ReportWire

Tag: Child endangerment

  • Fairfield man, 37, arrested on hate crime charges after teen girl assaulted while walking to school

    AN IMMIGRATION DETAINER ON HIM. WE HAVE OTHER NEWS RIGHT NOW. FAIRFIELD MAN IS FACING HATE CRIME CHARGES TONIGHT AFTER POLICE SAY THAT A STUDENT WAS ATTACKED ON HER WAY TO SCHOOL. THIS HAPPENED YESTERDAY MORNING ON DAHLIA STREET. THAT’S NEAR FAIRFIELD HIGH SCHOOL. POLICE SAY THAT THE STUDENT WAS ATTACKED BY 37 YEAR OLD VICTOR CHAVEZ. INVESTIGATORS SAY THAT CHAVEZ USED VULGAR, RACIST LANGUAGE BEFORE ASSAULTING THAT GIRL. A NEIGHBOR SAYS SHE SAW WHAT HAPPENED AND GOT THE GIRL TO SCHOOL, AND THEN SHE IMMEDIATELY REPORTED THE CRIME. CHAVEZ WAS EVENTUALLY FOUND AND ARRESTED THIS MORNING. HE’S BEEN CH

    Fairfield man, 37, arrested on hate crime charges after teen girl assaulted while walking to school

    Updated: 5:15 PM PDT Oct 23, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    A 37-year-old Fairfield man has been arrested and faces hate crime charges in connection with the assault of a teen girl who was walking to school, police said.Fairfield High School staff were alerted after the attack on Wednesday and school resource officers responded to assist the victim, police said. Investigators determined the student was walking near the 300 block of Dahlia Street when the man, identified as Victor Viera Chavez, confronted her with “vulgar, race-based language before physically assaulting her, reportedly due to her perceived immigration status.”A witness helped the girl to school and Fairfield police launched a hate crime investigation. Police’s Youth Services Unit detained Chavez the next morning as he was leaving his home. He was booked for assault, child endangerment and hate crime charges.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    A 37-year-old Fairfield man has been arrested and faces hate crime charges in connection with the assault of a teen girl who was walking to school, police said.

    Fairfield High School staff were alerted after the attack on Wednesday and school resource officers responded to assist the victim, police said.

    Investigators determined the student was walking near the 300 block of Dahlia Street when the man, identified as Victor Viera Chavez, confronted her with “vulgar, race-based language before physically assaulting her, reportedly due to her perceived immigration status.”

    A witness helped the girl to school and Fairfield police launched a hate crime investigation.

    Police’s Youth Services Unit detained Chavez the next morning as he was leaving his home. He was booked for assault, child endangerment and hate crime charges.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    Source link

  • Former daycare worker accused of binding 1-year-old girl with tape

    A former worker at an Ohio daycare accused of using painter’s tape to bind a 1-year-old girl has been formally charged.

    [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks]

    Katelyn Strohacker, 23, has been charged with child endangerment after an incident was reported back in July at a daycare center in Licking County, according to our news partner WBNS in Columbus.

    TRENDING STORIES:

    She is alleged to have placed painter’s tape over the child’s eyes, restrained her hands behind her back and feet together, and left her face down under a blanket unattended, according to Licking County Common Pleas Court documents.

    The center’s director told the girl’s parent that Strohacker had bound and left the child in bed for an hour, records say.

    She was arrested and released on a $50,000 bond, WBNS said.

    Strohacker is not allowed to have unsupervised contact with minors.

    Her next scheduled court appearance is Aug. 28.

    [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

    Source link

  • Shein discloses it found 2 cases of child labor in its supply chain last year

    Shein discloses it found 2 cases of child labor in its supply chain last year

    Fast-fashion giant Shein said it discovered two cases of child labor in its supply chain last year.

    In its annual sustainability report, Shein disclosed this week that it found minors under age 15 employed by manufacturers that make products for the company. Shein, which mainly sources its products from China, did not say where it found the child labor cases.

    The company said it suspended product orders from the suppliers when it discovered the violations. Both cases were resolved “swiftly” and involved remediation steps, such as ending contracts with underage employees and paying them any outstanding wages, Shein said. The online retailer resumed working with the manufacturers after they beefed up screening for new hires.

    The disclosure comes as some advocacy groups – such as Amnesty International UK – are pushing back on a possible listing of Shein on the London Stock Exchange due to labor and environmental concerns.

    The company, which was founded in China but is now based in Singapore, had also reportedly attempted to file a confidential IPO application to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last year.

    Shein said in its report that it updated its policies around labor violations in October 2023.

    Before, suppliers engaging in practices like child or forced labor had their orders suspended and were given 30 days for remediation. Now, the company says it will “immediately proceed to terminate” ties with suppliers who engage in these violations.

    Source link

  • Shein discloses it found 2 cases of child labor in its supply chain last year

    Shein discloses it found 2 cases of child labor in its supply chain last year

    Fast-fashion giant Shein said it discovered two cases of child labor in its supply chain last year.

    In its annual sustainability report, Shein disclosed this week that it found minors under age 15 employed by manufacturers that make products for the company. Shein, which mainly sources its products from China, did not say where it found the child labor cases.

    The company said it suspended product orders from the suppliers when it discovered the violations. Both cases were resolved “swiftly” and involved remediation steps, such as ending contracts with underage employees and paying them any outstanding wages, Shein said. The online retailer resumed working with the manufacturers after they beefed up screening for new hires.

    The disclosure comes as some advocacy groups – such as Amnesty International UK – are pushing back on a possible listing of Shein on the London Stock Exchange due to labor and environmental concerns.

    The company, which was founded in China but is now based in Singapore, had also reportedly attempted to file a confidential IPO application to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last year.

    Shein said in its report that it updated its policies around labor violations in October 2023.

