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Tag: child protective services

  • Two arrested in connection to death of a child in Grand Prairie

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    A set of handcuffs is pictured.

    The Grand Prairie Police Department and Child Protective Services are investigating the death, which occurred at a residence in the 1200 block of Huddleston Drive, police said.

    USA TODAY NETWORK

    Two people were arrested Friday after the death of a child in Grand Prairie, officials said in a statement.

    The Grand Prairie Police Department and Child Protective Services are investigating the death, which occurred at a residence in the 1200 block of Huddleston Drive on Friday, police said.

    Twenty-year-old Susaneth Pazarez-Nunez and 23-year-old Fernando Vega Diaz have both been charged with injury to a child causing death in connection to the investigation, according to the statement.

    Police could not release further details on the investigating, citing its ongoing nature and confidentiality laws concerning child abuse investigations, officials said.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lillie Davidson

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lillie Davidson is a breaking news reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She graduated from TCU in 2025 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, is fluent in Spanish, and can complete a crossword in five minutes.

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  • Our View: If people knock on CPS’s door, will they open?

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    The horrific torture and killing of 8-year-old Genesis Mata is the latest tragedy to ignite a firestorm of protests and demands to reform Kern County’s Child Protective Services. Just when will demands, audits and promised improvements yield real reforms and better protect Kern’s helpless children?

    The Kern County Board of Supervisors this week agreed to solicit bids to hire an independent consultant to investigate CPS’s practices and procedures. What might have been done to prevent Genesis’ Aug. 2 death? In the 1990s, the state Legislature intervened and ordered an audit of the Kern department after several children died from abuse. Auditors proposed improvements and laws were changed.

    Kern County Department of Human Services Director Lito Morillo recently noted that in 2006, the Child Welfare Services League of America reviewed Kern’s Child Welfare Services and developed a strategic improvement plan.

    The long-lasting effects of these studies, audits, recommendations and “strategic plans” have not materialized.

    This spring, the Kern County grand jury reported CPS lacks the funding and staff to adequately protect Kern’s children, as abuse cases continue to increase.

    Will this latest investigation lead only to more hand-wringing and empty promises? Once Genesis’ Aug. 2 death slips out of the headlines, will child protection once again become a low priority?

    “Too many cases have emerged from Kern County, California, where reported situations of abuse were allowed to persist unchecked, ultimately leading to deaths of children who were failed by the very institutions meant to protect them,” Josefina Villarreal wrote on a Change.org petition that demanded an investigation.

    Genesis’ body was found abandoned in a Bakersfield motel bathtub on Aug. 2. Police report scalding hot water was poured over Genesis’ body, her fingers were broken by being slammed in a door, and she had been whipped with a cord or cable. Bakersfield Police Chief Greg Terry called Genesis’ death the worst case of child abuse seen in his department’s history.

    Her father, Ray Mata Jr., 31, and his wife, Graciela Bustamonte, 24, Genesis’ stepmother, have been charged with first-degree murder, aggravated mayhem and inflicting injury upon a child. Also among the charges are two counts of torture and two counts of child cruelty. Mata Jr. and Bustamonte have pleaded not guilty and an October hearing is scheduled.

    A district attorney spokesperson said the counts reflect two cases. The identity of the second victim was not disclosed, but at the time of Mata Jr.’s arrest, police and court records indicate he was being investigated by CPS after a school reported that a frequently absent child had visible bodily injuries. Seven children now have been removed from Mata Jr.’s and Bustamonte’s home, and placed in protective custody.

    Mata Jr. has a lengthy criminal history, which includes arrests and convictions on drugs, weapons and vehicle charges. Genesis’ biological mother, Destiny Delacruz, 26, also has a criminal record that includes drug, theft and child abuse charges. She admits to having a lengthy use of methamphetamine.

    Delacruz told a reporter she was 14 years old and had a son when she met then 18-year-old Mata Jr. Two years later, when she was 16, she gave birth to Genesis. In 2018, she turned over the children to Mata Jr.’s mother in the belief she would provide better care. Delacruz said that was the last time she saw the children. It is uncertain how the children ended up in Mata Jr.’s care.

    Delacruz’s extended family members told reporters Kern CPS repeatedly ignored their many reports of allegations that Mata Jr. was abusing the children. Similar complaints about the department’s handling of child abuse cases were aired during this week’s Kern County Board of Supervisors meeting.

    “I have seen firsthand how broken Kern County’s child protection services is,” Brooke Malley-Ault, a Mira Monte High School guidance counselor and Bakersfield City School District board member, told supervisors. As a mandated reporter, she and other school staff regularly report evidence of abuse, only to see little action taken. “We feel hopeless because we know what we’ve seen, yet we’re told to stand back.”

    As the public outrage grows over Genesis Mata’s death, CPS officials are encouraging people to report cases to the child abuse hotline 661-631-6011 or 800-540-4000.

    But the nagging question remains: If people call, will CPS come?

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  • Texas Mother Speaks Out After Alleging CPS Took Her 2-Year-Old Son Without A Court Order (Video)

    Texas Mother Speaks Out After Alleging CPS Took Her 2-Year-Old Son Without A Court Order (Video)

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    A Texas mother is speaking out after alleging that Child Protective Services (CPS) removed her two-year-old son from her care without a court order.

