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Notes
The tombstone page lists the deaths of children following
their removal from the care of their parents by force of
law. We do not report on true orphans or deaths that would
have occurred without social services intervention, such as
those caused by a parent during visitation or a relative
having custody with consent of the parents. But deaths in
custody of relatives are included when parental custody was
revoked. Likewise, in boot camps and psychiatric hospitals,
we include only those deaths of inmates not placed
voluntarily by their parents. Deaths reported in the press
without a name for the deceased are not on our list.
The tomb.htm file contains annotations giving the
reference for each case. Display the html source to see
them. All deaths have been authenticated with a source at
least as reliable as a daily newspaper. The modest
standards of journalism are better than those of social
services. SSDI means that the death appears in the Social
Security Death Index. Where an authoritative source
verifies death in non-parental care, other details may come
from less authoritative sources. The age limit is 18 years.
For pictures and biographies of a few of the children, refer
to Suncana
Alvarado.
Our statistical estimates show that in the United States
and Canada combined, there are about 900 deaths per year in
foster care. The list drawn mostly from news accounts on
the web shows in recent years about 50 a year, so most
deaths are kept out of the press.
Script
Preparation of the list of deaths required examining over
a thousand articles from internet news archives. A pattern
of response emerged that appears to come from a script:
- We express our condolences to the natural parents.
- We have removed all other children from the offending foster home.
- Confidentiality rules prevent us from discussing details of this
case.
- We are investigating the case to determine what went wrong.
- We are changing our procedures so that this will not happen again. The
most common change is instituting more background checks. Others are
improved training, adding social workers or a new computer system.
- In some cases, we are prosecuting the offending foster parent.
- Complaints of abuse by foster parents get short shrift until a death,
then child protectors search for a delinquent mandated reporter to
prosecute.
- Sometimes a program is launched against the specific cause of death,
swimming pools, guns, dogs.
- In unusual cases, the child protectors establish a fund for the benefit
of one of the victims. The public is invited to help by making
donations.
- On anonymous internet forums, social work acolytes blame the parents for
the abuse and neglect that got the child into foster care.
With thousands of improvements made to procedures, foster
care should now be close to perfection. In reality, little
seems to change over time.
Getting Away with Murder
The Washington Post requested information on a twelve-year-old boy who
died unattended in a hallway while in custody of the Department of Human
Services. On December 5, 1999 they reported getting just one document in response. This child is not on our list
of deaths in custody. In other cases the paper reported that after
questions were raised about deaths in custody the department destroyed
documents.
Shame
A few parents are disturbed to see the names of their
loved ones displayed in public. Shame for the events in the
list should not attach to the families, but to the child
protectors who inflict the damage. We hope the list will
contribute to the only reform that can make child deaths
less likely - leaving children with their parents.
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