    Before, suppliers engaging in practices like child or forced labor had their orders suspended and were given 30 days for remediation. Now, the company says it will “immediately proceed to terminate” ties with suppliers who engage in these violations.

    Source link

  • Running-averse man commits to monthly half-marathons for a good cause

    Running-averse man commits to monthly half-marathons for a good cause

    SAN FRANCISCO — Sunday morning marked the 15th annual running of “The Giant Race,” a 5K, 10K and half-marathon beginning and ending at Oracle Park on the San Francisco waterfront. Among the thousands of participants was a young man running to help exploited children and he did it with a symbolic twist.

    Grant Clark loves his job so much that, for it, he’s willing to do something he hates.

    “I always hate running,” he said. “I hated running growing up so I started this ten months ago just to try it out, do something new and push myself a little bit.”

    The 24-year-old works for an organization based in the Bay Area called “Special Operations Finding Kids,” which hires private investigators to help find and retrieve children being trafficked for sexual exploitation. To raise money and awareness, Clark has committed to run a half-marathon each month for the rest of the year but he’s adding an extra challenge — he runs with his hands tied together to symbolize kids being held captive.

    “It’s a life sentence for these children, having gone through that trauma because it sticks with them forever,” Clark said. “And for me to run with my hands tied is really a small challenge compared to what they have to do throughout their life.”

    Grant Clark runs a half-marathon in San Francisco.

    KPIX


    On Sunday, it was the Giant Race half-marathon. With his friend Carter Young acting as a pace buddy, Clark began the 12.1-mile trek along the city’s waterfront. It was his sixth run, including races in Miami, Los Angeles and San Diego.

    “This running path has taken me down a road I never thought I’d be on,” Clark said. “It’s kind of surreal, obviously, having my family here supporting me, having someone run with me. It’s all — I’m very blessed for that.”

    While his parents give their full support, his father, Jeff Clark, said they’re also concerned about the psychological burden their son may be carrying in combatting such a dark practice as human trafficking.

    “From my perspective as a father, clearly I’m very proud about it and it worries me a bit, too because it’s such an emotional issue,” he said. “I can’t imagine the toll that it takes from you when you see stories constantly and now your son’s involved in these stories, trying to help out in a good way. But still, you know, the pressure’s there.”

    Clark is motivated by the pressure he puts on himself and, as he entered the ballpark and crossed the finish line, he was thankful that, for him, escaping bondage was as simple as untying a piece of rope.

    “When I first put the video out saying I was going to do this whole initiative it was a little scary because I never ran more than two miles in my life,” Clark said. “Now we’re on number six so it feels good. I mean, every day brings a new gift. I’m very blessed to be in the position I’m in and just excited to continue doing it.”

    Now, it’s on to the next run, as he continues his mission to find joy in doing something he hates.

    Clark’s goal is to raise $75,000 for “Special Operations Finding Kids” by the end of the year. For more information go to: http://findingkids.org.

    John Ramos

    Source link

  • Uvalde school massacre videos, 911 calls released after legal fight

    Uvalde school massacre videos, 911 calls released after legal fight

    DALLAS — As shots rang out in the hallways and classrooms of Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, one of the terrified teachers who frantically dialed 911 described “a lot, a whole lot of gunshots,” while another sobbed into the phone as a dispatcher urged her to stay quiet.

    “Hurry, hurry, hurry, hurry!” the first teacher cried before hanging up.

    Those calls, along with bodycam footage and surveillance videos, were included in a massive collection of audio and video recordings released by officials of the city of Uvalde on Saturday after a prolonged legal fight. The Associated Press and other news organizations brought a lawsuit after the officials initially refused to publicly release the information from one of the worst school shootings in U.S. history.

    One of the first calls police received on the morning of May 24, 2022, came from a woman who called 911 to report that a pickup truck had crashed into a ditch and that the occupant had run onto the school campus.

    “Oh my God, they have a gun,” she said.

    In a 911 call a few minutes later, a man screams: “He’s shooting at the kids! Get back!”

    “He’s inside the school! He’s inside the school,” he yells as the screams of others can also be heard.

    “Oh my God in the name of Jesus. He’s inside the school shooting at the kids,” he says.

    The delayed law enforcement response to the shooting — nearly 400 officers waited more than 70 minutes before confronting the gunman in a classroom filled with dead and wounded children and teachers — has been widely condemned as a massive failure.

    The gunman, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, was fatally shot by authorities at 12:50 p.m. He had entered the school at 11:33 a.m., officials said.

    Just before arriving at the school, Ramos shot and wounded his grandmother at her home. He then took a pickup from the home and drove to the school.

    Ramos’ distraught uncle made several 911 calls begging to be put through so he could try to get his nephew to stop shooting.

    “Maybe he could listen to me because he does listen to me, everything I tell him he does listen to me,” the man, who identified himself as Armando Ramos, said on the 911 call. “Maybe he could stand down or do something to turn himself in,” Ramos said, his voice cracking.

    He said his nephew, who had been with him at his house the night before, stayed with him in his bedroom all night, and told him that he was upset because his grandmother was “bugging” him.

    “Oh my God, please, please, don’t do nothing stupid,” the man says on the call. “I think he’s shooting kids.”

    But the offer arrived too late, coming just around the time that the shooting had ended and law enforcement officers killed Salvador Ramos.

    Multiple federal and state investigations into the slow law enforcement response laid bare cascading problems in training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned whether officers prioritized their own lives over those of children and teachers in the South Texas city of about 15,000 people 80 miles (130 kilometers) west of San Antonio. Families of the victims have long sought accountability for the slow police response.

    Brett Cross’ 10-year-old nephew, Uziyah Garcia, was among those killed. Cross, who was raising the boy as a son, was angered relatives weren’t told the records were being released and that it took so long for them to be made public.