    RELATED: Prayers Up! Texas Mother Passes Away While Saving Her Children From A House Fire

    Here’s What Reportedly Occurred

    According to Fox 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth, Joslyn Sanders took her son, Josiah, to the Children’s Medical Center Dallas due to a rash he developed. Sanders reportedly believed the rash was caused by her son’s skin reacting to a new laundry detergent.

    “I realized his foot was swelling and took him to the hospital at the advice of a pediatrician,” she explained to the outlet.

    However, Sanders disagreed with the medication doctors prescribed her son.

    “I was not ok with clindamycin since that antibiotic is reserved for more severe infections,” she added.

    Sanders left the hospital. Then, CPS officers visited her apartment the next day, accompanied by officers from the Corinth Police Department.

    Corinth Police Chief Jerry Garner reportedly spoke with Fox 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth about the visit.

    “They did not observe anything that would indicate the child was in imminent danger,” Garner explained.

    However, CPS officers reportedly explained that they visited Sander’s residence on reports from the hospital that Josiah was malnourished.

    “They observed the child would eat, and drink. They saw a rash, but they did not see an emergency,” Garner continued. “They did not see anything obvious to indicate the child was malnourished.”

    Upon their visit, Sanders reportedly informed CPS that she would take her child to another medical professional. However, the CPS officials then informed her that it would not be needed and that they would be removing her son from her care.

    “The child had a skin infection and a nutritional deficiency. Mother Joslyn Sanders provided no explanation about the child being malnourished. The doctor said the child is at severe risk of becoming septic due to serious infection,” a court affidavit filed by CPS reportedly reads, per Fox 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth.

    A spokesperson for CPS has reportedly confirmed with the outlet that a judge ordered the child to be in the organization’s care.

    The Texas Mother Speaks Out As Social Media Weighs In

    According to the outlet, Sanders alleges that CPS’s affidavit failed to acknowledge that Josiah has been receiving treatment for “feeding difficulties.” The outlet reports that the child is being treated by his nutrition therapist and primary care provider.

    Now, after spending at least sixty days away from her son, Sanders is speaking out.

    “I’ve never been away from my son for more than a few hours; it’s now been 60 days,” she reportedly explained. “I think about him every moment.”

    Here’s What Is Expected To Happen To The Child

    According to Fox 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth, Josiah was placed into a foster home on Tuesday, February 19. Furthermore, a hearing for his mother to present her side of events has been scheduled for Wednesday, February 28.

    RELATED: UPDATE: Memphis Woman Charged After Being Accused Of Posting Photos Of Minor Daughter Performing Brazilian Wax On Nude Women

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  • A Texas family fought for weeks to regain custody of their newborn. Experts say the case shows how Black parents are criminalized. | CNN

    A Texas family fought for weeks to regain custody of their newborn. Experts say the case shows how Black parents are criminalized. | CNN

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    CNN
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    A Black Texas couple has been reunited with their newborn daughter after authorities removed the baby and placed her in foster care last month citing a doctor’s concerns about how they were treating a jaundice diagnosis.

    Rodney and Temecia Jackson of DeSoto, Texas, regained custody of their daughter, Mila, on April 20 following a nearly month-long battle with the state’s Child Protective Services, according to The Afiya Center, a reproductive justice advocacy group.

    A spokesperson for the Texas Department of Family Protective Services, which includes CPS, confirmed to CNN that the office had recommended a dismissal of the case to an assistant district attorney. Mila’s release was granted on Thursday, according to a court filing.

    The Jacksons had been pleading for Mila’s return in videos posted to social media, and news conferences as reproductive justice activists protested and rallied behind the family.

    The removal, the Jacksons say, was sparked by their decision to let their midwife treat Mila’s jaundice instead of taking her to the hospital for care as their doctor had recommended. Temecia Jackson said during a news conference earlier this month that she gave birth to Mila at home on March 21 with the help of a midwife and wanted that same trusted midwife to provide medical care for her baby. But Mila’s pediatrician disagreed with this decision and ultimately contacted CPS, Temecia Jackson said.

    “We’ve been treated like criminals,” Rodney Jackson said during the news conference. “This is a nightmare that I wouldn’t wish on anyone.”

    Reproductive justice advocates say Mila’s removal is just the latest example of the criminalization of Black parents, who lose their children to the child welfare system at disproportionate rates. In the US in 2018, Black children made up 23% of youth in foster care, but only 14% of the nation’s child population, according to the Annie E. Casey Foundation. Additionally, one study found that between 2003-2014, 53% of Black children were the subjects of child welfare investigations by the time they reached age 18.

    Marsha Jones, executive director of The Afiya Center – a Dallas, Texas, based non-profit that advocates for Black women and girls – said there is a systemic problem with the child welfare system that unfairly targets Black parents. In many cases, Black families have their first experiences with the criminal justice system in family court, Jones said.

    “It’s almost unspoken and unseen because there is just this thought that Black women are not good parents and that we are criminalized because of poverty,” Jones told CNN. “This is not new.”

