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Protection without cause
In 2002 Christine Long had two children, eleven-year-old
Adam and 18-month-old Jessica in her care in Hamilton
Ontario. In our help file we advise against calling CAS
to resolve a problem with a former spouse, but most
parents do not find such advice until it is too late.
Christine called CAS, and on November 20, 2002 a lady
cop visited her home, without giving any assistance. An
hour later the cop returned with a CAS worker.
Christine called a friend to be a witness, and the cop
called for backup. Adam is diabetic, and Christine
loaded a syringe with insulin to treat him. On seeing
the syringe, a cop slammed Christine against a wall and
handcuffed her. CAS took the two kids, and the under
the Mental Health Act the police took
Christine to a hospital where the doctor made note of
injuries from the police treatment and the handcuffs and
sent her home two hours later.
Two days later in court, Christine got the papers minutes
before the hearing, preventing her from responding. CAS got
their application approved, but the judge refused to order a
psychiatric evaluation or drug testing. Within two weeks,
Christine managed to get Adam released to her ex-husband.
CAS kept Jessica for three years, until the date scheduled
for trial. At that point they returned Jessica and
dismissed their case, making it legal for the family to use
their own names and faces in public.
The pictures below show the progresssion from good home
to slovenly foster care.
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