    “If we thought we could get anything we wanted, we’d ask for a time machine to go back in time and save our children but we can’t, so all we are asking for is for justice, accountability and transparency, and they refuse to give this to us,” he said. “This small, simple ask that I feel that we are due.”

    Two of the responding officers now face criminal charges: Former Uvalde school Police Chief Pete Arredondo and former school officer Adrian Gonzales have pleaded not guilty to multiple charges of child abandonment and endangerment. A Texas state trooper in Uvalde who had been suspended was reinstated to his job earlier this month.

    In an interview this week with CNN, Arredondo said he thinks he’s been “scapegoated” as the one to blame for the botched law enforcement response.

    Some of the families have called for more officers to be charged and filed federal and state lawsuits against law enforcement, social media, online gaming companies, and the gun manufacturer that made the rifle the gunman used.

    Just before officers finally breached the classroom, one officer can be heard on a body camera expressing concern about friendly fire.

    “I’m kind of worried about blue on blue,” an officer said. “There are so many rifles in here.”

    The classroom breach was followed by about five to six seconds of gunfire. Officers rushed forward as someone shouted, “Watch the kids! Watch the kids! Watch the kids!”

    Less than a minute into the chaos, someone shouted, ”“Where’s the suspect?” Someone else immediately answered, “He’s dead!”

    The police response included nearly 150 U.S. Border Patrol agents and 91 state police officials, as well as school and city police. While dozens of officers stood in the hallway trying to figure out what to do, students inside the classroom called 911 on cellphones, begging for help, and desperate parents who had gathered outside the building pleaded with officers to go in. A tactical team eventually entered the classroom and killed the shooter.

    Previously released video from school cameras showed police officers, some armed with rifles and bulletproof shields, waiting in the hallway.

    A report commissioned by the city, however, defended the actions of local police, saying officers showed “immeasurable strength” and “level-headed thinking” as they faced fire from the shooter and refrained from firing into a darkened classroom.

    Source link

  • St. Paul woman has been sentenced to 36 months for fentanyl death of 7-year-old daughter

    St. Paul woman has been sentenced to 36 months for fentanyl death of 7-year-old daughter

    Morning headlines from March 22, 2024


    Morning headlines from March 22, 2024

    02:22

    ST. PAUL, Minn. — Shauntaija Jannell Travis was sentenced Friday to 36 months, with credit for 292 days served for the second-degree manslaughter of her 7-year-old daughter. She will serve her sentence at the Shakopee Women’s Prison. 

    In March 2023, Travis’ daughter died in the living room of a residence on the 800 block of Sherburne Avenue, according to a criminal complaint. The girl’s cause of death was later identified as fentanyl toxicity and the manner of death was declared as accidental.

    Officers searched Travis’ bedroom and found a straw with “white residue,” the complaint said, along with a pill that was later found to contain fentanyl.  

    At the time of the girl’s death, Travis was in a custody battle over the child with other family members. Travis admitted to officers that she agreed to let her grandmother take custody of the victim so she could “get her life straightened out and get help from her drug addiction,” the complaint said. The girl would’ve been in her grandmother’s custody less than a week after the victim’s death. 

    Travis originally pleaded not guilty to charges, but changed her plea to guilty in January

    Mackenzie Lofgren

    Source link

  • Mother of 5-year-old girl killed by father takes first steps in planned wrongful death lawsuit

    Mother of 5-year-old girl killed by father takes first steps in planned wrongful death lawsuit

    CONCORD, N.H. — The mother of a 5-year-old girl who was killed in 2019 and whose body has not been found, asked a probate judge on Monday to declare the girl legally dead and to be appointed as administrator of her estate.

    Crystal Sorey took the first steps in preparation of a planned wrongful death lawsuit regarding her daughter, Harmony Montgomery, more than two weeks after Harmony’s father, Adam Montgomery, was convicted of fatally beating her and other crimes. She has not said whom she plans to sue.

    Sorey’s lawyer told Judge Beth Kissinger in Nashua that Adam Montgomery’s second-degree murder conviction, plus his admission of guilt to lesser charges that he moved her body around for months afterward and falsified physical evidence, was enough to result in a legal death declaration.

    Kissinger did not rule immediately, asking for court paperwork, including the jury’s verdict and a probate surety bond from Sorey, which would guarantee she would fulfill her duties under the law as administrator.

    A Webex connection was set up at the men’s state prison in Concord for Adam Montgomery to participate in the hearing, but he refused to attend, a prison official said. Montgomery also had declined to show up at his two-week trial.

    Montgomery and Sorey were not in a relationship when their daughter was born in 2014. Harmony Montgomery lived on and off with foster families and her mother until Sorey lost custody in 2018. Montgomery was awarded custody in early 2019, and Sorey testified she last saw her daughter during a FaceTime call around Easter of that year.

    Sorey eventually went to police, who announced they were looking for the missing child on New Year’s Eve 2021. In early 2022, authorities searched a home in Manchester where Montgomery had lived and charged him with assault, interference with custody and child endangerment.

    By that June, Montgomery also was facing numerous charges related to stolen guns, while his estranged wife, Kayla Montgomery, was charged with perjury for lying to a grand jury investigating her stepdaughter’s disappearance. She has been serving an 18-month sentence and is expected to be paroled in May.

    In August 2022, Attorney General John Formella announced that investigators believed Harmony was dead and that the case was being treated as a homicide.

    Harmony Montgomery’s case has exposed weaknesses in child protection systems and prompted calls to prioritize the well-being of children over parents in custody matters.

    Source link

  • Ohio woman who disappeared with 5-year-old foster son sent officers to his body — in a sewer drain

    Ohio woman who disappeared with 5-year-old foster son sent officers to his body — in a sewer drain

    COLUMBUS, Ohio — COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — An Ohio woman who disappeared with her 5-year-old foster son has been found, and she told police where to locate the boy’s body. They found it in a sewer drain. Now she’ll face a murder charge, police said.

