Agencies launch effort to curb abuse

MANSFIELD — Richland County Children Services kicked off the Choose Your Partner Carefully campaign Monday.

The program focuses on raising awareness — especially among women with children — to avoid partners who might be abusive.

Richland Services officials said about a third of child abuse cases reported in Richland County are the result of children being abused by their mom’s boyfriend, fiancé or new husband.

In 2009, the local agency investigated a record 2,748 cases of alleged child abuse and neglect.

“In those cases, nearly 900 times in Richland County last year, a child became a victim because of his or her mother’s choice of companion,” said Carl Hunnell, Children Services spokesman.

Children Services is working with the Richland County Domestic Violence Center and the Richland County Foundation’s Women Fund on this project to help inhibit the violence. Richland County Foundation provided a $2,750 grant to kick off the effort.

Kathy Ezawa, director of the Domestic Violence Shelter, said the grant will be used to educate women about choosing a partner who will treat them and their children with dignity and respect — and how to recognize potential danger signs.

She said the staff at Children Services and the Domestic Violence Shelter will go into the community to implement the program.

Jim and Elsa Croucher, of Middletown, also shared their personal tragedy. On Dec. 22, 1992, their 18-year-old daughter, Tina, was slain by her abusive ex-boyfriend in their home. He then turned the gun on himself.

Elsa Croucher said there was something a little different about him.

“We just couldn’t put our fingers on it,” Croucher said. “Later we learned he was from an abusive home and he really did not know how to have normal relationships with anyone.

“He started dating Tina, this strong-willed child, telling her where to go, who to see, what to wear, what friends to see, what time to be home, the whole nine yards of control — and Tina allowed this to happen. And then when he was able to control her, he started with the hitting and the slapping, and one day Tina came home with a large bruise on her face. … She said, ‘A gang of us were playing football and a football hit my face.’ And we believed her. This straight-forward young lady, we believed every word she told us.”

The boy transferred to their daughter’s high school. One day, as he walked down the hall, Tina was talking to another guy, when he grabbed her and threw her against some lockers.

“That was the first time we realized Tina was in an abusive relationship,” Elsa Croucher said.

Her parents told her to break up with him, but eventually she went back to him. He followed Tina everywhere.

While the parents were at work, he came to their home while Tina was sleeping and killed her.

In 1996, the Crouchers established Citizens Against Domestic Violence, a nonprofit organization that educates teens about the dangers of domestic violence.

On Dec. 28, House Bill 19, dubbed Tina’s Law, was signed by Gov. Ted Strickland. Under the law, school districts must adopt a policy to prevent and address dating violence at school and train staff on prevention education for health classes.

“We started this organization out of our grief,” Jim Croucher said. “We feel like if you can get to the young people and make them aware (that’s the key).

“Domestic violence, a.k.a. teen dating violence — the stats are virtually the same except the one: The homicide rate is slightly higher among teenagers.”

lwhitmire@nncogannett.com 419-521-7223

Source: http://www.mansfieldnewsjournal.com/article/20100209/NEWS01/2090311

Infant dies after being kept in garage

February 9, 2010 Child Abuse No Comments

LOVELAND – A Loveland infant who died 24 days after birth was kept in a dirty garage and had breathing difficulties that sometimes caused her to turn blue, according to an affidavit that led to the arrest of the baby’s mother.

Summer Moon Hawk, who was born New Year’s Day and was the first baby born this year at McKee Medical Center, died Jan. 25. Her mother, Kaylynn Marie Davis, 20, was charged with child abuse resulting in death and is jailed with $300,000 bond.

Davis sometimes left Summer and her 2-year-old sister, Pheonyx Davis, with strangers so she could go “party,” according to an arrest warrant affidavit filed by Scott Highland of the Loveland Police Department. Close friends told police that Davis “actually becomes a better mother when she is high in that she has a little bit more patience and will pay a small amount of attention to them,” the affidavit said.

The father of the baby, Davis’ fiancée David Hawk, was not mentioned in the affidavit.

