SheWhoMustNotBeNamed
Former Member
Court decisions that made news in 2010
Todays column is the first of a two-part chronological review of important law-related news stories on Staten Island in 2010.
On January 22, seven-year-old Staten Islander Patrick Alford disappeared from a Brooklyn foster home where he had been temporarily placed by the citys Administration For Childrens Services following his remand to that agency by the Family Court.
The placement sprang from allegations that his mother, Jennifer Rodriguez, who had been arrested for shoplifting and is struggling with a drug problem, neglected the child and his younger sister.
Although several family members urged Judge Terrence McElrath to place Patrick with them, he opted instead for temporary foster care.
On Jan. 29, McElrath, believing that Rodriguez knew the whereabouts of her son, took the extraordinary step of remanding her to jail. Four days later, however, he released her on condition that she cooperate with efforts to find Patrick. According to the citys attorney, she fully complied.
In October, Rodriguez initiated a federal lawsuit seeking to hold the city liable for Patricks disappearance. Two weeks ago, she was arrested for the third time this year, the latest allegation being that she waved a knife at a man who came to her home to retrieve his wallet.
As the year ends, Patrick remains missing. Still, McElraths decision to place him in foster care cant reasonably be evaluated without knowledge of all the facts and circumstances that prompted it.
Family Court judges make potentially life-altering decisions every day, and they, like the rest of us, do not have the benefit of hindsight.
http://www.silive.com/opinion/danielleddy/index.ssf/2010/12/court_decisions_that_made_news.html
Todays column is the first of a two-part chronological review of important law-related news stories on Staten Island in 2010.
On January 22, seven-year-old Staten Islander Patrick Alford disappeared from a Brooklyn foster home where he had been temporarily placed by the citys Administration For Childrens Services following his remand to that agency by the Family Court.
The placement sprang from allegations that his mother, Jennifer Rodriguez, who had been arrested for shoplifting and is struggling with a drug problem, neglected the child and his younger sister.
Although several family members urged Judge Terrence McElrath to place Patrick with them, he opted instead for temporary foster care.
On Jan. 29, McElrath, believing that Rodriguez knew the whereabouts of her son, took the extraordinary step of remanding her to jail. Four days later, however, he released her on condition that she cooperate with efforts to find Patrick. According to the citys attorney, she fully complied.
In October, Rodriguez initiated a federal lawsuit seeking to hold the city liable for Patricks disappearance. Two weeks ago, she was arrested for the third time this year, the latest allegation being that she waved a knife at a man who came to her home to retrieve his wallet.
As the year ends, Patrick remains missing. Still, McElraths decision to place him in foster care cant reasonably be evaluated without knowledge of all the facts and circumstances that prompted it.
Family Court judges make potentially life-altering decisions every day, and they, like the rest of us, do not have the benefit of hindsight.
http://www.silive.com/opinion/danielleddy/index.ssf/2010/12/court_decisions_that_made_news.html