    Columbus police said Pammy Maye, 48, was taken into custody shortly before 10 p.m. Thursday in Brooklyn, a Cleveland suburb about 150 miles (240 kilometers) from her home in Columbus.

    Officers found Maye wandering in a nightgown, and she told investigators where they could find Darnell’s Taylor’s body, Columbus Police Chief Elaine Bryant said. It was recovered shortly after 1 a.m. Friday.

    Maye was being evaluated Friday at a Cleveland-area hospital and will remain in custody, police said. Court records did not show if she has retained an attorney or when she may appear in court.

    Maye, who also faces kidnapping and child endangerment charges, had last been seen at her home around 3 a.m. Wednesday, around the time her husband called 911, saying Maye had told him the child was no longer alive. The husband said he had searched the home before calling police and did not find the child.

    According to court records, Maye held her hand over her husband’s mouth when he tried to make the 911 call, saying she “had a plan.” Maye then abruptly left the home, authorities said, and an Amber Alert for her and the child was issued two hours later. Her vehicle was then found unoccupied around 6 a.m. Wednesday in Brooklyn.

    Maye had been the boy’s foster mother since May 2023. The child’s biological family was notified about the boy’s death and Maye’s arrest.

    Source link

  • Parents Charged After Son Found Living In ‘Deplorable’ Home With Almost 80 Animals

    Parents Charged After Son Found Living In ‘Deplorable’ Home With Almost 80 Animals

    Two Pennsylvania parents have been charged after police and humane officers found their teen son living in an uninhabitable home with nearly 80 animals.

    James and Kathleen Chaney were charged Friday with endangering the welfare of a child and several counts of animal cruelty after officers were called to a Westmoreland County home in August.

    Their 14-year-old son was living in conditions police described as “deplorable,” according to a criminal complaint obtained by HuffPost. Animal rescue workers took 46 dogs, 23 cats, five guinea pigs, a dove, a ferret and a chinchilla from the home.

    Photographs of the Chaneys’ home taken by a volunteer for an animal rescue group.

    Jenn Johnson, Ninth Life Rescue Center

    According to the complaint, Cassie Wilson, a volunteer humane officer with the nonprofit rescue group All but Furgotten, observed several animals, some missing fur, outside the Chaneys’ home living in filth.

    Wilson reported that as she got closer and could see into the home, she discovered that the interior was coated in urine, feces and fly traps that were full of dead flies. The Chaneys’ 14-year-old son, identified as “LC,” was also at the home.

    Wilson told HuffPost that “everybody going in there was just in complete shock.”

    A police officer and child service caseworker who were greeted by LC described the teen as “nervous,” having “disheveled” hair and clothes, and smelling of urine and feces.

    Areas of the Chaneys' home were photographed as animal welfare workers searched the property.
    Areas of the Chaneys’ home were photographed as animal welfare workers searched the property.

    Jenn Johnson, Ninth Life Rescue Center

    Kathleen Chaney allegedly told police and humane officers that LC was her son and that he lived inside the home. She said she and her husband, James Chaney, cared for the animals on the property, according to the complaint.

    Kathleen Chaney was at work when police called to say they were serving the search warrant, but she refused to come home, according to CBS News. Court documents indicate James Chaney lived in another town.

    The boy was removed from the home, Wilson told HuffPost, and the animal rescue operation began, which took hours. There were more animals around “every corner,” she said, and “once the house was clear, we went outside and found more animals.”

    In the complaint, police described each room of the home as being covered in cobwebs, mold and waste, adding that the smell of urine was so bad that one officer had to leave several times and return.

    Pets rescued from the home were documented by Ninth Life Rescue Center in Pennsylvania, which assisted with adoptions.
    Pets rescued from the home were documented by Ninth Life Rescue Center in Pennsylvania, which assisted with adoptions.

    Jenn Johnson, Ninth Life Rescue Center

    According to police, the home had no running water or food for the 14-year-old to “safely” eat.

    Jenn Johnson, president of Ninth Life Rescue Center, who assisted in the rescue of the animals, said volunteers and officers found multiple dead animals inside the home.

    Police noted in the criminal complaint that they found a “rotting carcass” of a long-dead dog.

    “There were feces and urine covering the house,” Johnson told HuffPost. “Animals in cages locked in bedrooms. There was a deceased dog laying in the bathroom, chickens that were dead in a pen outside ― it was a rough day.”

    The surviving dogs and cats were suffering from serious medical conditions, and many did not have access to water or food.

    One of the dogs had a needle stuck in its belly and another dog was suffering from a ruptured uterus, according to the complaint.

    Two of the rescued cats that were adopted from Ninth Life Rescue Center.
    Two of the rescued cats that were adopted from Ninth Life Rescue Center.

    Jenn Johnson, Ninth Life Rescue Center

    The 14-year-old boy was taken into a temporary living situation immediately following the rescue, and the majority of the surviving animals have been medically treated and adopted, Johnson told HuffPost. However, she added that some animals are still undergoing surgeries and need “ongoing support.”

    No attorney was listed for the two parents, and county inmate records did not show them as having been booked or taken into custody as of Wednesday. Penn Township police did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for information.

    Both Johnson and Wilson told HuffPost that large-scale animal rescue cases have become more common in recent years, making it increasingly difficult for nonprofits like theirs to provide immediate medical care. The rescuers said their organizations are still financially recovering from the rescue months later.

    Source link

  • Davenport man had marijuana near child, police allege – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Davenport man had marijuana near child, police allege – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    A 25-year-old Davenport man was released on bond after police allege he had 7.2 pounds of marijuana in a home where a 3-year-old child lives.

    Elijah Gay faces felony charges of failure to affix a drug tax stamp and a controlled-substance violation, as well as an aggravated misdemeanor charge of child endangerment, court records show.

