My heart is just broken for this sweet adorable little girl. :cry:
This case gave me the same feeling as one on your side of the pond.. Aliyah Lunsford. You can see bruising on both Kiesha and Aliyah's photos on MSM. A world apart but so similar.
My heart is just broken for this sweet adorable little girl. :cry:
I did not know this.
I posted on another thread about rights of fathers. As I am a woman, I was gutted that I was told that only in the dark ages and an island off Tas were any 50 50 custody.
A question to Dad's here. What do you do while paying money but have no responsibility? To Mum's what do you do when your child is in need of specialist care?
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In my family we are lucky enough to only have 1 marriage breakdown, the single 5 yo child involved is parented 50/50 by both his parents. Both parents pay 50% of his costs and both do equal parenting, involvement in school, sports etc.
That is the way it should be but can't always happen it appears. I look forward to hearing the female parent, in this case, getting a life sentence. Fast forward tomorrow and hopefully a sentence.
It is becoming apparent that 50/50 care isn't working out for the children either even in the lowest conflict situations and with Mum and Dad living in the same suburb. They don't like being shuttled back and forth and it's too disruptive for most of them. There are no easy answers unfortunately and sadly it's the children who suffer most of all.
The New South Wales Government has lashed out at unions for linking the murder of Sydney girl Kiesha Weippeart to caseworker shortages and budget cuts in the Department of Community Services.
The mother of the six-year-old, Kristi Abrahams, has pleaded guilty to murdering her daughter, whose remains were found in 2011.
Court documents have shown caseworkers, teachers, police and relatives suspected the six year old was suffering from serious abuse in the months leading up to her death in 2011, but none intervened.
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Community services workers, teachers, police and relatives of six-year-old Kiesha Weippeart all knew or suspected she was suffering serious abuse in the months before her death, but none intervened effectively before her mother murdered her.
In distressing revelations that highlight serious failures within the system that is supposed to protect the state's most vulnerable, court documents show that, having been placed in foster care after her mother bit her, community services workers learnt Kiesha was burnt with a cigarette soon after returning to the family home, but did little about it.
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The documents, an agreed statement of facts signed by Kiesha's mother, Kristi Abrahams, as part of her sentencing, show that a social worker arrived a day after the cigarette burn was reported to find the little girl dressed in a hat and reluctant to show her face.
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its shocking! the docs case worker should have been keeping a close eye on her expecially since she had already been assaulted as a toddler by her mother.
so, a child with obvious signs of abuse tells you their mother put her cigarette out on you, you have the power to do something and you do nothing? its beyond belief!!
her foster parents must be heart broken.
i hope kristi is given a life sentence or at least until she is unable to have any more children!
I think what is best for the child is situational, I don't think it's appropriate to make statements such as this.
I don't know exactly what the relationship between Kiesha and her father was like, there are other circumstances, his health, Kristi's control, we don't know. What I do know is that Kristi deserves a long and harsh sentence.
Kristi Abrahams deserves a life sentence without the possibility of parole imo. Robert Smith got 16 years so Kristi's sentence will be greater than his.
Note the position of Kristi Abrahams left index finger as detectives escort her from grandmother's home in Bidwell.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/gallery-e6frewxi-1225900554597?page=64
OK now that actually IS someone flipping the bird! She's awful, she really is.
There was more than one instance of it. I think that speaks volumes.