some facts aren't in dispute.

Two weeks ago, she accused her father of some sort of abuse. Tennessee Department of Children's Services caseworkers consulted Stevie, her father and police and arranged for her to stay with family friends two doors away.

Three days after Stevie's move, Christopher Milburn, 34, walked down the street to shoot and kill his daughter and his neighbor. A short distance away, he took his own life. People in the city of 17,000 about 80 miles northwest of Memphis raised money so Stevie's mother could take her body home to Oregon.

But what former foster children and those who knew Stevie — and some who didn't — are debating is the wisdom of placing a child at the center of an abuse investigation in a home so close to her accused abuser.

"Were the right decisions made in this case? I don't pretend to have any of those answers," said the Rev. Gary Meade, pastor of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Dyersburg, the church Stevie's caretakers attended. Meade also is a former lawyer and foster father who adopted two children.

"This story highlights the reality of social work. There are laws and there are policies. The challenge is in how those laws and policies intersect with real life."

Some answers lie in a collection of state laws, Department of Children's Services policies and practices endorsed by the National Association of Public Child Welfare Workers. Together, they call for most parents to be consulted about places where their children can stay while investigations are under way and for children to be placed in homes near their families.

But some things will never be known because state law shields abuse investigations like Stevie's from public view.
Girl wasn't in foster care

In Tennessee, 5,333 children were in state custody at the end of June. There are 11,770 open investigations, some of which involve children, like Stevie, who have not been legally removed from their parents' custody but are living with relatives or friends under the terms of what's called an "immediate protection agreement."
(2 of 3)

She was not in foster care, said Rob Johnson, spokesman for the Department of Children's Services.
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The Tennessee Department of Children's Services does not regularly track the number of children living under an immediate protection agreement, said Stacy Miller, the agency's general counsel. The Tennessean requested a review of case files involving immediate protection agreements between July 2008 and July 2009. It revealed one death — a child drowned while with a babysitter. That case is under investigation.

Johnson said the department will review its actions in Stevie's case. And, as with every child's death in Tennessee, a county health department-led team will review her death to determine if it was, in any way, preventable.

As a standard part of the initial investigation into unsubstantiated allegations like Stevie's, the department often works with the family and child to identify a safe, neutral space where the child might stay for at least a short time. It's a process that happens quickly but carefully, said Carla Aaron, the Department of Children's Services executive director for child safety.

Caseworkers make a number of observations about birth and host families, the child and his parents' safety and mental stability as well as any criminal records of the people involved. State records show Christopher Milburn had no Tennessee arrests and served no time in prison here.

"If we thought there was danger, we would not go down the road of doing an IPA," Aaron said. "We might pursue protective custody. … In this case, we had no indication that this was a dangerous situation at all."

Protective custody gives the state at least temporary custody of a child and in most cases will lead to a placement in a foster home. If family issues can't be resolved or corrected, it can lead to years in foster care or, ultimately, adoption.
DCS practice criticized

Nashville attorney Natasha Blackshear, an alumna of the New York state foster care system, said she doesn't believe the practice of placing children in their home communities — either for the night or for years — is best.
(3 of 3)

"I think that that's one of those policies that's been made with a middle-class, blond-haired, blue-eyed child in mind," said Blackshear, who serves on the Tennessee Commission on Children and Youth. "The child that benefits from that policy comes from a middle-class neighborhood with good schools or is the kind of child that people are looking to adopt.
Advertisement

"But that's not the story with most of the kids that come into the system. A lot of them come from the ghetto, from neighborhoods where the trouble isn't just in their home and from bad schools."

Blackshear said the close-to-home approach to placements is part of the reason only 25 percent of the children in state custody have earned a high school diploma or equivalent or are working by their 18th birthday. And, when parents are accused of abuse, Blackshear believes that some additional care and caution need to be taken to protect children, she said.

"Even when there are unproven accusations, it does seem like some additional caution, more than two doors' distance, might be a good idea," she said.
Ex-foster kids weigh in

There are benefits to keeping foster children near the schools, stores, gathering places and perhaps places of worship they know, said Ira Lustbader, associate director of Children's Rights, a New York-based nonprofit child advocacy agency. The agency in the late 1990s brought a civil rights suit against Tennessee over the state's treatment of children in its care.

"Safety trumps everything and has to come first," Lustbader said. "But it's an important goal because the experience of being removed from one's home and placed in foster care is in itself traumatic, and you don't want to expose that child to any additional trauma."

Lustbader said there is not enough publicly available information about the Dyersburg case to assess whether the appropriate balance was struck between Stevie's emotional and physical safety needs.

Some former foster children agree with the idea that children in state care belong closer to their families of origin. Krista Noel said she was 13 when false allegations of sexual abuse led the Department of Children's Services to remove her sister and her from their homeless mother's custody.

Noel's sister, then a student at Hume-Fogg High School, asked to be placed in a home in Nashville so that she could continue attending the magnet school. Noel says she wasn't asked where she wanted to go and ended up in Baxter, Tenn., about 70 miles east of Nashville.