    Elijah Gay (Scott County Jail)

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    MMP News Author

    Source link

  • Mother of Florida boy accused of football practice shooting now charged with felony

    Mother of Florida boy accused of football practice shooting now charged with felony

    A Florida woman whose 11-year-old is accused of shooting two teenagers at a football practice in October is now charged with a felony

    ByThe Associated Press

    December 7, 2023, 8:08 PM

    APOPKA, Fla. — A Florida woman whose 11-year-old is accused of shooting two teenagers at a practice in October was charged with a felony Thursday after authorities say she left a loaded gun in a worn and tattered cardboard box in her car.

    Sharelle Johnson, 33, did not have the box secured and it was easily opened, according to a news release issued by the state attorney’s office. Investigators say Johnson’s son took the gun from the car and shot two teens following an argument at practice.

    She was charged with negligence by leaving a loaded firearm within easy access of a child. A conviction carries up to five years in prison. A lawyer representing the family didn’t immediately return a phone message left with his office.

    A report from the Apopka Police Department said the child had been chased and attacked by the shooting victims, with a witness telling detectives one of the shooting victims had slapped him in the face.

    Surveillance video showed one of the victims chasing the 11-year-old before the shooting, according to police records. Someone tried to break up the altercation, but the suspect grabbed the gun and ran toward the two teens, police wrote in the report.

    Source link

  • Vermont day care provider convicted of causing infant's death with doses of antihistamine

    Vermont day care provider convicted of causing infant's death with doses of antihistamine

    Vermont child care provider accused of sedating an infant guilty of manslaughter

    ByThe Associated Press

    December 2, 2023, 11:40 AM

    RUTLAND, Vt. — A child care provider accused of sedating an infant with an antihistamine was convicted of manslaughter, and faces up to 25 years in prison when she’s sentenced.

    A jury on Friday convicted of Stacey Vaillancourt of manslaughter and child cruelty in the 2019 death of Harper Rose Briar in Vaillancourt’s home in Rutland.

    The 6-month-old was found unresponsive while in Vaillancourt’s care, and an autopsy determined she had high concentrations of diphenhydramine, the sedating ingredient in some over-the-counter antihistamines including the brand Benadryl. The drug is not recommended for infants without a doctor’s order, and there was no such order for Harper.

    Vaillancourt’s defense attorney said there was no evidence to prove Vaillancourt sedated the infant, but the prosecutor told jurors that no one else could have done it.

    Vaillancourt, who denied giving the infant anything that wasn’t provided by her parents, was released on an unsecured appearance bond. Her attorney didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment on Saturday.

    Source link

  • 80 people freed from Australian migrant centers since High Court outlawed indefinite detention

    80 people freed from Australian migrant centers since High Court outlawed indefinite detention

    CANBERRA, Australia — Eighty people, including convicted criminals considered dangerous, have been released from Australian migrant detention centers since the High Court ruled last week that their indefinite detention was unconstitutional, the immigration minister said Monday,

    A member of Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority won freedom Wednesday when the court outlawed his indefinite detention.

    Australia has been unable to find any country willing to resettle the man, identified only as NZYQ, because he had been convicted of raping a 10-year-old boy, and authaorities consider him a danger to the Australian community.

    The court overturned a 2004 High Court precedent set in the case of a Palestinian man, Ahmed Al-Kateb, that found stateless people could be held indefinitely in detention.

    Immigration Minister Andrew Giles said NZYQ is one of 80 people who had been detained indefinitely and have been freed since Wednesday’s ruling.

    “It is important to note that the High Court hasn’t yet provided reasons for its decision, so the full ramifications of the decision won’t be able to be determined,” Giles told Australian Broadcasting Corp.

    “We have been required, though, to release people almost immediately in order to abide by the decision,” he added.

    All 80 were released with appropriate visa conditions determined by factors including an individual’s criminal record, Giles said.

    “Community safety has been our number one priority in anticipation of the decision and since it’s been handed down,” he said.

    Solicitor-General Stephen Donaghue told the court last week that 92 people in detention were in similar circumstances to NZYQ in that no other country would accept them.

    “The more undesirable they are … the more difficult it is to remove them to any other country in the world, the stronger their case for admission into the Australian community — that is the practical ramifications” of outlawing indefinite detention, Donaghue said.

    NZYQ came to Australia in a people smuggling boat in 2012. He had been in detention since January 2015 after he was charged with raping a child and his visa was canceled.

    Ian Rintoul, Sydney-based director of the Australian advocacy group Refugee Action Coalition, said it was unclear on what basis detainees were being released.

    One detainee from the restive Indonesian province of West Papua has been in a Sydney detention center for 15 years and has not been freed, Rintoul said.

    Not all the detainees were stateless. Iran will accept its citizens only if they return voluntarily from Australia, and Australia has stopped deporting Afghans since the Taliban took control, Rintoul said.

    Source link

  • Off-duty St. Louis officer accused of shooting at trick-or-treating event no longer employed

    Off-duty St. Louis officer accused of shooting at trick-or-treating event no longer employed

    A police spokesperson says an off-duty St. Louis County officer accused of shooting a gun at a school trick-or-treating event no longer is employed at the department

    ByThe Associated Press

    October 23, 2023, 7:07 PM

    ST. LOUIS — An off-duty St. Louis County officer accused of displaying his badge and firing into the air at a trick-or-treating event no longer is employed at the agency, a police spokesperson confirmed Monday.

    Matthew McCulloch was no longer working at the department as of Thursday, St. Louis County Police officer Adrian Washington said in an email. He had been on unpaid administrative leave. Washington declined to comment on whether McCulloch was fired or quit, describing it as a personnel matter.

    McCulloch is charged with child endangerment, unlawful use of a weapon, armed criminal action and making a terrorist threat during a school-sponsored trunk-or-treating event attended by hundreds of parents and children Oct. 15 in the St. Louis suburb of Kirkwood.