The Colorado Department of Human Services had an open case on Summer because she tested positive at birth for THC, a chemical in marijuana, according to the affidavit. DHS also had opened a case when Pheonyx Davis tested positive for THC when she was born Dec. 30, 2007.

DHS spokeswoman Liz McDonough said she was legally prohibited from speaking about individual cases.

But she said in general, health-care providers are required to notify the county human service office if there’s evidence that the mother’s behavior threatens the health of the child.

The county will then develop “a safety plan for the child” with specific actions varying on a case-by-case basis. They could require increased supervision of the mother, parenting classes and taking custody of the child.

DHS conducts a “fatality review” if an infant dies of suspected abuse or neglect within five years of involvement with the family welfare unit, McDonough said. She couldn’t immediately say Monday whether such a review has begun in Summer’s death.

According to the arrest affidavit, police were notified shortly after 11:30 a.m. Jan. 25 that Summer had been found dead at a home in the 2600 block of Cedar Drive.

Davis told police she had fed her daughter at 8:30 a.m. and noticed her moving at 10 a.m., then found her dead at 11:30 a.m. However, paramedics said rigor mortis had set in by the time they arrived, according to the affidavit. Margorie Bennett, Summer’s great-grandmother, said Davis woke her at about midnight and told her she couldn’t get Summer to wake up for a feeding.

“Margorie noticed Summer’s lips, eyelids, hands and feet were blue. She told Kaylynn that she was good at getting babies to go to sleep but not waking them up. Margorie did not appear to be concerned about Summer’s condition and went back to bed,” the affidavit said.

The child’s grandmother, Anita Davis, helped Kaylynn wake and feed the baby but didn’t see the child again until 11:30 a.m. when Kaylynn woke her and told her Summer wasn’t breathing.

Summer’s body was found on a bed in a cold, dirty garage at the house, where the baby was kept, according to Highland’s affidavit. There was a small space heater in the garage, but no other heat source.

Police took temperature readings in the garage throughout the evening of Jan. 25 and found that the temperature dipped as low as 43.7 degrees, according to the affidavit.

Several of Kaylynn Davis’ friends told investigators that the baby was extremely congested and suffered from severe diaper rash. The friends said Summer sometimes would turn blue and stop breathing, and some advised her to take the infant to a doctor or hospital, according to the affidavit.

“Kaylynn’s response to their concerns was always the same. She would tell them Summer was fine and that she just had a cold,” the affidavit said.

The friends also reported that Kaylynn Davis would feed her daughter by propping a bottle on a pillow and wrapping a blanket around the baby’s shoulders and the bottle to prevent Summer from spitting out the bottle.

Records showed that Summer had two doctor visits in her short life, Highland wrote.
The first was a routine well-baby check-up Jan. 11 at the Loveland Community Health Center. Summer’s weight was slightly below where it should be, so Kaylynn Davis was advised to have her checked again in a week. She was given standard information on caring for a newborn.

The second visit was Jan. 18 at Salud Family Health Center in Fort Collins. A physician’s assistant said Summer had a cold but otherwise appeared to be a “perfectly healthy baby.”

The physician’s assistant said Davis did not mention anything about the baby having difficulty breathing or turning blue. If so, she would have advised Davis to go to an emergency room if Summer showed signs of difficulty breathing, according to the affidavit.

Davis was advised of the charges against her Monday, and Magistrate Matthew Zehe set her first appearance in District Court for 8:30 a.m. Thursday.

Davis appeared by video from the jail and several members of her family and her fiancée were in the courtroom.

The family declined comment after the hearing, and one person in the group pushed a news reporter as they left the courthouse.

It wasn’t immediately clear who was caring for Summer’s 2-year-old sister.