"Even though DCS was taking me, had I had a say, I would have wanted to stay in Nashville," said Noel, 24, an expectant mother and waitress. "I would have already known my community and I wouldn't have felt so like I was alone.

"Not that race is so much an issue, but I'm mixed with black and white. In Baxter, there's not that many black people."

Today, she serves on the Tennessee Youth Advisory Council, which works to give children in the state system a voice.

"Even now, not many kids have a choice or a say in where they are placed," Noel said. "Children who know their rights are able to advocate for themselves. But in most cases, youth don't know what's going on. They don't know what rights they have."
She was not in foster care, said Rob Johnson, spokesman for the Department of Children's Services.
Advertisement

The Tennessee Department of Children's Services does not regularly track the number of children living under an immediate protection agreement, said Stacy Miller, the agency's general counsel. The Tennessean requested a review of case files involving immediate protection agreements between July 2008 and July 2009. It revealed one death — a child drowned while with a babysitter. That case is under investigation.

Johnson said the department will review its actions in Stevie's case. And, as with every child's death in Tennessee, a county health department-led team will review her death to determine if it was, in any way, preventable.

As a standard part of the initial investigation into unsubstantiated allegations like Stevie's, the department often works with the family and child to identify a safe, neutral space where the child might stay for at least a short time. It's a process that happens quickly but carefully, said Carla Aaron, the Department of Children's Services executive director for child safety.

Caseworkers make a number of observations about birth and host families, the child and his parents' safety and mental stability as well as any criminal records of the people involved. State records show Christopher Milburn had no Tennessee arrests and served no time in prison here.

"If we thought there was danger, we would not go down the road of doing an IPA," Aaron said. "We might pursue protective custody. … In this case, we had no indication that this was a dangerous situation at all."

Protective custody gives the state at least temporary custody of a child and in most cases will lead to a placement in a foster home. If family issues can't be resolved or corrected, it can lead to years in foster care or, ultimately, adoption.
DCS practice criticized

Nashville attorney Natasha Blackshear, an alumna of the New York state foster care system, said she doesn't believe the practice of placing children in their home communities — either for the night or for years — is best.
"I think that that's one of those policies that's been made with a middle-class, blond-haired, blue-eyed child in mind," said Blackshear, who serves on the Tennessee Commission on Children and Youth. "The child that benefits from that policy comes from a middle-class neighborhood with good schools or is the kind of child that people are looking to adopt.
Advertisement

"But that's not the story with most of the kids that come into the system. A lot of them come from the ghetto, from neighborhoods where the trouble isn't just in their home and from bad schools."

Blackshear said the close-to-home approach to placements is part of the reason only 25 percent of the children in state custody have earned a high school diploma or equivalent or are working by their 18th birthday. And, when parents are accused of abuse, Blackshear believes that some additional care and caution need to be taken to protect children, she said.

"Even when there are unproven accusations, it does seem like some additional caution, more than two doors' distance, might be a good idea," she said.
Ex-foster kids weigh in

There are benefits to keeping foster children near the schools, stores, gathering places and perhaps places of worship they know, said Ira Lustbader, associate director of Children's Rights, a New York-based nonprofit child advocacy agency. The agency in the late 1990s brought a civil rights suit against Tennessee over the state's treatment of children in its care.

"Safety trumps everything and has to come first," Lustbader said. "But it's an important goal because the experience of being removed from one's home and placed in foster care is in itself traumatic, and you don't want to expose that child to any additional trauma."

Lustbader said there is not enough publicly available information about the Dyersburg case to assess whether the appropriate balance was struck between Stevie's emotional and physical safety needs.

Some former foster children agree with the idea that children in state care belong closer to their families of origin. Krista Noel said she was 13 when false allegations of sexual abuse led the Department of Children's Services to remove her sister and her from their homeless mother's custody.

Noel's sister, then a student at Hume-Fogg High School, asked to be placed in a home in Nashville so that she could continue attending the magnet school. Noel says she wasn't asked where she wanted to go and ended up in Baxter, Tenn., about 70 miles east of Nashville.

"Even though DCS was taking me, had I had a say, I would have wanted to stay in Nashville," said Noel, 24, an expectant mother and waitress. "I would have already known my community and I wouldn't have felt so like I was alone.

"Not that race is so much an issue, but I'm mixed with black and white. In Baxter, there's not that many black people."

Today, she serves on the Tennessee Youth Advisory Council, which works to give children in the state system a voice.

"Even now, not many kids have a choice or a say in where they are placed," Noel said. "Children who know their rights are able to advocate for themselves. But in most cases, youth don't know what's going on. They don't know what rights they have."
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« Reply #4 on: August 14, 2009, 03:02:54 AM »

It's so sad that it takes a tragedy for Social Services to rethink their policies.  Sigh. 

Seems that no matter where Stevie had been moved to, her father would likely have found a way to reach her.  But to place her so very closeby, and with a friend of Stevie's father on top of that, just seems like this placement was begging for trouble of some sort.  IMO. 

We hear so often that Social Services rule in the 'best interests of the child'.  However, it sure seems to me that very often the child's interests are the last thing taken into consideration.   

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