    Police said McCulloch told multiple attendees that “you are all going to die,” according to the probable cause statement.

    After a man responded by pushing McCulloch to the ground, police said McCulloch lifted his shirt to show a handgun and his badge. McCulloch then shot into the air at least a dozen times “while shouting that all attendees would die,” police alleged. Trick-or-treaters ran for cover, then police said several people tackled McCulloch and took the gun.

    McCulloch’s lawyer did not immediately return an Associated Press voicemail requesting comment Monday.

    McCulloch is jailed on a $500,000 bond. A judge will consider his request for a lower bond on Friday.

    Source link

  • Agency investigated girl’s family 5 times before she was killed, report shows

    Agency investigated girl’s family 5 times before she was killed, report shows

    TOPEKA, Kan. — Child welfare officials investigated the family of a 5-year-old Kansas girl five times in the 13 months before she was raped and killed, but couldn’t confirm allegations of neglect or drug use by her mother, and the family repeatedly declined offers of help, a report released Tuesday showed.

    The report by the state Department of Children and Families said in one case, the agency confirmed that the mother wasn’t properly supervising Zoey Felix, but the girl was placed with her father and because of that, “No safety concerns were identified.” After receiving allegations in late August of drug use and lack of utilities in the home, child welfare officials made seven failed attempts to reach the family over the next month.

    On Oct. 2, Zoey died after fire crews couldn’t resuscitate her at a gas station. Neighbors believe Zoey and her father had been camping in a grove of trees on a vacant lot nearby.

    Mickel Cherry, a 25-year-old homeless man, is charged with first-degree murder, rape and capital murder, and could face the death penalty. Authorities haven’t said how Zoey died.

    “Zoey Felix’s death was an unacceptable tragedy,” Gov. Laura Kelly said in a statement accompanying the Department of Children and Families’ two-page summary of its interactions with the girl’s family.

    Kelly said she plans to push for legislation next year that would expedite the release of information when a child dies of abuse or neglect. Her administration pushed for such a change in 2021, but a bill never passed.

    Currently, DCF only releases a summary of its involvement initially and can’t do so until attorneys vet the document. Typically, the full case reports aren’t released until after the prosecution is completed, which can take well over a year.

    This has left an information vacuum in Zoey’s case that was exacerbated Tuesday when a judge sealed the arrest affidavit that was used to support criminal charges against Cherry.

    Judge Christopher Turner concluded that releasing the records would jeopardize the safety of witnesses or sources or “cause the destruction of evidence.”

    Cherry’s attorney, Mark Manna, of the Kansas Death Penalty Defense Unit, has declined to comment. Cherry’s family didn’t respond to phone messages, and his Facebook friends described him as chronically homeless.

    Neighbors said Zoey wandered their neighborhood dirty and hungry. Several reported calling child welfare to express concerns.

    According to the summary from DCF, child welfare officials said they received the first tip about Zoey on Sept. 8, 2022, alleging poor conditions in the home and possible drug use in the presence of a child. The mother agreed to a drug screen and it came back negative, the agency said.

    The agency also said in its summary that Zoey’s mother was working with court services. By then, she had been charged with domestic battery against her husband and teenage daughter, court records show. The DCF summary said the agency offered help to the family, but they declined and the case was closed.

    Another complaint alleging an unsupervised child was lodged with the agency on Nov. 8, 2002. Just six days earlier, Zoey’s mother had called to report that the then 4-year-old was missing, a police incident report shows. Zoey was found unharmed a short time later.

    The DCF summary made no reference to Zoey’s disappearance, and it was unclear whether that prompted the complaint. The summary said simply that the case was unsubstantiated and offers of help were denied.

    Later that month, Zoey’s mother was arrested after crashing her car near a north Topeka bar while driving drunk with Zoey in the front seat. A sworn statement from a Topeka police officer, which also was released Tuesday, said the mother was “having difficulty standing upright, attempting to walk away with a small child.”

    He also wrote that in looking into her car, he saw two open bottles of vodka, one half-full and the other, three-quarters full. The officer said that in interviews, Zoey said her mother had been drinking from both bottles before and while driving.

    The officer wrote that the mother was uncooperative and, “She was taken to the ground in order to be handcuffed.”

    The DCF summary said welfare workers left Zoey in her father’s care; court records show he was living with a girlfriend at the time. Zoey’s mother was jailed until March, when she pleaded guilty to felony aggravated battery and driving under the influence and was sentenced to probation.

    Zoey’s father was evicted from his apartment in May. Another tip the agency received that month alleged there were no operating utilities in the mother’s home, but the agency found the home to be “livable,” with utilities, food and no signs of drugs. Again, the family declined services.

    Then on Aug. 29, another complaint alleged drug use and no utilities, prompting the seven failed attempts by the agency to contact the family in September.

    But during that time, police went to the home twice, once even tracking down Zoey and talking to her. But officers were told by Zoey’s father that she wasn’t living there, city spokeswoman Gretchen Spiker said.

    The second time police responded, an officer stood outside as belongings were retrieved from the house, a police report said. Police reports do not explain where Zoey, her sister, her father and Cherry went after that, but neighbors said they were living in a makeshift camp.

    Laura Howard, the top administrator for the Department for Children and Families, vowed to launch a thorough investigation.

    “We will take every step necessary,” she wrote in a statement.

    DCF opened another investigation as a result of Zoey’s death.

    Source link

  • Ex-Illinois child welfare worker guilty of endangerment after boy beaten to death by mom

    Ex-Illinois child welfare worker guilty of endangerment after boy beaten to death by mom

    A judge has convicted a former state child welfare worker of child endangerment in connection with the 2019 beating death of a 5-year-old suburban Chicago boy by his mother

    ByThe Associated Press

    October 13, 2023, 5:59 PM

    WOODSTOCK, Ill. — A judge convicted a former state child welfare worker Friday of child endangerment in connection with the 2019 beating death of a 5-year-old suburban Chicago boy by his mother, but the judge acquitted the man’s supervisor.

