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TheDenverChannel.com
Foster Mother Accused Of Abusing
Children
Timmy Dodge's Parents Say Signs Of Abuse Clearly
Evident
POSTED: 6:58 am MST November 30, 2004
UPDATED: 10:00 am MST November 30, 2004
A former foster mother was arrested over the holiday
weekend, accused of child abuse.
Timmy Dodge
Doctors say Timmy Dodge had a very severe head
injury and hemorrhages in both eyes caused by an
extreme force that he could not have caused
himself.
Tember Rector faces felony charges for seriously
injuring two children while in her care, including
inflicting a severe head injury on a 2-year-old boy who
was rushed unconscious to Children's Hospital three
weeks after he was placed in her custody.
That boy's biological parents said there were signs
of abuse long before their son's injuries were
evident.
Tim Dodge and Misty Anderson had feared the worse
when their son, Timmy Dodge Jr., was taken to the
hospital Feb. 2. Doctors removed part of Timmy's skull
to protect his swelling brain. They had worried that he
might not ever speak or walk again but after the
surgery, Timmy recovered quickly, with a swollen eye and
stitches as visible remnants of his brain surgery.
"Until he gets into school, we are not going to know
the full extent of the abuse, the damage," Dodge told
7NEWS.
Rector had told police Timmy fell from the bed and
hit his head on her nightstand. But in Rector's arrest
affidavit, released on Monday, doctors said that "aside
from falling out of a two-story window, (Timmy) Dodge
could not have caused this injury to himself."
In January, social services removed both Timmy and
his younger sister, Serenity, from Dodge and Anderson's
home after a judge ruled them to be unfit parents.
Social workers had described their home as filthy and
the couple were suspected methamphetamine users.
The children were placed in Rector's care in Castle
Rock.
Anderson said she saw signs of abuse and feared for
her children's safety after learning that five
complaints had been filed against Rector before Timmy
and Serenity were even placed in the home. All of those
claims were unfounded, according to Douglas County Human
Services.
But after a nine-month investigation Castle Rock
police found otherwise, charging Rector with a second
count of child abuse for allegedly injuring a 7-year-old
girl. That girl broke her wrist in summer 2003 and told
authorities that she was pushed down the stairs when she
came home and her clothes were dirty.
For Timmy and Serenity's parents, they just hope soon
their children will be home with them.
"You tend to get hopeless sometimes, but these are
our kids and we are not giving up," Dodge said.
The state conducted an investigation into Maple Star,
the agency that certified Rector as a foster parent. It
cleared the agency of any wrongdoing.
For Dodge and Anderson, they're fighting for custody
of their kids and hope that justice will be found
through the courts when it comes to their son's abuse.
The children have been placed in another foster
home.
Foster mom found
guilty of abusing 2-year-old boy
By Mike McPhee
Denver Post Staff Writer
DenverPost.com
A Douglas County jury Thursday took one day to convict a
Castle Rock foster mother of recklessly abusing her
2-year-old foster son, who suffered massive brain and head
injuries nearly two years ago.
Tember Rector, 44, was found not guilty of a second count
of child abuse involving a 7-year-old girl who broke her
wrist seven months before the boy was injured.
Under the sentencing guidelines for child abuse,
Rector faces a minimum prison sentence of 10 years and a
maximum of 32 years, which will be determined by Douglas
County District Judge Paul King on April 7. Rector
remains free until sentencing but must post $50,000 bail
by Monday. Her attorney, Joe Pickard, said they are
considering an appeal.
"I believe the verdict was fair considering the
evidence," said Deputy District Attorney Darren Vahle.
"The doctors at Children's Hospital (who treated the boy
and testified at the trial) were very persuasive. This
did not happen the way she said it happened."
The six-day trial was based on circumstantial
evidence because no one witnessed how the boy, Timothy
Dodge Jr., was injured the evening of Feb. 2, 2004.
Vahle claimed Rector lost her temper and caused
Timmy's injuries. But Rector testified that Timmy hurt
himself when he fell into a nightstand while jumping on
her bed. Emergency personnel airlifted the boy to
Children's Hospital, where doctors cut one-third of his
skull away to relieve pressure on his brain from
swelling and bleeding.
Dr. Andrew Sirotnak, an expert on child abuse at
Children's, testified that the boy's brain injuries were
consistent with extreme force trauma, such as severe
child abuse or falling from a high building.
Rector's attorney said the case was difficult.
"She said she did not injure the boy, and I believe
her," he said. "It's too bad the judge doesn't have
more discretion in this sentencing."
As for the girl, prosecutor Vahle said it was an
understandable verdict because of the many stories the
girl told the jury about how she broke her wrist. The
girl, who is now 10 and living in her 15th foster home,
told the jury a number of conflicting stories and
couldn't remember which arm she broke.
She identified Rector in the courtroom and said,
"She's the one who hurt me."
Pickard said the only direct testimony against his
client came from the girl, yet the jury chose to
exonerate Rector on that charge and convicted her on
circumstantial evidence in the boy's case.
Staff writer Mike McPhee can be reached at
303-820-1409 or mmcphee@denverpost.com.
Source:
www.denverpost.com/news/ci_3442040
Here are some comments by the
grandmother of the injured boy:
The SAME JUDGE oversaw the case of some children
that were placed in that home a year before my
grandchildren. My son and daughter-in-law called
people, wrote letters, went to the media and did
everything they could to get those kids out of that
home because of all the bruises, cuts and scrapes.
Social Services told them if they didn't stop ranting
and raving about the care their children were getting,
they would get a restraining order and they wouldn't
be able to have any more visits. You will see from
the articles that a 10-year old girl testified that
Tember Rector pushed her down the stairs and broke her
arm. Other children were injured, I have the arrest
affidavit, and the documentation that goes with it,
and I KNOW what happened in that home. They covered
up for that woman at the cost of 12 children in a
2-year period of time, ALL of whom were removed from
her home.
They took my son's kids because there were Light
Bright pegs on the floor that they said were an
immediate danger to the kids, and they took them and
placed them in a home where there was a LOADED,
unlocked gun in an unlocked drawer in the nightstand
beside their bed. This woman claims she left my
grandson on her bed watching t.v., got into the shower
and heard a thud. Obviously there was overwhelming
evidence that she did something horrible.
Source:
dee7020@aol.com
Article Launched: 04/08/2006 1:00
AM MDT
The Denver Post
CASTLE ROCK
Child's injuries bring 15-year prison
term
A Castle Rock foster mother was sentenced to 15 years
in prison Friday for causing severe injuries to a
2-year-old boy in her care two years ago.
Tember Rector, 44, tried to convince jurors of her
innocence in January. But they convicted her on
circumstantial evidence of causing severe head injuries
to Timothy Dodge.
The jury acquitted her of similar charges involving
Jimmy's 7-year-old sister, who broke her wrist under
Rector's care.
She faced a mandatory sentence of at least 10 years.
Source:
www.denverpost.com/ news/ ci_3686348
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