Abby Normal
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Additionally, leaving kids in cars unattended has become an actual crime in many states, whereas there are no "drinking while being a caretaker" laws.
Additionally, leaving kids in cars unattended has become an actual crime in many states, whereas there are no "drinking while being a caretaker" laws.
This is the truth. I don't even think it's comparable to leaving the kid in the car. First of all the child is still in your home. Second of all, as you stated there is no law that says you must be sober while there are children in the house. Third, there would have to be multiple, recorded instances of this situation (parent constantly getting drunk with no child supervision) before CPS would get involved.
BBM
Wouldn't the house also have to be dirty, unsanitary or unsafe [no heat/running water]. JI/DB's house was neat and clean, certainly no 'pig sty' where someone was so drunk they neglected house. For that matter, Lisa is clean, attentive and appropriately dressed in pics/videos. Her medical records might well attest to the fact that she was a healthy, well cared for baby.
A divorce lawyer (who practices in MO) told me to my face that in order for a mother to lose custody of her child in that state, one of three things have to be going on.
1. Drugs in and out of the home
2. Abuse
3. Unsafe enviroment that's harmful to the child.
All of those points need to be fully documented, in some cases collaborated by multiple people. It's not out the realm of possibility that CPS also adheres to those standards.
Well, that divorce lawyer is wrong. I live in MO and in a county I live near, I have seen Mother's lose custody of their child(ren) three times in the last 7 months. I kid you not. The mothers were not into drugs, they were not abusive, and the children were not in an unsafe environment. It came down to who has the most money. I watched it, and sat through it playing out in court, for support. Sometimes I think that it seems the attorneys figure it out between themselves while they're eating lunch together or going to happy hour together. :waitasec:
MOO
A divorce lawyer (who practices in MO) told me to my face that in order for a mother to lose custody of her child in that state, one of three things have to be going on.
1. Drugs in and out of the home
2. Abuse
3. Unsafe enviroment that's harmful to the child.
All of those points need to be fully documented, in some cases collaborated by multiple people. It's not out the realm of possibility that CPS also adheres to those standards.
This is the truth. I don't even think it's comparable to leaving the kid in the car. First of all the child is still in your home. Second of all, as you stated there is no law that says you must be sober while there are children in the house. Third, there would have to be multiple, recorded instances of this situation (parent constantly getting drunk with no child supervision) before CPS would get involved.
BBM It is an unsafe enviornment to leave minor children under the age of 12 (and an 11 month old sick infant) unsupervised. You cannot supervise children in a black out drunk and this was harmful to the child as the child was allegedly abducted while parent unable to protect. Neglect is abuse. In my state black out drunks documented while the sole care provider of the children would have a case opened in DFCS. My educated and informed opinion only.
Well, I"m thinking of thousands of moms that go to bed at night and are sound sleepers, taking cold meds because they are sick, taking sleeping aid because they are insomniacs....that need to have their children taken away. We don't KNOW that if Lisa was still in that house and woke crying for mama at any time after Deb fell asleep, she wouldn't have heard her. We don't KNOW!
I haven't read this entire thread, and so maybe this has been said already - but I'll say it anyway.
Sometimes when I read WS, my jaw hits the floor because I honestly cannot believe the low threshold some people have for government intrusion. As a person who wants the government to stay as far, far away from me and my family as I can possibly keep them, I have some serious comprehension problems when it comes to people wishing CPS would just barge into private homes and take children away when there are perfectly competent adults to care for them.
I'm at the front of the line when it comes to being critical of drinking while parenting and neglecting the kids. But, there are lots of things that can be done in the way of child protection short of removing kids from a home, and to my knowledge, nobody here knows what has or has not been done with regard to the kids in this case. Removing kids is an awful experience for everyone, especially the kids, and should be a dead-last resort, when there is nobody else in the family to care for them. In this case, we've got a father who (as far as I can tell) hasn't admitted to anything untoward, as well as a plethora of other perfectly competent relatives. For all we know, there may be an order that DB is not to be left alone in charge of the kids. Maybe that's why the family has been living with relatives. We don't know - nor should we know, as a matter of privacy.
The idea that the government should take the other children away, based on what we know, disgusts me. Blech.
Fascinating read on deaths of children by neglectful parents.
http://www.law.northwestern.edu/lawreview/v100/n2/807/LR100n2Collins.pdf