    Lake County Judge George Strickland found Carlos Acosta, 57 of Woodstock, who was a case investigator for the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, guilty of the child endangerment charge but acquitted him of a reckless conduct charge, news outlets reported.

    Strickland said he could not find Acosta’s supervisor, Andrew Polovin, 51, of Island Lake, guilty of either charge because he did not know how much Polovin knew about the abuse of the boy, Andrew “AJ” Freund of Crystal Lake.

    AJ died in April 2019 after being beaten by his mother. JoAnn Cunningham. She is serving a 35-year sentence for his murder.

    The boy’s father, Andrew Freund Sr., was sentenced to 30 years in prison for covering up the murder by burying the boy’s body in a field.

    Acosta and Polovin were accused of ignoring numerous warning signs of the boy’s abuse.

    Polovin’s attorney, Matthew McQuaid, said he and his client were “grateful” for the verdict.

    “I never thought he committed a crime,” McQuaid said.

    He said Polovin, who was fired by the state, now works in a different field.

    Authorities said Cunningham killed AJ on April 15, 2019, after she became angry about soiled underwear that he had tried to hide. She forced the boy to stand in a cold shower for at least 20 minutes, hit him in the head with the shower head, and then put him to bed cold, wet and naked, authorities said.

    AJ’s body was found wrapped in plastic in a shallow grave near the family’s home in Crystal Lake.

    Source link

  • A lawsuit accuses a Georgia doctor of decapitating a baby during delivery

    A lawsuit accuses a Georgia doctor of decapitating a baby during delivery

    ATLANTA — A doctor used too much force and decapitated a Georgia woman’s baby during delivery, according to a lawsuit attorneys said was filed Wednesday.

    The baby’s mother and father, Jessica Ross and Treveon Isaiah Taylor Sr., attended a news conference in Atlanta where their attorneys announced the lawsuit against Dr. Tracey St. Julian and Southern Regional Medical Center, a hospital in Riverdale, Georgia, where Ross went on July 9 to have her son. Riverdale is about 13 miles (20 kilometers) south of Atlanta.

    “They were so excited about the birth of their first child,” said attorney Cory Lynch. “Unfortunately, their dreams and hopes turned into a nightmare that was covered up by Southern Regional Medical Center.”

    Calls to St. Julian’s office went unanswered, and an email message was not immediately returned. The Associated Press was not able to determine whether she had an attorney.

    Southern Regional said in statements it could not discuss treatment for particular patients due to privacy laws, but it denies the allegations against it. Its “heartfelt thoughts and prayers” were with Ross and Taylor and their care providers, it said.

    “Our commitment is to provide compassionate, quality care to every single patient, and this loss is heartbreaking,” the hospital said. It later added that St. Julian was not an employee of the hospital, and it had “taken the appropriate steps in response to this unfortunate situation.”

    A spokeswoman, Kimberly Golden-Benner, said the hospital could not elaborate. St. Julian is part of a health care group called Premier Women’s Obgyn that has two locations and offers circumcisions, infertility treatment and other services in addition to low- and high-risk obstetric care, according to its website. St. Julian is a board-certified obstetrician and gynecologist who has been practicing in the Atlanta area since January 2005, the website says.

    According to the suit, the baby got stuck during delivery, but St. Julian delayed a surgical procedure and failed to seek help quickly. Instead, she applied “ridiculously excessive force” on the baby’s head and neck to try to deliver it, attorney Roderick Edmond, who is also a physician, said.

    Roughly three hours passed before St. Julian took Ross, 20, for a cesarean section, according to the suit. By then, a fetal monitor had stopped registering a heartbeat.

    The cesarean section removed the baby’s legs and body, but the head was delivered vaginally, according to Edmond.

    The couple asked for a C-section earlier, when the baby still could have survived, but were denied, Edmond said.

    He said the case highlighted the higher rates of infant and maternal mortality for Black women.

    Ross and Taylor, 21, did not speak at Wednesday’s news conference. Their attorneys also accused Southern Regional staff of trying to cover up the decapitation by discouraging the couple from getting an autopsy, encouraging them to have their son cremated and wrapping and propping his body to make it appear the head was still attached.

    The suit alleges gross negligence, fraud and intentional infliction of emotional distress. It seeks unspecified punitive damages.

    Source link

  • 10 people died at the Astroworld music festival two years ago. What happens now?

    10 people died at the Astroworld music festival two years ago. What happens now?

    Nearly two years after 10 people were crushed to death during the deadly 2021 Astroworld festival, no charges have been filed — even though some people, including event workers, expressed safety concerns.

    Pinpointing “who exactly caused those deaths is not an easy question to answer,” said Sandra Guerra Thompson, a criminal law professor at the University of Houston Law Center.

    “It’s a very difficult thing to say, unless you have some kind of clear evidence that somebody in charge, whose job it was to ensure safety and who should have known better, failed to take action,” she said.

    A nearly 1,300-page report on the investigation into the tragedy released by Houston police Friday said contract worker Reece Wheeler told authorities that he saw a crush of people and warned an event organizer that people could die, shortly before rapper Travis Scott went onstage.

    In the report, investigators wrote that Scott said he did see one person near the stage getting medical attention, but said that overall, the crowd seemed to enjoy the show. He said he did not see any signs of serious problems, nor did he hear anyone tell him to stop the show.

    Hip-hop artist Drake, who also performed, told police it was difficult to see from the stage what was going on in the crowd and that he didn’t hear anyone call for the show to stop.

    Despite no charges being filed, more than 500 lawsuits have been filed over the deaths and injuries at the concert, including many against concert promoter Live Nation and Scott. Some of those suits have since been settled.