Source: http://www.coloradoan.com/article/20100209/NEWS01/2090322/1002/CUSTOMERSERVICE02/Infant-dies-after-being-kept-in-garage

Human rights group calls for tribal arrest power

February 8, 2010 Human Rights No Comments

BOISE, Idaho (AP) – A northern Idaho human rights group says a county sheriff is refusing to cooperate with the Coeur d’Alene Indian Tribe on law enforcement, leading to a growing number of criminals being released without prosecution.

The Kootenai County Task Force on Human Relations on Thursday called for the Idaho Legislature to pass a bill that will let Idaho tribal police officers arrest non-tribal members who violate state law on the reservation.

The proposal, due to be introduced next week at the Capitol, would require those arrested by tribal police to be tried in state court. Tribal officers would have to be certified by the state police academy near Boise, as Coeur d’Alene tribal officers are now. Other tribes, including Shoshone-Bannock and Shoshone-Paiute tribes in southern Idaho, wouldn’t be forced to participate.

Christie Wood, a task force leader, wrote in an open letter to Idaho lawmakers Thursday that Benewah County Sheriff Bob Kirts refuses to respond to tribal calls for help with reservation crimes and won’t reinstate a cross-deputization agreement with tribal police. Without such a pact, Coeur d’Alene tribal police can’t currently arrest non-tribal members on Indian territory.

“The failure of Sheriff Kirts to work with the Tribal Police has left citizens in bedlam,” Wood wrote, according to a copy of the letter obtained by The Associated Press. “Perpetrators have been set free that have committed serious criminal offenses against citizens living in Benewah County.”

The tribe contends the county’s conduct results in at least 90 non-Indians every month who are suspected of crimes from domestic violence and drunken driving to serious criminal assaults being freed without prosecution.

Kirts said the tribe’s account – and the letter to lawmakers – are inaccurate and misleading.

“I think somebody is feeding them a line of fecal matter,” he told the AP, adding the tribe is trying to pressure his agency. “They came to me and said, ‘If you deputize us, we will not put the law through the Legislature. To me, that’s a threat. I said, ‘Let’s go.”’

The Coeur d’Alene reservation’s checkerboard property ownership – its 10,000 residents include about 8,600 nonmembers – means tribal officers often encounter crimes committed by nonmembers in both Kootenai and Benewah counties. The tribe has a cross-deputization agreement with Kootenai County that allows its 13 full-time officers and five reservists to arrest non-tribal members on the reservation there.

“This agreement has worked remarkably well to protect citizens from criminal activity,” the task force wrote.

A similar pact with Benewah County collapsed in January 2007, in part due to a dispute over tribal authorities’ power to handle some minor offenses.

The two sides have different versions of what happened.

“They started to cite non-tribal members in tribal court, saying ‘If you take care of this here, there will be no record on your license,”’ Kirts told the AP.

Helo Hancock, the tribe’s attorney and legislative director, conceded there were fundamental disagreements between Benewah County and the tribe over its authority to cite a non-tribal member for a civil infraction. But he maintained that’s within the tribe’s purview, but said tribal officials have offered Kirts an olive branch: They would discontinue the practice if he would uphold the cross-deputization pact.

Kirts has rebuffed offers to reinstate the agreement, Hancock said, leaving the tribe no other choice but to go to the Idaho Legislature for help.

“We have a growing problem that requires a reasonable solution,” he said. “When Benewah County deputies are unable or unwilling to respond, it means we have to turn perpetrators loose, simply because we don’t have the authority to make an arrest.”

Source: http://nativetimes.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3029:human-rights-group-calls-for-tribal-arrest-power&catid=55&Itemid=31

U.S., EU ‘Condemn’ Iranian Human Rights Violations

February 8, 2010 Human Rights No Comments

The United States and the European Union on Monday offered a condemnation against Iran’s government for human rights violations, saying intimidation, detentions, show trials and executions of presidential election protesters defies international standards.

“We call on the government of Iran to live up to its international human rights obligations, to end its abuses against its own people, to hold accountable those who have committed the abuses and to release those who are exercising their rights,” reads a joint statement issued by the White House.