    Jones said the center stepped in last month to support the Jackson family and put pressure on public officials to return Mila home. She believes this played a role in reuniting the family last week.

    “There’s no reason this baby should have been removed from her home,” Jones told CNN. “This family was not being heard. The Black midwife wasn’t being heard.”

    Rodney and Temecia Jackson could not be reached for comment.

    In a letter to CPS obtained by CNN affiliate WFAA, the family’s pediatrician, Dr. Anand Bhatt, who is with the Baylor Scott & White healthcare system, wrote that while the Jacksons “are very loving and they care dearly” about Mila, “their distrust for medical care and guidance has led them to make a decision for the baby to refuse a simple treatment that can prevent brain damage.”

    “I authorized the support of CPS to help get this baby the care that was medically necessary and needed,” the letter continued.

    CBS News, which obtained a copy of the affidavit filed by the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, reported that Bhatt reached out to a DFPS investigator on March 25 and indicated that Mila’s bililrubin test showed levels of 21.7 milligrams.

    A bilirubin test can screen for jaundice and other conditions. That level was “cause for a lot of concern,” Bhatt told the investigator, according to CBS News, and could lead to brain damage, he said, “because the bilirubin can cross the blood brain barrier.”

    Bhatt said he reserved a bed for Mila at Children’s Medical Center of Dallas and asked the Jacksons to take her there or he would call police for a welfare check, according to court documents obtained by CBS News. WFAA reported that Bhatt wanted Mila to receive phototherapy – a common treatment for jaundice.

    But court documents, according to CBS News, say Rodney Jackson told Bhatt he and Temecia Jackson planned to treat their baby “naturally” and didn’t believe in “modern medicine.”

    The midwife, Cheryl Edinbyrd, told CBS News the family had ordered a blanket and goggles to provide light therapy to treat Mila’s jaundice.

    When the Jacksons didn’t show up at the hospital, a CPS investigator and police went to the Jackson’s home at 4 a.m. on March 25 but Rodney Jackson declined to speak with them, according to court documents obtained by CBS News. An hour later, authorities returned with an ambulance and fire truck and Rodney Jackson still denied them entry.

    Authorities returned to the home on March 30 with a warrant and arrested Rodney Jackson on charges of preventing the execution of a civil process, according to CBS News. Police entered the home and took Mila from Temecia Jackson. According to CBS News, the Jacksons’ other two children were not removed.

    Temecia Jackson said in a press conference that when she asked to see the affidavit, she noticed it had the name of a different mother on it.

    “Instantly I felt like they had stolen my baby as I had had a home birth and they were trying to say that my baby belonged to this other woman,” Temecia Jackson.

    Marissa Gonzales, a spokesperson from the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, said in an email to CNN that her department was given an incorrect name for the initial affidavit. The mistake, she said, was corrected in the case filings.

    Gonzales declined an interview with CNN to discuss the case further, citing “state confidentiality restrictions.”

    “It is always the goal of DFPS to safely reunite children with their parents,” Gonzales also said. “The decision about when that happens rests with the judge who ordered the removal.”

    CNN’s request to interview Bhatt was also denied by Baylor Scott & White.

    “In respect of patient privacy, it is inappropriate to provide comment on this matter,” the health system said in an emailed statement. “We do abide by reporting requirements set forth in the Texas Family Code and any other applicable laws.”

    Advocates say the racial bias of professionals such as teachers, doctors and social workers has created inequity in the child welfare system.

    Dorothy Roberts, a law professor and sociologist at the University of Pennsylvania, said decisions to report neglect and abuse are largely shaped by racist stereotypes of Black families.

    The child welfare system, she said, needs to consider the trauma inflicted on children when they are separated from their families.

    “We have to ask whether there is a better way of addressing children’s medical needs instead of the system we have now where doctors are reporting suspicions, which we know is highly biased, and investigating families, which we know is very traumatic,” said Roberts, author of “Torn Apart: How the Child Welfare System Destroys Black Families – and How Abolition Can Build a Safer World.” “Hospitals should not be places of fear for parents.”

    Roberts said there is also a longstanding cultural conflict between the healthcare system and midwives who are often devalued. Black midwives provided care for mothers for hundreds of years, delivering the babies of enslaved women and even slave owners’ wives. But as medicine became more professionalized in the late 1800s, male doctors wanted to take control of childbirth, with some suggesting midwives were unfit, according to a report by Vox.

    Monica Simpson, executive director of Sistersong, a reproductive justice organization advocating for women of color, said many Black women are choosing midwives because they have lost trust in doctors and hospitals.

    Much of that is driven by the harrowing statistics: Black women are 2.6 times likelier to die of pregnancy-related complications than White women, according to the most recent data from the National Center for Health Statistics.

    Black infants also die at more than twice the rate of White infants, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Simpson said the child welfare system is broken. She said racism has played a part in the continued criminalization and separation of Black families.

    “There’s been this narrative that Black women can’t parent their children properly,” Simpson said. “We have been battling these narratives for decades. The way that Black women are criminalized around their motherhood, it’s horrible.”

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