    Those who were killed ranged in age from 9 to 27, and all 10 people died due to compression asphyxia, according to medical examiners.

    NO CHARGES BROUGHT

    In June, a Texas grand jury declined to indict six people in the case, including Scott. Prosecutors said, then, that the circumstances of the deaths limited what charges they were able to present, eliminating potential counts such as murder, manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

    Thompson said the sheer number of people involved in putting on the event, the large scale of it, and the high bar for proving criminal negligence or recklessness are challenges for prosecutors in cases like this.

    “It goes back to, who knows what’s going on, is that being communicated?” she said. “Were they being told that people have died, and they still wanted the concert to go on? Or, were they being told that ‘Hey, some people are getting hurt, which might not be that unusual at an event like that?”

    Assistant Harris County District Attorney Alycia Harvey said after the grand jury declined to issue indictments that prosecutors were left with only possible counts of endangering a child in connection with the deaths of the two youngest concertgoers, ages 9 and 14.

    Scott’s lawyer, Kent Schaffer, has said that the performer was not responsible for the tragedy.

    “He never encouraged people to do anything that resulted in other people being hurt,” Schaffer said.

    TRAVIS SCOTT’S RESPONSE

    Scott has previously said he was unaware of the deaths until after the show. He has since created what he called Project HEAL, a $5 million initiative that includes funding for an effort to address safety challenges for festivals and large-scale events.

    The police report said Scott told investigators that around the time Drake came onstage he was told to end the show after the performance, but that no one told him of an emergency.

    NEW SAFETY PRACTICES

    Following the tragedy, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott formed a task force to study concert safety, and to recommend crowd control and security measures during mass gathering.

    The task force in April 2022 reported that people without tickets entered the outdoor festival area hours before the performances began, overwhelming staff and leading to a variety of injuries. It also concluded that the process for issuing permits for mass gatherings is inconsistent statewide.

    The task force recommended creating a command center that is authorized to pause or cancel a show in response to safety concerns.

    “Sometimes, sadly, industries learn safety practices following disasters,” said Thompson, the law professor. “The standards for live concerts like this, I would imagine, are going to change.”

    _____

    Miller reported from Oklahoma City, Willingham reported from Charleston, West Virginia.

    Source link

  • 10 people died at the Astroworld music festival two years ago. What happens now?

    10 people died at the Astroworld music festival two years ago. What happens now?

    Nearly two years after 10 people were crushed to death during the deadly 2021 Astroworld festival, no charges have been filed — even though some people, including event workers, expressed safety concerns.

    Pinpointing “who exactly caused those deaths is not an easy question to answer,” said Sandra Guerra Thompson, a criminal law professor at the University of Houston Law Center.

    “It’s a very difficult thing to say, unless you have some kind of clear evidence that somebody in charge, whose job it was to ensure safety and who should have known better, failed to take action,” she said.

    A nearly 1,300-page report on the investigation into the tragedy released by Houston police Friday said contract worker Reece Wheeler told authorities that he saw a crush of people and warned an event organizer that people could die, shortly before rapper Travis Scott went onstage.

    In the report, investigators wrote that Scott said he did see one person near the stage getting medical attention, but said that overall, the crowd seemed to enjoy the show. He said he did not see any signs of serious problems, nor did he hear anyone tell him to stop the show.

    Hip-hop artist Drake, who also performed, told police it was difficult to see from the stage what was going on in the crowd and that he didn’t hear anyone call for the show to stop.

    Despite no charges being filed, more than 500 lawsuits have been filed over the deaths and injuries at the concert, including many against concert promoter Live Nation and Scott. Some of those suits have since been settled.

    Those who were killed ranged in age from 9 to 27, and all 10 people died due to compression asphyxia, according to medical examiners.

    NO CHARGES BROUGHT

    In June, a Texas grand jury declined to indict six people in the case, including Scott. Prosecutors said, then, that the circumstances of the deaths limited what charges they were able to present, eliminating potential counts such as murder, manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

    Thompson said the sheer number of people involved in putting on the event, the large scale of it, and the high bar for proving criminal negligence or recklessness are challenges for prosecutors in cases like this.

    “It goes back to, who knows what’s going on, is that being communicated?” she said. “Were they being told that people have died, and they still wanted the concert to go on? Or, were they being told that ‘Hey, some people are getting hurt, which might not be that unusual at an event like that?”

    Assistant Harris County District Attorney Alycia Harvey said after the grand jury declined to issue indictments that prosecutors were left with only possible counts of endangering a child in connection with the deaths of the two youngest concertgoers, ages 9 and 14.

    Scott’s lawyer, Kent Schaffer, has said that the performer was not responsible for the tragedy.

    “He never encouraged people to do anything that resulted in other people being hurt,” Schaffer said.

    TRAVIS SCOTT’S RESPONSE

    Scott has previously said he was unaware of the deaths until after the show. He has since created what he called Project HEAL, a $5 million initiative that includes funding for an effort to address safety challenges for festivals and large-scale events.

    The police report said Scott told investigators that around the time Drake came onstage he was told to end the show after the performance, but that no one told him of an emergency.

    NEW SAFETY PRACTICES

    Following the tragedy, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott formed a task force to study concert safety, and to recommend crowd control and security measures during mass gathering.

    The task force in April 2022 reported that people without tickets entered the outdoor festival area hours before the performances began, overwhelming staff and leading to a variety of injuries. It also concluded that the process for issuing permits for mass gatherings is inconsistent statewide.

    The task force recommended creating a command center that is authorized to pause or cancel a show in response to safety concerns.

    “Sometimes, sadly, industries learn safety practices following disasters,” said Thompson, the law professor. “The standards for live concerts like this, I would imagine, are going to change.”

    _____

    Miller reported from Oklahoma City, Willingham reported from Charleston, West Virginia.

    Source link