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http://www.massnews.com/8231baby.htm
Baby Seized By State Police From Mothers Arms In Hospital
Room
By Ed Oliver
The Massachusetts News
8-25-1
The mother whose newborn baby was seized by state police
and DSS agents from her arms at the Mary Lane Hospital last month, says she
fears for the lives and safety of her newborn, Aaron, and her four-year-old,
Damien, who are in DSS custody.
Her 5-year-old son, Kyle, died after a Rottweiler attacked
him this June while in another DSS foster home.
Atty. Gregory Hession says the snatch from the hospital
could be retribution for the wrongful death suit the mother has filed against
the agency.
In an interview with Massachusetts News, Diana Ross from
Ware said, They murdered one child. I am not going to sit back and let them
hurt my other two boys.
Compounding her worries, Ross said DSS placed her infant
son and Damien together with two homosexual men who say they want to adopt
them. I told DSS I didn t want that. I said I think the boys should bond with
their mother, not with gay men. They told me I have no say in the matter.
Ross told MassNews she would have the boys checked out at
a hospital for molestation immediately after she gets them back from DSS,
particularly after a gay, foster care parent in Worcester County was arrested
last month for raping two boys in his custody.
Judge Is No Help
Circuit Judge Patricia M. Dunbar decided yesterday in
Hampden County Juvenile Court that DSS could keep custody of the newborn
infant.
Atty. Hession told MassNews that Dunbar said that DSS did
not meet the burden of proof with the baby and did not make reasonable efforts
to keep the child with the family. However, the judge decided that custody of
the infant would remain with DSS based on Ross previous history with DSS.
Essentially, Judge Dunbar is saying we don t care what the
law says. There is a problem here and we are going to take the child, said
Hession, who added, The department simply wants to take children rather than provide
services so the family can stay together.
Hession said he would have to study the opinion before
deciding on any future course of action.
DSS spokesman Michael MacCormack released a statement on
the Ross case and told MassNews he did not want to comment further.
The Department s decision to file a petition for custody
of Infant A. Ross was the result of a careful review of this family s history,
which was incorporated, together with information provided by medical, child
welfare and mental health professionals, into a petition filed with the
Northhampton Juvenile Court, and led to the temporary transfer of custody of
this infant to DSS.
Cognizant of Ms. Ross desire to care for her infant, we
are nonetheless mandated to insure that the infant s safety and best interests
are protected in a safe environment. We are grateful that the Court s decision
today affirms the Department s position on the safety of this child.
While mindful of the privacy of the child, DSS would not
even reveal the identity of the medical, child welfare and mental health
professionals with whom it consulted. Observers say it sounds like they are all
social workers employed by DSS, but the agency will always use a phrase like
that to avoid being accountable to the public.
Police Raid Hospital Room
After giving birth on Sunday, August 5, Ross says she was
celebrating with her family in her hospital room on Monday. A nurse entered the
room and took the baby, saying she had to check his vital signs.
Within minutes a posse of police, state police and DSS
social workers swarmed the room and informed the family that DSS had taken the
baby due to a 51A report of neglect, which had been filed by a nurse only hours
after the baby was born. The report alleges that Ross had not fed her baby the right
way when she was in recovery and had allowed her mother to hold and feed the
newborn.
The physician, Dr. Torbin Iverson, entered the mother s
room to see what was occurring and expressed his shock and confusion at the
state s action. He stated that the mother and baby were doing well and he had
not seen any problems. It was difficult to understand how the charge of not
feeding right could be made while the mother was under the care, supervision,
and scrutiny of maternity ward staff.
Ross told MassNews, A DSS social worker told me they had a
complaint of neglect and they were taking my baby. They threw a paper on my bed
and told me to fight it in court, said Ross. I was hysterical.
Ross mother Sandra told MassNews that when she drove up to
the hospital to visit her daughter, she saw a DSS social worker running out of
the hospital with the baby and flanked by state and local police. She said a
state policeman prevented her from entering the hospital.
Dr. Iverson told MassNews, It was unusual for DSS to come
in this manner and remove a baby. The times I saw the mother with the baby she
seemed okay. She certainly seems to be very concerned and caring and loves her
children.
Dr. Iverson, who is an obstetrician-gynecologist, told
MassNews that although he can t prove that Ross is a fit mother, because it is
outside of his field, Ross always kept her appointments and took good pre-natal
care of her baby.
A copy of the Nursing Progress Continuation Notes from the
hospital reveals that DSS told social workers at the hospital to tip them off
when Ross delivered her baby.
The records note that after the birth, Ross was encouraged
multiple times to hold the infant and the bottle upright, as well as stimulate
the infant to stay awake during feeds. Mother not following instruction, it
says. It also states that the mother did properly clean and change the infant
and that bonding was occurring between mother and child.
The nursing notes were relayed by phone to DSS social
worker Ann Kochis, according to the notes.
According to the notes, DSS told the hospital to issue a
51A Neglect Report against Ross. The hospital informed DSS that they were
unable to establish neglect in such a short time, yet, they filed the 51A
anyway with DSS social worker Kay Durepo.
51A form sent to DSS per their request. DSS aware that we
are unable to establish neglect in such a short period of time. Form sent
regardless, the nursing records state.
DSS Social Worker Ann Kochis and Area Director Ellen
Patashnic at the DSS East Springfield Office refused to comment for MassNews,
directing all questions to public affairs in Boston.
Attorney Greg Hession, who is helping to get Ross baby
back, told MassNews that in order for DSS to take the baby, the law requires
either serious abuse and neglect, such as broken bones, wounds and starvation,
or the likelihood of future serious abuse and neglect. He added that DSS would
have had to make reasonable efforts to keep the child with the mother.
Attorney Alan Goodman told MassNews, The only abuse that
has taken place in this whole situation has been the abuse of Diana Ross, the
mother, by this bureaucracy called DSS that is out of control. DSS appears to
be an agency bent on breaking up families under the guise of child protection.
Many observers point to the adoption bonuses that DSS
receives from the federal government if takes a child from its parents and
adopts it out to foster parents.
Seized in 1999
Ross two boys, Kyle and Damien, were seized in December
1999, after Kyle wandered outside the house. Ross, a single mother, had
previously clashed with DSS over similar incidents.
Kyle was born in September 1995 and Damien in September
1997.
DSS placed Damien with a gay couple and Kyle was placed
with Linda McNeil and her boyfriend, Eddie Finklea Jr., who kept a Rottweiler
in the backyard.
Kyle told me he loved me and wanted to come home, said
Ross. DSS told him he was never going home. I promised Kyle I would get him
home.
He told me he got hurt in the foster home. He had bruises
on his bottom and legs and burns he said were from a flatiron. DSS told me the
burns were from a heater. Kyle told me the people at the foster home locked him
crying in the bedroom, while they partied with drugs and alcohol.
In a shocking story that made headlines, Kyle was attacked
and killed by the Rottweiler in June of this year after he wandered into the
dog s unlocked pen.
Ross mother, Sandra Daneault, told MassNews that she
remembers after they got the news, Diana was distraught and tearfully
apologized to a photo of Kyle that she could not get him home like she had
promised him.
With the help of Attorney Alan Goodman, Ross, who was
pregnant, filed suit against the dog s owner and has taken preliminary steps to
sue the Department of Social Services for wrongful death and emotional distress
on behalf of her son.
In an apparent retaliation, Ross infant son Aaron was
seized from her by DSS at the hospital the day after he was born and just two
months after the tragic death of Kyle.
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