The 31st anniversary of the Islamic revolution is Thursday, and EU and U.S. officials say they are concerned that the date will be used by the Iranian government to crack down further on individuals who’ve protested Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s election last June 12. Many say Ahmadinejad stole the vote out from opposition leader Mir Hossein Moussavi

Amnesty International cites Iranian counts that 40 people have died in demonstrations since the election, and more than 5,000 people have been arrested while scores have been sentenced to prison and at least 11 sentenced to death, including two, Mohammad Reza Ali-Zamani and Arash Rahmanipour, whose executions were carried out on Jan. 28 after being convicted in October of “enmity to God.”

“The United States and the European Union condemn the continuing human rights violations,” the joint U.S.-EU statement said. “The large scale detentions and mass trials, the threatened execution of protestors, the intimidation of family members of those detained and the continuing denial to its citizens of the right to peaceful expression are contrary to human rights norms.”

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/02/08/eu-condemn-iranian-human-rights-violations/

The Human-Rights Facade Is Beginning to Crumble

February 8, 2010 Human Rights No Comments

Noah Pollak – 02.08.2010 – 8:26 AM

The collaboration between Amnesty International and an unrepentant Islamist named Moazzam Begg has been a source of wonderment among those who follow these kinds of things, but only back-burner wonderment, obscured by the media’s general tendency to protect the credibility of “human rights” NGOs, or at least not ask too many questions.

The UK Times was impelled, finally, to give some space to the fact that Amnesty, one of the two largest human-rights groups* (the other being Human Rights Watch) has been promoting Begg, a former Gitmo detainee and booster of terrorists and radicals. What finally attracted press attention to this outrageous state of affairs was the appearance of a whistleblower from within the ranks of Amnesty.

Meet Gita Sahgal, the head of Amnesty’s gender unit. She went public with her disgust after spending two years in a failed effort to separate Amnesty from Begg:

“I believe the campaign [with Begg's organization, "Cageprisoners"] fundamentally damages Amnesty International’s integrity and, more importantly, constitutes a threat to human rights,” Sahgal wrote in an email to the organisation’s leaders on January 30. “To be appearing on platforms with Britain’s most famous supporter of the Taliban, whom we treat as a human rights defender, is a gross error of judgment.”

No kidding. But this story doesn’t have a happy ending. Amnesty responded to her going public by suspending her. The excellent British blog Harry’s Place has posted her statement:

A moment comes, which comes but rarely in history, when a great organisation must ask: if it lies to itself, can it demand the truth of others? For in defending the torture standard, one of the strongest and most embedded in international human rights law, Amnesty International has sanitized the history and politics of the ex-Guantanamo detainee, Moazzam Begg and completely failed to recognize the nature of his organisation Cageprisoners. …

The issue is a fundamental one about the importance of the human rights movement maintaining an objective distance from groups and ideas that are committed to systematic discrimination and fundamentally undermine the universality of human rights.

Or, as a British blogger puts it, “upholding concepts of due process and women’s rights may not be best served by strolling along to Downing Street hand in hand with Moazzam Begg, a Salafi Islamist who has attended Jihadi training camps in Afghanistan and Bosnia.”

There is a vital role for groups like HRW and Amnesty to play in the world. Properly understood, their mission is to use their moral authority to shame and condemn tyranny and those who wish to make the world a hospitable place for tyrants and terrorists. But moral authority requires moral clarity. HRW and Amnesty have been overtaken by activists who use their position to wage easy campaigns against open societies instead of taking on the more difficult, thankless, and sometimes dangerous struggle against closed ones.

For people who do not follow these issues closely, there have been a few recent moments that indicate beyond any doubt that something is rotten in the “human-rights community.” One moment was when HRW went to Saudi Arabia to raise money. We have arrived at another such moment: a human-rights organization has suspended an employee for complaining about the organization’s partnership with a terrorist.

*In my opinion, the largest and most important human rights organization in the world is the U.S. Army, but that’s an argument for another time.

Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/blogs/index.php/pollak/233011

 

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Human Rights

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