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Lawsuits

State to pay $2.9 million in Nassau foster care abuse case

Three children sexually assaulted in a foster home a decade ago sued the Florida DCF.
Conceding a settlement should have been reached long ago, the state has agreed to pay $2.9 million to three children sexually abused by older kids in a Nassau County foster home.

The agreement follows an appellate decision lawyers called unprecedented that gave the children the right to sue the Florida Department of Children and Families for placing them in a home where danger lurked.

The settlement encompasses both state and federal claims filed against the department and its employees. Under its terms, the money will go into a trust fund to pay for ongoing therapeutic care and treatment for the children, molested nearly a decade ago.

“This was a very tragic case of harm to children in a foster home. We wish it had never happened,” said department spokesman John Harrell. “It has taken way too long to reach a resolution. This settlement will help care for the needs of these children.”

The agreement is scheduled to be presented to a Nassau County circuit judge this morning for approval. About a third of the settlement amount will pay attorney fees. It includes a $1.2 million state court settlement reached in December and a $1.7 million federal settlement announced Monday.

Lawyers for the children said the settlement was bolstered by a December ruling by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta. It said the children could sue on grounds that DCF was “deliberately indifferent” to the potential danger they faced when they were placed in the state-licensed foster home.

“This was the first written opinion by a federal appeals court upholding the right of children in foster care to sue for child-on-child sexual abuse,” said attorney Howard Talenfeld, president of the foster care advocacy group Florida’s Children First.

The children’s complaint says they were placed in a home where two known, sexually aggressive adolescents lived, ages 11 and 14. Both foster parents worked, leaving the siblings — then 3, 5 and 8 — at his mercy, said their Jacksonville attorney, Brian Cabrey. They were molested over a 10-month period in 1999 and 2000.

The 11-year-old had previously molested another foster child in the Nassau County home. That assault was reported to DCF’s abuse hotline, according to the lawsuit.

“No background check was done on the setting before the children were left there,” Cabrey said. “And no plan was drafted or implemented to prevent the child-on-child abuse that eventually occurred.”

Lawyers for the former DCF workers had argued to the 11th Circuit that they were immune from liability because they didn’t know about the potential for abuse. But the court concluded, based on the 2005 lawsuit, that the workers showed “deliberate indifference” to the youngsters’ welfare.

The case also exposed numerous record-keeping snafus, prompting an internal report by the department’s general counsel that blasted the Jacksonville office in December for destroying, misplacing and withholding records from the children’s lawyers. Department attorney Robin Whipple-Hunter said at the time that improvements were being made.

Cabrey said the mishandled documents were essential to protecting children in the foster care system and unnecessarily delayed resolution of the case.

“Fortunately in this case we were finally able to get these three young children the help they so desperately need,” Cabrey said.

The children have been adopted together.

paul.pinkham@jacksonville.com,

(904) 359-4107

State pays $750K in killings of two children by father


NewJersey   DYFS admits no wrongdoing in settlement
Thursday, September 04, 2008
BY SUSAN K. LIVIO
Star-Ledger Staff

The state paid $750,000 to settle a lawsuit accusing the Division of Youth and Family Services of failing to help two children under its supervision who were later killed by their father, a spokesman for the state Attorney General's office said yesterday.

DYFS admitted no wrongdoing when it settled the case in April, said spokesman Lee Moore.

 

But a surviving sibling, Amanda Bennett, 20, and her grandparents, who filed the negligence lawsuit, "certainly perceive it as a recognition by the state that DYFS didn't do its job," said the family's attorney, Gregg Shivers of Cherry Hill.

The lawsuit stems from a case in which Scott McCarter shot and killed his wife, Wendy Bennett, and their two children Melanie, 6, and Scott Jr., 12, at their Millville home on May 25, 2006. McCarter then killed himself.

Amanda Bennett, who was Wendy Bennett's daughter, said two days before the shooting, she pleaded with DYFS employees to intervene because her stepfather, who was on trial for sexually abusing her, had moved home. Amanda, who moved in with her maternal grandparents, said she feared for her half-sister's safety.

The Office of the Child Advocate later determined DYFS had made mistakes. The agency never performed a safety assessment when McCarter started spending more time at home, never required he take a psychological exam and missed routine visits with the family, according to the report released 11 months ago.

Shivers credits the child advocate's candid report for the settlement. "Certainly the fact a state agency came to the same conclusions we did, I would imagine had a big impact on the state decision to settle the case instead of taking it to trial," he said.

A spokeswoman for DYFS' parent agency, the Department of Children and Families, declined to comment, referring all comments to the attorney general's office.

Bennett, now a college student, "is doing remarkably well under the circumstances," Shivers said.

"The amount of money is not going to bring back her mother and two siblings," Shivers added. "Her hope is that this and other suits that have come out over the last five years or so will continue to force the state to take a look at the agency and improve it."

In addition to the amount paid by the state, the settlement includes a $100,000 payment made by the insurance company of Richard Hickman, whom Amanda Bennett also sued for allegedly giving McCarter the gun he used against his family, Moore said.

The total $850,000 settlement was split between Amanda Bennett and another beneficiary of Scott McCarter, a daughter in Florida, Moore said. Bennett received $725,000; the other child received $125,000. Leonard Haberman, the attorney for the child in Florida, could not be reached for comment.

Since the state launched an overhaul of its child welfare system in 2003, it has made large settlements to at least two families.

The state in 2006 paid $7.5 million to the estate of Faheem Williams, the 7-year-old Newark boy whose mummified remains were found in the basement of a Newark apartment. He had a twin brother and a younger half-brother.

In 2005, the state paid $12.5 million to four brothers adopted from DYFS whose adoptive mother, Vanessa Jackson of Collingswood, pleaded guilty to depriving them of food and medical care.

 


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